This PR makes changes to make our Anoma client CLI commands compatible
with the https://github.com/anoma/anoma/tree/testnet-01 branch.
We must now capture the Anoma client node_id on start because some
endpoints (e.g mempool submit) require this node id in the request.
I'm using
[Effectful.Environment](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/effectful-2.5.0.0/docs/Effectful-Environment.html)
to interact with environment variables as it avoids use of `IOE`.
In a separate PR we should replace all usages of `System.Environment`
with `Effectful.Environment` but I've left existing usages of
`System.Environment` in place for the time being.
Add `juvix dev anoma prove`
This is similar to `juvix dev nockma run`.
The difference is that the managed client is used and it outputs the
result as a jammed file.
## CLI docs
```
The prove command submits a Nockma program to the Anoma.Protobuf.NockService.Prove gRPC endpoint.
By default, the gRPC request is made to the client that is started by juvix dev anoma start.
Use the -c/--config option to use a different Anoma client.
The config file format is:
url: <ANOMA_CLIENT_URL>
port: <ANOMA_CLIENT_GRPC_PORT>
The gRPC response (a Nockma program) is saved to a file named <input>.proved.nockma, where <input> is the base name of the input file.
Use the -o/--output option to specify a custom output filename.
If the program generates traces, they will be written to standard output.
Usage: juvix dev anoma prove NOCKMA_FILE [--args ARGS_FILE]
[-c|--config CONFIG_FILE] [-o|--output OUTPUT_FILE]
Submit a Nockma program to Anoma.Protobuf.NockService.Prove
Available options:
NOCKMA_FILE Path to a .nockma file
--args ARGS_FILE Path to a file containing args. The args file should
contain a list (i.e. to pass 2 and [1 4] as args, the
contents should be [2 [1 4] 0]).
-c,--config CONFIG_FILE A path to an Anoma client configuration file
-o,--output OUTPUT_FILE Path to output file
-h,--help Show this help text
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Jan Mas Rovira <janmasrovira@gmail.com>
This PR adds the `juvix dev anoma {start, stop, status}` commands to
manage a running Anoma client.
The motivation for this is that we can add additional commands (e.g
`indexer`, `prove`, `(mempool)-submit`) which interact with the
persistent Anoma client.
`juvix dev anoma start` now writes a configuration file in
`<juvix_config>/anoma-client/config.yaml` which contains the host URL
and
port of the started Anoma client and the pid of the Anoma client
process.
For example:
config.yaml
```
host:
port: 58922
url: localhost
pid: 75299
```
The `anoma stop` command kills the Anoma client and the `anoma status`
command shows the config of the currently running client.
There can be at most one Anoma client running when using this mechanism.
## Dependency
This PR adds a new dependency on the `unix` package. This is used for
APIs to send signals to processes.
## CLI docs
### `juvix dev anoma`
```
Usage: juvix dev anoma COMMAND
Subcommands related to the Anoma client
Available options:
-h,--help Show this help text
Available commands:
start Start an Anoma client
status Show the status of the Anoma client
stop Stop the Anoma client
```
### `juvix dev anoma start`
```
Usage: juvix dev anoma start --anoma-dir ANOMA_DIR [-g|--foreground]
[-f|--force]
Start an Anoma client
Available options:
--anoma-dir ANOMA_DIR Path to anoma repository
-g,--foreground Start the client in the foreground
-f,--force Forcefully start a client, terminating any currently
running client if necessary
-h,--help Show this help text
```
### `juvix dev anoma status`
```
Usage: juvix dev anoma status
Show the status of the Anoma client
Available options:
-h,--help Show this help text
```
### `juvix dev anoma stop`
```
Usage: juvix dev anoma stop
Stop the Anoma client
Available options:
-h,--help Show this help text
```
This PR:
1. Adds a new interpretation for the Anoma effect, which makes gRPC
calls to an existing Anoma client instead of spawning a new one.
2. Adds a new `nockma run` mode, `with-client`, which can be used to run
an Anoma program against a running Anoma client, using its URL and gRPC
port.
3. separates the `nockma run` command into subcommands.
