* implement popen and pclose (to an extent) for NodeJS
* bring node020 back into tests.
* ah, I see what was being done here. Fix the idris for the test.
* fix test's unreachable clause warning
* fix expectation
* Add note to CHANGELOG
* small tweaks to get popen into merge-ready state.
* make color output toggling simpler and also more robust
* don't unintentionally assert that tests are run in an environment where colors are turned on.
* Update src/Idris/Env.idr
* Add Show for Vect.All
* Add an alias for HVect to Data.Vect.Quantifiers.All
* Add a few utilities for Vect.Quantifiers.All to make it more at home in listy uses.
* Add CHANGELOG entries.
Also updated test real002 to use the actual Control.App from
libs/base/Control/App.idr. Before it was using a different version that
existed within its test directory, tests/idris2/real002/Control/App.idr
* Fix symbom mangling
* Revert "Fix symbom mangling"
This reverts commit 6481e80155.
* Fix typo
* [RefC] Add missed prims of setBuffer* .
* [ fix ] formatting
* [ re #2609 ] Use 'UInt' instead of 'Word'
More descriptive/to the point / Less assumed knowledge.
There are no *LE suffixes for UInt8, since endianness is to do with
multiple bytes and UInt8 is a single one.
Co-authored-by: Guillaume Allais <guillaume.allais@ens-lyon.org>
Co-authored-by: Thomas E. Hansen <teh6@st-andrews.ac.uk>
* [ base ] Deprecate setByte in favour of setBits8
Deprecate getByte; fix Core.Binary.Prims
Along with `setByte`, the `getByte` function should similarly be
deprecated since it also assumes the value will have the given size,
rather than guaranteeing it in the type.
CI highlighted some required changes in `Core.Binary.Prims` thanks to
`-Werror`. The fix was to add some `cast` calls where the old `getByte`
and `setByte` used to be.
The RefC buffer test will need updating once we remove the functions
completely. Added a note for future peeps.
A common issue for users is that the behaviour of the various repl
commands are not documented anywhere despite some of them having complex
behaviour (e.g. `:set` which accepts a specific set of options). This
implements the ability to call `:?|:h|:help` on repl commands to request
detailed help for a specific repl command, while preserving the
behaviour that calling the help command without any arguments prints the
general help text.
Generic help is defined as the first line of the help text.
Detailed help is defined as the entire help text.
This means that `:help :t`, for example, does not error (there is no
detailed help) but instead just prints the single line of help text.
* [ repl ] Use unlines for detailed help (see #2087)
Ideally, the lines affected should be multiline strings. But for some
arcane reason, newlines in those get swallowed in Nix and Windows
**CI** only Ô.o
This was already documented in issue #2087.
* [ new ] --except for golden testing lib
To allow CI to pass despite #2087
Co-authored-by: Guillaume Allais <guillaume.allais@ens-lyon.org>
This completes the implementation of the examples in the paper
"Applications of Applicative Proof Search" (Liam O'Connor, 2016).
Unfortunately, the final example is an example of something that _can_
be expressed, but _cannot_ be model-checked by the approach in the
paper.
(Side note on `petersonsCorrect`: The paper mentions that it checks in
~3 minutes on a 2013 MacBook Pro. Assuming they mean "type-checks", this
is roughly consistent with our observations of just short of 2 minutes.
I doubt that they evaluated it, since an attempt at doing this on a
reasonably modern server (Intel Xeon Gold 5220R, 502 GB of RAM) was
killed after just over 3 hours, producing the following resource log:
Command exited with non-zero status 255
Time: 11320.46s user, 35.12s system, 3h09m46s elapsed, 99%CPU
Memory: 57644016 Kbytes RAM
)
On average across 10 runs on an Intel Core i7-8750H with 15.2GB of
available system memory (16GB installed in system), type-checking
`libs/papers/Search/GCL.idr` WITH `petersonsCorrect` takes:
* 1 minute 48.7 seconds, consuming 3.92GB of RAM
By contrast, commenting `petersonsCorrect` out results in type-checking
taking on average (same #runs, same config):
* 0 minutes 1.2 seconds, consuming 0.25GB of RAM
And good luck trying to evaluate the thing!
(This might be a good performance test at some point, but uh, we're not
there yet...)
Thanks to the debug info supplied by #2673, I was able to spot which
functions were blocking and `public import` the relevant files in
`papers/Search/Properties.idr`.
As a result the GCL file now type-checks, albeit extremely slowly!
I stopped an evaluation of `petersonsCorrect` at the REPL after 15
minutes and ~14GB of RAM consumed.
* Currying the `ops` function makes the totality checker spot that it
_is_ actually total.
* Instance arguments are heavily abused in the paper, along with
implicit `open` magic, but Idris allows no such ~~luxury~~
obfuscation, so we have to pass things explicitly.
* `decSo` is not `public export`ed, so we have to define `IsTT` by
pattern-matching (which is fine).
Currently, it gets stuck on checking `petersonsCorrect` for some,
currently unknown, reason. (And the log output is loooooong O.O)
Once again, this would not have been possible without gallais insigths.
Many thanks!
Co-authored-by: Guillaume Allais <guillaume.allais@ens-lyon.org>
* Switch to `Inf` to actually use codata/corecursion.
