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Facilitating Program Verification with Dependent Types Hongwei Xi Boston University.

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Presentation on theme: "Facilitating Program Verification with Dependent Types Hongwei Xi Boston University."— Presentation transcript:

1 Facilitating Program Verification with Dependent Types Hongwei Xi Boston University

2 Talk Overview Motivation Detecting program errors (at compile-time) Detecting more program errors (at compile-time) Dependently typed programming languages Imperative: Xanadu Programming examples Current status and future work

3 A Wish List We would like to have a programming language that should be simple and general support extensive error checking facilitate proofs of program properties possess correct and efficient implementation...... But …

4 Reality Invariably, there are many conflicts among this wish list These conflicts must be resolved with careful attention paid to the needs of the user

5 Some Advantages of Types Capturing errors at compile-time Enabling compiler optimizations Facilitating program verification Using types to encode program properties and verifying the encoded properties through type- checking Serving as program documentation Unlike informal comments, types can be fully trusted after type-checking

6 Limitations of (Simple) Types Not general enough Many correct programs cannot be typed For instance, type casts are widely used in C Not specific enough Many interesting properties cannot be captured For instance, types in Java cannot handle safe array access

7 Dependent Types Dependent types are types that are more refined dependent on the values of expressions Examples int(i): singleton type containing only integer i array(n): type for integer arrays of size n

8 Examples of Dependent Types int(i,j) is defined as [a:int | i < a < j] int(a), that is, the sum of all types int(a) for i < a < j int[i,j), int(i,j], int[i,j] are defined similarly nat is defined as [a:int | a >=0] int(a)

9 Informal Program Comments /* the function should not be applied to a negative integer */ int factorial (x: int) { /* defensive programming */ if (x < 0) exit(1); if (x == 0) return 1; else return (x * factorial (x-1)); }

10 Formalizing Program Comments {n:nat} int factorial (x: int(n)) { if (x == 0) return 1; else return (x * factorial (x-1)); } Note: factorial (-1) is ill-typed and thus rejected!

11 Informal Program Comments /* arrays a and b are of equal size */ double dotprod (double a[], double b[]) { int i; double sum = 0.0; if (a.size != b.size) exit(1); for (i = 0; i < a.size; i = i + 1) { sum = sum + a[i]  b[i]; } return sum; }

12 Formalizing Program Comments {n:nat} double dotprod (a: array(n), b: array(n)) { /* dotprod is assigned the following type: {n:nat}. ( array(n), array(n)) -> float */ … … … }

13 Xanadu Xanadu is a dependently typed imperative programming language with C-like syntax The type of a variable in Xanadu can change during execution The programmer may need to provide dependent type annotations for type-checking purpose

14 Dependent Record Types (I) A polymorphic type for arrays: {n:nat} array(n) { size: int(n); data[n]: ‘a }

15 Dependent Record Types (II) A polymorphic type for 2-dimensional arrays: {m:nat,n:nat} array2(m,n) { row: int(m); col: int(n); data[m][n]: ‘a }

16 Dependent Record Types (III) A polymorphic type for sparse arrays: {m:nat,n:nat} sparseArray(m,n) { row: int(m); col: int(n); data[m]: list }

17 A Program in Xanadu {n:nat} unit init (int vec[n]) { var: int ind, size;; /* arraysize: {n:nat} array(n)  int(n) */ size = arraysize(vec); invariant: [i:nat] (ind: int(i)) for (ind=0; ind<size; ind=ind+1) { vec[ind] = ind; /* safe array subscripting */ }

18 Binary Search in Xanadu {n:nat} int bs(key: int, vec: array(n)) { var: l: int [0, n], h: int [-1, n); int m, x;; l = 0; h = vec.size - 1; while (l <= h) { m = (l + h) / 2; x = vec.data[m]; if (x < key) { l = m - 1; } else if (x > key) { h = m + 1; } else { return m; } } return –1; }

19 Dependent Union Types A polymorphic type for lists: union list with nat = { Nil(0); {n:nat} Cons(n+1) of ‘a  list(n) } Nil: list(0) Cons: {n:nat} ‘a  list(n)  list(n+1)

20 Reverse Append on Lists (‘a) {m:nat,n:nat} list(m+n) revApp (xs: list(m),ys: list(n)) { var: ‘a x;; invariant: [m1:nat,n1:nat | m1+n1=m+n] (xs: list(m1), ys: list(n1)) while (true) { switch (xs) { case Nil: return ys; case Cons (x, xs): ys = Cons(x, ys); } } exit; /* can never be reached */ }

21 Constraint Generation The following constraint is generated when the revApp example is type-checked: m:nat,n:nat,m1:nat,n1:nat,m1+n1=m+n,a:nat,m1=a+1 implies a+(n1+1)=m+n

22 Current Status of Xanadu A prototype implementation of Xanadu in Objective Caml that performs two-phase type-checking, and generates assembly level code An interpreter for interpreting assembly level code A variety of examples at http://www.cs.bu.edu/~hwxi/Xanadu/Xanadu.html

23 Conclusion (I) It is still largely an elusive goal in practice to verify the correctness of a program It is therefore important to identify those program properties that can be effectively verified for realistic programs

24 Conclusion (II) We have designed a type-theoretic approach to capturing simple arithmetic reasoning The preliminary studies indicate that this approach allows the programmer to capture many more properties in realistic programs while retaining practical type-checking

25 Future Work Adding more programming features into Xanadu in particular, OO features Certifying compilation: constructing a compiler for Xanadu that can translate dependent types from source level into bytecode level Incorporating dependent types into (a subset of) Java and …

26 End of the Talk Thank you! Questions?


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