CLI docs:
## `nockma run`
```
Usage: juvix dev nockma run COMMAND
Subcommands used to run an Anoma program. Use with artefacts obtained from
compilation with the anoma target
Available options:
-h,--help Show this help text
Available commands:
builtin-evaluator Run with the builtin Nockma evaluator
ephemeral-client Run with an ephemeral Anoma client
with-client Run with a running Anoma client
```
### `with-client`
```
Usage: juvix dev nockma run with-client
NOCKMA_FILE [--args ARGS_FILE] (-p|--grpc-port PORT) [--url URL]
Run with a running Anoma client
Available options:
NOCKMA_FILE Path to a .nockma file
--args ARGS_FILE Path to file containing args. The args file should
contain a list (i.e. to pass 2 and [1 4] as args, the
contents should be [2 [1 4] 0]).
-p,--grpc-port PORT The GRPC port of a running Anoma client
--url URL The URL of a running Anoma client. default: localhost
-h,--help Show this help text
```
### `ephemeral-client`
```
Usage: juvix dev nockma run ephemeral-client
NOCKMA_FILE [--args ARGS_FILE] --anoma-dir ANOMA_DIR
Run with an ephemeral Anoma client
Available options:
NOCKMA_FILE Path to a .nockma file
--args ARGS_FILE Path to file containing args. The args file should
contain a list (i.e. to pass 2 and [1 4] as args, the
contents should be [2 [1 4] 0]).
--anoma-dir ANOMA_DIR Path to anoma repository
-h,--help Show this help text
```
### `builtin-evaluator`
```
Usage: juvix dev nockma run builtin-evaluator
NOCKMA_FILE [--args ARGS_FILE] [--profile]
Run with the builtin Nockma evaluator
Available options:
NOCKMA_FILE Path to a .nockma file
--args ARGS_FILE Path to file containing args. The args file should
contain a list (i.e. to pass 2 and [1 4] as args, the
contents should be [2 [1 4] 0]).
--profile Report evaluator profiling statistics
-h,--help Show this help text
```
* Closes#3141
* Adds the `latte-light` theme with lighter background and makes it the
default. This is a bit subjective, but in my opinion the light theme
should not have a background darker than the browser window pane. It
should be close to white.
This PR removes `GetAnomaProcess` from the Anoma effect.
Use the `launchAnoma` function to start a persistent Anoma client /
server (used by `juvix dev anoma node`).
Other changes:
* It's no longer necessary to pass the protobuf files to `grpcurl`
because the Anoma client now supports gRPC reflection.
* We pass the elixir start command to `mix` via `-e` argument instead of
using a temporary file.
The purpose for this change is that we I want to add an interpreter for
Anoma that makes gRPC calls to an exisitng Anoma client.
`GetAnomaProcess` has no meaning for this interpreter.
The `from` and `to` long options for `juvix dev nockma encode` were
mislabelled. `from` should be the source encoding and `to` should be the
target encoding.
This PR changes how we launch the Anoma Client to avoid a bug with
linking cryptographic APIs.
libsodium cryptographic APIs like sign-detached cannot currently be
called from within the Anoma node or client binaries. Until this is
solved we must start both the node and client from the elixir REPL.
Previously we were starting the node using the REPL and the client using
the binary.
This commit changes the `start.exs` script we were using to start the
node to now start both a node and a client.
After this change we can enable Anoma compilation test `test077`.
The output of `juvix dev anoma node --anoma-dir ANOMA_DIR` is now:
```
Anoma node and client successfully started
Listening on port 51748
```
Support for emacs
[nockma-mode](https://github.com/anoma/juvix-mode/pull/25). The list of
features is given in the link.
It adds the following commands:
1. `juvix dev nockma ide check`. Parses a nockma file (used by flycheck
only).
2. `juvix dev nockma ide highlight`. Highlights a nockma file.
3. `juvix dev nockma ide rules`. Shows all evaluation rules properly
highlighted in emacs.
* Add a `--vscode` option which causes the error messages to be printed
without newlines, in a way compatible with the problem matcher of the
VSCode extension
* Related VSCode extension PR:
https://github.com/anoma/vscode-juvix/pull/153
This pr adds support for getting traces from the anoma node.
I've updated the test suite so that tests that were disabled because of
traces are now being run.
There are a few tests that require atention:
1. `test028`: Gives the wrong answer.
2. `test084`: Gives the wrong answer.
4. `test074`: Expected to fail because it uses scry.
5. `test086`: Expected to fail because Anoma representation of prngs is
different than the juvix representation.
- New command `juvix dev nockma encode --help`
```
Usage: juvix dev nockma encode --to ENCODING --from ENCODING
Encode and decode nockma terms
Available options:
--to ENCODING Choose the source encoding.