* Add `%hint`s to mark the interface implementations as such, despite
use of a record for `DepthInv` (this is necessary for other stuff).
* Pass in `Oh` to `reaches10.evidence` in order for things to work.
With huge thanks to gallais for helping me put the final things in
place!
Co-authored-by: Guillaume Allais <guillaume.allais@ens-lyon.org>
Termination checking needs figuring out. There is some funky stuff going
on with the half-deciders and their constructors. Other than that, I
**think** it's nearly done. God knows how much RAM it'll take though...
Seems to be very slow though...
And Idris is unable to find the depth-inv instance for `r10Proof`.
Could be that auto-search is not as strong as Agda's? Or more likely,
I've set things up slightly wrong...
This also caught an implementation error in the Global formula
definitions:
AG f = A[ f U (f AND' Completed) ]
and **not**
AG f = A[ (f U f) AND' Completed ]
(both of which are valid parsings of the original
AG f = A[ f u f AND' Completed]
)
This makes more sense in terms of `EU` being efficient and only
evaluating as much as it needs to. However, I'm not sure `model.follow`
is implemented correctly (Agda delays the call to `model.followAll`,
which I'm unsure if we can do (and if so, how to do it) in Idris)...
This reveals an unfortunate problem/misunderstanding: For `ExistsUntil`
to make sense, in terms of evaluation speedups, the list needs to be
lazy. Which is _not_ what `Lazy (List a)` does /!\
I need to switch to LazyList...
And here's a good case against allowing custom unicode syntax:
〈$〉 is `<$>`, i.e. the infix notation for `map`. That's fine; If you
happen to know it!
ESPECIALLY, if your paper defines 〈_〉 as custom notation for a guarded
expression! Then there is **no way** to tell that the expression 〈$〉
is not a guarded expression over `$`, but is instead the alias for
`map`!! You just have to magically know this beforehand!
We also need an explicit `Lazy` annotation for Idris to be happy with
the implicit `ms` in the `IsCompleted` constructor.
The proofs of depth-invariance for Always Until and Exists Until require
mapping the proofs over the Formulae's internal `All` and `Any`
respectively. Idris provides some functions for this, but they erase the
list and so don't quite work. Instead we need to implement our own,
which don't erase the list.
Don't you love when papers introduce syntax and functions which you've
never seen before and don't seem to match the types of the existing
stuff?
P.S. YEET! (aka. that's probably enough for today ^^)
The original Agda code declares the module with L and Sigma (Lbls and
Sts) with type Set. This is apparently close to a parameter block, which
solves the unification error I was having with `now`! Huge thanks to
gallais for showing me that!
I should have put this under version-control WAAAAAY sooner than this!
Oh well, better late than never...
There are some fun problems to solve in terms of type-mismatch and
erasure, but that's for another day.
* first pass at signal support for node backend
* change signal values to int's
* implements defaultSignal
* return -1 as expected by calling API if any error is raised by nodejs runtime
* finishes signal support for nodejs
* extract repetitive foreign import identifiers
* fix comments
As discussed with edwin, let's get rid of the external TT type.
There is no way to get your hands on a TT value anyway so this
should not change anything.
Put the `RWST` argument to be the last one. This makes such functions
to be easier used in point-free compositions and to be easily
interchangeable with existing `runStateT`-like functions.
`Given` with `Always` from Idris 1 library are completely overridden by
`IsYes` and `ItIsYes` respectively, which have a more common naming.
This, however, may break some very old code (fixed by a trivial rename).
* RefC backend improvements
1. OnCollect had the wrong number of arguments. The code creator expects
3 arguments, but onCollect in prim.h expected 4 arguments. The first of which
was an erased arguments. That is now fixed.
2. OnCollect did not call `newReference` when creating a new reference to the pointer
and the freeing function
3. OnCollect and OnCollectAny still had a spurious printf statement
Those issues have been fixed, the test case can be found in
tests/refc/garbageCollect
4. The IORef mechanism expects that the %World token will be passed around
consistently. This is not the case. States in Control.App make use of
IORefs, but the function created from Control.App.prim_app_bind
had the world token erased to NULL.
Now, IORefs are managed using a global variable,
IORef_Storage * global_IORef_Storage;
referenced in cBackend.h, defined in the created .c file, and set to NULL
in main();
5. While multithreading and forking is still not supported, compiling a program
that makes use of Control.App demands a C implementation of prim_fork.
Files support/refc/threads.c and support/refc/threads.h provide a
dummy implementation for it, so that Control.App programs compile and run.
A test for these 2 issues is given in tests/refc/issue2424
* format changes
to make the linter happy
* format changes
to make the linter happy
* format changes
to make the linter happy
* spelling mistake braket -> bracket
Co-authored-by: Volkmar Frinken <volkmar@onutechnology.com>
* Allow functions to be marked for foreign export
This relies on the backend knowing what to do with such things, but the
general idea is to mark them with '%export "backend:exportedname"' then
'getCompileDataWith', given a back end, will search for every function
that needs to be exported, as well as every function starting from the
expression to be compiled. This will allow Idris functions to be called
from other languages, where a backend supports it.
This is hard to set up a test case for, for the moment, since no
backends actually do anything with it. So consider it a bit of a
placeholder for now.
* Add missing clause to Eq FnOpt
Thanks to @buzden