• base64: Jam and Base 64 encoding
• bytes: Jam encoding
• debug: Nockma code with annotations
• text: Nockma code without annotations
--from ENCODING Choose the target encoding.
• base64: Jam and Base 64 encoding
• bytes: Jam encoding
• debug: Nockma code with annotations
• text: Nockma code without annotations
```
* Fixes a bug in calling Anoma stdlib from Nock code
* Runs the anoma compilation test with the anoma node nockma evaluator.
I've classified the tests in 4 categories:
1. `Working`. The test works as expected.
2. `Trace`. We need more work on our end to get the traces from the
anoma node and check that they match the expected result.
3. `NodeError`. The anoma node returns `failed to prove the nock
program`.
4. `Wrong`. The anoma node returns some value that does not match the
expected value.
---------
Co-authored-by: Lukasz Czajka <lukasz@heliax.dev>
Co-authored-by: Łukasz Czajka <62751+lukaszcz@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Paul Cadman <git@paulcadman.dev>
# Changes
1. Adds a new command `juvix dev anoma node`. This command runs the
anoma node.
2. Adds a flag `--anoma-dir` to `juvix dev nockma run`. When given, it
must point to the anoma clone. Then, it will run the nockma code in the
anoma node and report the result (with no traces).
# Prerequisites
1. An anoma clone at some specific commit.
```
git clone git@github.com:anoma/anoma.git
cd anoma
git checkout 98e3660b91cd55f1d9424dcff9420425ae98f5f8
# build anoma
mix deps.get
mix escript.install hex protobuf
mix compile
# build the client
mix do --app anoma_client escript.build
```
2. The `mix` command (elixir).
3. The [`grpcurl`](https://github.com/fullstorydev/grpcurl) command. To
install a single binary in `~/.local/bin` you can run:
```
curl -sSL
"https://github.com/fullstorydev/grpcurl/releases/download/v1.9.1/grpcurl_1.9.1_linux_x86_64.tar.gz"
| tar -xz -C ~/.local/bin --no-wildcards grpcurl
```
# Testing
I've not included any test. It can be tested locally like this:
```
cd juvix/tests/Anoma/Compilation/positive
juvix compile anoma test001.juvix
echo 20 > args.debug.nockma
juvix dev nockma run --anoma-dir ~/projects/anoma test001.nockma --args args.debug.nockma
The Anoma API accepts jammed nock terms as input. The benefit to this is
that jammed terms are greatly compressed compared to the original term.
* Closes https://github.com/anoma/juvix/issues/3017
Remaining tasks:
- [x] Deserialize input nockma file in `juvix dev nockma {run, eval}`
- [x] Support debug input nockma file in `juvix dev nockma {run, eval,
repl}` i.e there should be a way to pass the `*.debug.nockma` (output of
`juvix compile anoma --debug`) file to `juvix dev nockma {run, eval,
repl}`
- [x] Add proper JuvixErrors for deserialisation failures
---------
Co-authored-by: Jan Mas Rovira <janmasrovira@gmail.com>
* Closes#3077
* Closes#3100
* Adds a compilation-time configuration script that creates a
`config/config.json` file which is then read by the
`Makefile`/`justfile` and embedded into the Juvix binary.
Implements a transformation `compute-case-anf` which lifts out
non-immediate values matched on in case expressions by introducing
let-bindings for them. In essence, this is a partial ANF transformation
for case expressions only.
For example, transforms
```
case f x of { c y := y + x; d y := y }
```
to
```
let z := f x in case z of { c y := y + x; d y := y }
```
This transformation is needed to avoid duplication of values matched on
in case-expressions in the Nockma backend.
* Closes#2962
* Depends on #2963
* In Isabelle/HOL comments cannot appear in internal syntax. All
comments inside a Juvix definition are moved outside: to before the
definition or before the earliest function clause.
---------
Co-authored-by: Jan Mas Rovira <janmasrovira@gmail.com>
- Closes#2797
Changes:
1. The global flag `--dev-show-thread-ids` is now properly being passed.
Before it was ignored.
3. The progress log has been refactored out of the `ParallelTemplate`
into the `Pipeline.Driver`. With the extra information available, I've
improved how we display the progress log:
1. We show `Compiling`, `Recompiling`, `Loading` to tell if the module
is compiled for the first time (the jvo is missing), or it needs to be
recompiled (with the reason displayed in parentheses), or is loaded from
a jvo file. In the latter case, the message is only showed with
`--log-level verbose|debug`.
2. The modules in other packages are displayed as dependencies with
their own progress counter.
2. When using `-N 1` and compiling a whole project we also get progress
log.
Example screencast:
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/7cc43cd4-9b23-4ad5-a863-832abacc1b6c
Example file:
```
module error;
import empty; -- error only happens if we have at least one import
type T := t;
x : T := t t; -- type error
```
If one loads this file into emacs (or vscode) they'll get a type error
as expected, but name colors and go-to information is lost, which is
annoying. This pr fixes this.
I'm not sure why, but this bug only occurs when there is at least one
import.
This pr has two relevant changes:
## Errors instead of crases
When registering a builtin, we perform some sanity checks. When
unsuccessful, the compiler crashes. This seldom happens because builtins
are defined in libraries that we write ourselves. However, any compiler
crash is a bug, so this pr refactors these crashes into proper errors.
## Registering builtins during scoping
Before this pr, builtins are registered and sanity checked during the
translation from Concrete to Internal. This imposes that the order in
which we translate stuff is relevant, as we must register a builtin
before we use it. For the most part this is fine when the dependency is
explicit in the code, but sometimes there are explicit dependencies.
E.g. do notation and the builtin `monad-bind`. In order to avoid adding
special rules, it is easier to just register builtins during scoping, so
I've refactored the code to do this.
I've also removed the `Builtins` effect and moved its methods to the
`InfoTableBuilder` since the builtins table is now part of the Scoped
InfoTable. Consequently, I've removed the the field `_artifactBuiltins`.
## Future work
- Fix#2952. I didn't find a good way to fix this problem in this pr, so
it is left for a separate pr.
---------
Co-authored-by: Paul Cadman <git@paulcadman.dev>
This pr adds the `--statements` flag to `juvix dev latex export`. It can
be used like this:
```
juvix dev latex export --statements "List; elem; find" List.juvix
```
All statements are selectable by their 'label'. The label of a statement
is defined as:
1. The function/type/operator/alias/axiom/local_module/fixity/iterator
name being defined.
2. The module name being imported.
## Limitations:
1. Only top statements are allowed. I.e. statements inside local modules
cannot be selected.
1. Open statements are not selectable. Giving `--statements "My.Module"`
will refer to the import statement `import My.Module`.
4. Single constructors are not selectable. Only the whole type
definition.
5. No comments will be printed.
This pr adds two new commands related to latex.
1. `juvix dev latex getJuvixSty`. This command prints the contents of
the `juvix.sty` latex package to stdout. It has no options and the
expected usage is `juvix dev latex getJuvixSty > juvix.sty`.
2. `juvix dev latex export`. Expects a .juvix file as an argument and
outputs to stdout the highlighted module in latex format. Optional flags
`--from LINE`, `--to LINE` to output only the specified line range.
There is a `--mode` flag to choose how you want the output.
```
• standalone: Output a ready to compile LaTeX file
• wrap: Wrap the code in a Verbatim environment
• raw: Output only the code (default: standalone)
```
4. As shown in the standalone output, one is allowed to choose the theme
when importing the juvix package like this: `\usepackage[theme =
latte]{juvix}`. Available themes are `latte`, `frappe`, `macchiato`,
`mocha`.
Examples:
To generate the following output I ran these commands:
```
cd examples/milestones/HelloWorld
mkdir latex
juvix dev latex getJuvixSty > latex/juvix.sty
juvix dev latex export HelloWorld.juvix > latex/main.tex
cd latex
xelatex main.tex
open main.pdf
```
1. with `\usepackage[theme = latte]{juvix}`:
![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/200c212f-cc18-4dac-95fe-b3828346e7fa)
1. with `\usepackage[theme = frappe]{juvix}`:
![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/a71d07aa-8adc-485c-a41d-3ea62dc2c5a3)
1. with `\usepackage[theme = macchiato]{juvix}`:
![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/e7e878cf-3c2b-4497-a06c-0e8a445b5116)
1. with `\usepackage[theme = mocha]{juvix}`:
![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/79a4c82c-c90e-4844-baf4-f107d8b8ae20)
This pr:
- Removes the light `ayu` theme.
- Adds the light `latte` theme (this now becomes the default theme).
- Adds the dark `frappe` theme.
- Adds the dark `moccha` theme.
- Refactor all source themes to use css variables instead of inlined
color definitions. This makes it much easier to maintain.
1. When the flatparse scanner fails and we fallback to megaparsec, a
warning is issued.
2. The flatparse scanner has been fixed so it is not confused when a
name starts with `import`.
1. Adds the `--log-level LOG_LEVEL` flag to the CLI. This flag can be
given `error`, `warn`, `info`, `progress`, `debug` as argument to filter
the logged messages.
2. Removes the `--only-errors` flag.
3. Adds the `--ide-end-error-char CHAR`, which receives a character as
an argument, which is appended to the end of error messages. This is
handy to facilitate parsing of errors messages from the ide. This
functionality was previously embeded in the old `--only-errors` flag.
* Closes#2813
Implements a translation from Juvix functions to Isabelle/HOL functions.
This extends the previous Juvix -> Isabelle translation which could
handle only type signatures.
Checklist
---------
- [x] Basic translation
- [x] Polymorphism
- [x] Arithmetic operators
- [x] Numeric literals
- [x] List literals
- [x] Comparison operators
- [x] Boolean operators
- [x] `if` translated to Isabelle `if`
- [x] `true` and `false` translated to Isabelle `True` and `False`
- [x] `zero` and `suc` translated to Isabelle `0` and `Suc`
- [x] `Maybe` translated to Isabelle `option`
- [x] Pairs translated to Isabelle tuples
- [x] Quote Isabelle identifier names (e.g. cannot begin with `_`)
- [x] Rename variables to avoid clashes (in Isabelle/HOL pattern
variables don't shadow function identifiers)
- [x] Common stdlib functions (`map`, `filter`, etc) translated to
corresponding Isabelle functions
- [x] Multiple assignments in a single `let`
- [x] CLI
- [x] Test
- The test is very fragile, similar to the markdown test. It just
compares the result of translation to Isabelle against a predefined
expected output file.
Limitations
-----------
The translation is not designed to be completely correct under all
circumstances. There are aspects of the Juvix language that cannot be
straightforwardly translated to Isabelle/HOL, and these are not planned
to ever be properly handled. There are other aspects that are difficult
but not impossible to translate, and these are left for future work.
Occasionally, the generated code may need manual adjustments to
type-check in Isabelle/HOL.
In particular:
* Higher-rank polymorphism or functions on types cannot be translated as
these features are not supported by Isabelle/HOL. Juvix programs using
these features will not be correctly translated (the generated output
may need manual adjustment).
* In cases where Juvix termination checking diverges from Isabelle/HOL
termination checking, providing a termination proof manually may be
necessary. Non-terminating Juvix functions cannot be automatically
translated and need to be manually modelled in Isabelle/HOL in a
different way (e.g. as relations).
* Comments (including judoc) are ignored. This is left for future work.
* Traits are not translated to Isabelle/HOL type classes / locales. This
is left for future work.
* Mutually recursive functions are not correctly translated. This is
left for future work.
* Record creation, update, field access and pattern matching are not
correctly translated. This is left for future work.
* Named patterns are not correctly translated. This is left for future
work.
* Side conditions in patterns are not supported. This is left for future
work.
* If a Juvix function in the translated module has the same name as some
function from the Isabelle/HOL standard library, there will be a name
clash in the generated code.
---------
Co-authored-by: Paul Cadman <git@paulcadman.dev>
Currently formatting a project is equivalent to running `juvix format`
on each individual file. Hence, the performance is quadratic wrt the
number of modules in the project. This pr fixes that and we now we only
process each module once.
# Benchmark (1236% faster 🚀)
Checking the standard library
```
hyperfine --warmup 1 'juvix format --check' 'juvix-main format --check'
Benchmark 1: juvix format --check
Time (mean ± σ): 450.6 ms ± 33.7 ms [User: 707.2 ms, System: 178.7 ms]
Range (min … max): 396.0 ms … 497.0 ms 10 runs
Benchmark 2: juvix-main format --check
Time (mean ± σ): 6.019 s ± 0.267 s [User: 9.333 s, System: 1.512 s]
Range (min … max): 5.598 s … 6.524 s 10 runs
Summary
juvix format --check ran
13.36 ± 1.16 times faster than juvix-main format --check
```
# Other changes:
1. The `EntryPoint` field `entryPointModulePath` is now optional.
2. I've introduced a new type `TopModulePathKey` which is analogous to
`TopModulePath` but wihout location information. It is used in hashmap
keys where the location in the key is never used. This is useful as we
can now get a `TopModulePathKey` from a `Path Rel File`.
3. I've refactored the `_formatInput` field in `FormatOptions` so that
it doesn't need to be a special case anymore.
4. I've introduced a new effect `Forcing` that allows to individually
force fields of a record type with a convenient syntax.
5. I've refactored some of the constraints in scoping so that they only
require `Reader Package` instead of `Reader EntryPoint`.
6. I've introduced a new type family so that local modules are no longer
required to have `ModuleId` from their type. Before, they were assigned
one, but it was never used.
# Future work:
1. For project-wise formatting, the compilation is done in parallel, but
the formatting is still done sequentially. That should be improved.
* Closes#2703
* Adds [peephole
optimization](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peephole_optimization) of
Cairo assembly.
* Adds a transformation framework for the CASM IR.
* Adds `--transforms`, `--run` and `--no-print` options to the `dev casm
read` command.
* Closes#2827
* Adds an optimization phase to the JuvixReg -> Casm pipeline, which
consists of repeated copy & constant propagation and dead code
elimination.
* Types of arguments to `main` can now be field elements, numbers,
booleans and (nested) records and lists.
* Type of `main` result can now be a record of field elements, numbers
and booleans. Lists or nested records are not allowed for the result.
* Adds checks for the type of `main` in the Cairo pipeline.
* Requires updating
[juvix-cairo-vm](https://github.com/anoma/juvix-cairo-vm). The input can
be provided in a Json file via the `--program_input` option of
`juvix-cairo-vm`.
* Adds a RISC0 backend which generates Rust code that can be compiled
with the official RISC0 toolchain.
* The RISC0 backend is a wrapper around the Rust backend.
* Adds the `risc0-rust` to the `compile` CLI command, which creates a
directory containing host and guest Rust sources for the RISC0 zkVM. The
generated code can be compiled/run using `cargo` from inside the created
directory (requires having RISC0 installed:
https://dev.risczero.com/api/zkvm/install).
* Closes#2689
* Adds the command `juvix isabelle program.juvix` which translates a
given file to an Isabelle/HOL theory.
* Currently, only a single module is translated.
* By default translates types and function signatures. Translating
function signatures can be disabled with the `--only-types` option.
Blocked by:
- https://github.com/anoma/juvix/issues/2763
---------
Co-authored-by: Jonathan Cubides <jonathan.cubides@uib.no>
This pr introduces parallelism in the pipeline to gain performance. I've
included benchmarks at the end.
- Closes#2750.
# Flags:
There are two new global flags:
1. `-N / --threads`. It is used to set the number of capabilities.
According to [GHC
documentation](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/base-4.20.0.0/docs/GHC-Conc.html#v:setNumCapabilities):
_Set the number of Haskell threads that can run truly simultaneously (on
separate physical processors) at any given time_. When compiling in
parallel, we create this many worker threads. The default value is `-N
auto`, which sets `-N` to half the number of logical cores, capped at 8.
2. `--dev-show-thread-ids`. When given, the thread id is printed in the
compilation progress log. E.g.
![image](https://github.com/anoma/juvix/assets/5511599/9359fae2-0be1-43e5-8d74-faa82cba4034)
# Parallel compilation
1. I've added `src/Parallel/ParallelTemplate.hs` which contains all the
concurrency related code. I think it is good to keep this code separated
from the actual compiler code.
2. I've added a progress log (only for the parallel driver) that outputs
a log of the compilation progress, similar to what stack/cabal do.
# Code changes:
1. I've removed the `setup` stage where we were registering
dependencies. Instead, the dependencies are registered when the
`pathResolver` is run for the first time. This way it is safer.
1. Now the `ImportTree` is needed to run the pipeline. Cycles are
detected during the construction of this tree, so I've removed `Reader
ImportParents` from the pipeline.
3. For the package pathresolver, we do not support parallelism yet (we
could add support for it in the future, but the gains will be small).
4. When `-N1`, the pipeline remains unchanged, so performance should be
the same as in the main branch (except there is a small performance
degradation due to adding the `-threaded` flag).
5. I've introduced `PipelineOptions`, which are options that are used to
pass options to the effects in the pipeline.
6. `PathResolver` constraint has been removed from the `upTo*` functions
in the pipeline due to being redundant.
7. I've added a lot of `NFData` instances. They are needed to force the
full evaluation of `Stored.ModuleInfo` in each of the threads.
2. The `Cache` effect uses
[`SharedState`](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/effectful-core-2.3.0.1/docs/Effectful-State-Static-Shared.html)
as opposed to
[`LocalState`](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/effectful-core-2.3.0.1/docs/Effectful-Writer-Static-Local.html).
Perhaps we should provide different versions.
3. I've added a `Cache` handler that accepts a setup function. The setup
is triggered when a miss is detected. It is used to lazily compile the
modules in parallel.
# Tests
1. I've adapted the smoke test suite to ignore the progress log in the
stderr.
5. I've had to adapt `tests/positive/Internal/Lambda.juvix`. Due to
laziness, a crash happening in this file was not being caught. The
problem is that in this file we have a lambda function with different
number of patterns in their clauses, which we currently do not support
(https://github.com/anoma/juvix/issues/1706).
6. I've had to comment out the definition
```
x : Box ((A : Type) → A → A) := box λ {A a := a};
```
From the test as it was causing a crash
(https://github.com/anoma/juvix/issues/2247).
# Future Work
1. It should be investigated how much performance we lose by fully
evaluating the `Stored.ModuleInfo`, since some information in it will be
discarded. It may be possible to be more fine-grained when forcing
evaluation.
8. The scanning of imports to build the import tree is sequential. Now,
we build the import tree from the entry point module and only the
modules that are imported from it are in the tree. However, we have
discussed that at some point we should make a distinction between
`juvix` _the compiler_ and `juvix` _the build tool_. When using `juvix`
as a build tool it makes sense to typecheck/compile (to stored core) all
modules in the project. When/if we do this, scanning imports in all
modules in parallel becomes trivial.
9. The implementation of the `ParallelTemplate` uses low level
primitives such as
[forkIO](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/base-4.20.0.0/docs/Control-Concurrent.html#v:forkIO).
At some point it should be refactored to use safer functions from the
[`Effectful.Concurrent.Async`](https://hackage.haskell.org/package/effectful-2.3.0.0/docs/Effectful-Concurrent-Async.html)
module.
10. The number of cores and worker threads that we spawn is determined
by the command line. Ideally, we could use to import tree to compute an
upper bound to the ideal number of cores to use.
11. We could add an animation that displays which modules are being
compiled in parallel and which have finished being compiled.
# Benchmarks
On some benchmarks, I include the GHC runtime option
[`-A`](https://downloads.haskell.org/ghc/latest/docs/users_guide/runtime_control.html#rts-flag--A%20%E2%9F%A8size%E2%9F%A9),
which sometimes makes a good impact on performance. Thanks to
@paulcadman for pointing this out. I've figured a good combination of
`-N` and `-A` through trial and error (but this oviously depends on the
cpu and juvix projects).
## Typecheck the standard library
### Clean run (88% faster than main):
```
hyperfine --warmup 1 --prepare 'juvix clean' 'juvix -N 4 typecheck Stdlib/Prelude.juvix +RTS -A33554432' 'juvix -N 4 typecheck Stdlib/Prelude.juvix' 'juvix-main typecheck Stdlib/Prelude.juvix'
Benchmark 1: juvix -N 4 typecheck Stdlib/Prelude.juvix +RTS -A33554432
Time (mean ± σ): 444.1 ms ± 6.5 ms [User: 1018.0 ms, System: 77.7 ms]
Range (min … max): 432.6 ms … 455.9 ms 10 runs
Benchmark 2: juvix -N 4 typecheck Stdlib/Prelude.juvix
Time (mean ± σ): 628.3 ms ± 23.9 ms [User: 1227.6 ms, System: 69.5 ms]
Range (min … max): 584.7 ms … 670.6 ms 10 runs
Benchmark 3: juvix-main typecheck Stdlib/Prelude.juvix
Time (mean ± σ): 835.9 ms ± 12.3 ms [User: 788.5 ms, System: 31.9 ms]
Range (min … max): 816.0 ms … 853.6 ms 10 runs
Summary
juvix -N 4 typecheck Stdlib/Prelude.juvix +RTS -A33554432 ran
1.41 ± 0.06 times faster than juvix -N 4 typecheck Stdlib/Prelude.juvix
1.88 ± 0.04 times faster than juvix-main typecheck Stdlib/Prelude.juvix
```
### Cached run (43% faster than main):
```
hyperfine --warmup 1 'juvix -N 4 typecheck Stdlib/Prelude.juvix +RTS -A33554432' 'juvix -N 4 typecheck Stdlib/Prelude.juvix' 'juvix-main typecheck Stdlib/Prelude.juvix'
Benchmark 1: juvix -N 4 typecheck Stdlib/Prelude.juvix +RTS -A33554432
Time (mean ± σ): 241.3 ms ± 7.3 ms [User: 538.6 ms, System: 101.3 ms]
Range (min … max): 231.5 ms … 251.3 ms 11 runs
Benchmark 2: juvix -N 4 typecheck Stdlib/Prelude.juvix
Time (mean ± σ): 235.1 ms ± 12.0 ms [User: 405.3 ms, System: 87.7 ms]
Range (min … max): 216.1 ms … 253.1 ms 12 runs
Benchmark 3: juvix-main typecheck Stdlib/Prelude.juvix
Time (mean ± σ): 336.7 ms ± 13.3 ms [User: 269.5 ms, System: 67.1 ms]
Range (min … max): 316.9 ms … 351.8 ms 10 runs
Summary
juvix -N 4 typecheck Stdlib/Prelude.juvix ran
1.03 ± 0.06 times faster than juvix -N 4 typecheck Stdlib/Prelude.juvix +RTS -A33554432
1.43 ± 0.09 times faster than juvix-main typecheck Stdlib/Prelude.juvix
```
## Typecheck the test suite of the containers library
At the moment this is the biggest juvix project that we have.
### Clean run (105% faster than main)
```
hyperfine --warmup 1 --prepare 'juvix clean' 'juvix -N 6 typecheck Main.juvix +RTS -A67108864' 'juvix -N 4 typecheck Main.juvix' 'juvix-main typecheck Main.juvix'
Benchmark 1: juvix -N 6 typecheck Main.juvix +RTS -A67108864
Time (mean ± σ): 1.006 s ± 0.011 s [User: 2.171 s, System: 0.162 s]
Range (min … max): 0.991 s … 1.023 s 10 runs
Benchmark 2: juvix -N 4 typecheck Main.juvix
Time (mean ± σ): 1.584 s ± 0.046 s [User: 2.934 s, System: 0.149 s]
Range (min … max): 1.535 s … 1.660 s 10 runs
Benchmark 3: juvix-main typecheck Main.juvix
Time (mean ± σ): 2.066 s ± 0.010 s [User: 1.939 s, System: 0.089 s]
Range (min … max): 2.048 s … 2.077 s 10 runs
Summary
juvix -N 6 typecheck Main.juvix +RTS -A67108864 ran
1.57 ± 0.05 times faster than juvix -N 4 typecheck Main.juvix
2.05 ± 0.03 times faster than juvix-main typecheck Main.juvix
```
### Cached run (54% faster than main)
```
hyperfine --warmup 1 'juvix -N 6 typecheck Main.juvix +RTS -A33554432' 'juvix -N 4 typecheck Main.juvix' 'juvix-main typecheck Main.juvix'
Benchmark 1: juvix -N 6 typecheck Main.juvix +RTS -A33554432
Time (mean ± σ): 551.8 ms ± 13.2 ms [User: 1419.8 ms, System: 199.4 ms]
Range (min … max): 535.2 ms … 570.6 ms 10 runs
Benchmark 2: juvix -N 4 typecheck Main.juvix
Time (mean ± σ): 636.7 ms ± 17.3 ms [User: 1006.3 ms, System: 196.3 ms]
Range (min … max): 601.6 ms … 655.3 ms 10 runs
Benchmark 3: juvix-main typecheck Main.juvix
Time (mean ± σ): 847.2 ms ± 58.9 ms [User: 710.1 ms, System: 126.5 ms]
Range (min … max): 731.1 ms … 890.0 ms 10 runs
Summary
juvix -N 6 typecheck Main.juvix +RTS -A33554432 ran
1.15 ± 0.04 times faster than juvix -N 4 typecheck Main.juvix
1.54 ± 0.11 times faster than juvix-main typecheck Main.juvix
```
* Implements code generation through Rust.
* CLI: adds two `dev` compilation targets:
1. `rust` for generating Rust code
2. `native-rust` for generating a native executable via Rust
* Adds end-to-end tests for compilation from Juvix to native executable
via Rust.
* A target for RISC0 needs to be added in a separate PR building on this
one.