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1\part{Language}
2\label{part:lang}
3
4\chapter{Overview of CIVL-C}
5
6\section{Main Concepts}
7
8CIVL-C is an extension of a subset of the C11 dialect of C. It
9includes the most commonly-used elements of C, including most of the
10syntax, types, expressions, and statements. Missing are some of the
11more esoteric type qualifiers, bitwise operations (at least for now),
12and much of the standard library. Moreover, none of the C11 language
13elements dealing with concurrency are included, as CIVL-C has its own
14concurrency primitives.
15
16The keywords in CIVL-C not already in C begin with the symbol \cckey.
17This makes them readily identifiable and also prevents any naming
18conflicts with identifiers in C programs. This means that most legal
19C programs will also be legal CIVL-C programs.
20
21One of the most important features of CIVL-C not found in standard C
22is the ability to define functions in any scope. (Standard C allows
23function definitions only in the file scope.) This feature is also
24found in GNU C, the GNU extension of C.
25
26Another central CIVL-C feature is the ability to \emph{spawn}
27functions, i.e., run the function in a new \emph{process} (thread).
28
29\emph{Scopes} and \emph{processes} are the two central themes of
30CIVL-C. Each has a static and a dynamic aspect. The static scopes
31correspond to the lexical scopes in the program---typically, regions
32delimited by curly braces \lb \ldots \rb. At runtime, these scopes
33are \emph{instantiated} when control in a process reaches the
34beginning of the scope. Processes are created dynamically by
35\emph{spawning} functions; hence the functions are the static
36representation of processes.
37
38\section{Example Illustrating Scopes and Processes}
39
40To understand the static and dynamic nature of scopes and processes,
41and the relations between them, we consider the (artificial) example
42code of Figure \ref{fig:scopecodeex}. The static scopes in the scope
43are numbered from $0$ to $6$.
44
45\begin{figure}[t]
46 \centering
47 \includegraphics[scale=1.2]{scopeCodeExample}
48 \caption{CIVL-C code skeleton to illustrate scope hierarchy}
49 \label{fig:scopecodeex}
50\end{figure}
51
52\begin{figure}
53 \centering
54 \includegraphics[scale=1.2]{scopeStateExample}
55 \caption{Static scope tree and a state for example program}
56 \label{fig:scopestateex}
57\end{figure}
58
59The static scopes have a tree structure: one scope is a child of
60another if the first is immediately contained in the second. Scope 0,
61which is the file scope (or \emph{root} scope) is the root of this
62tree. The static scope tree is depicted in Figure
63\ref{fig:scopestateex} (left). Each scope is identified by its
64integer ID. Additionally, if the scope happens to be the scope of a
65function definition, the name of the function is included in this
66identifier. A node in this tree also shows the variables and
67functions declared in the scope. For brevity, we omit the \emph{proc}
68variables.
69
70We now look at what happens when this program executes. Figure
71\ref{fig:scopestateex} (right) illustrates a possible state of the
72program at one point in an execution. We now explain how
73this state is arrived at.
74
75First, there is an implicit \emph{root function} placed around the
76entire code. The body of the \emph{main} function becomes the body
77of the root function, and the \emph{main} function itself disappears.
78This minor transformation does not change the structure of the scope
79tree.
80
81Execution begins by spawning a process $p_0$ to execute the root
82function. This causes scope $0$ to be instantiated. An instance of a
83static scope is known as a \emph{dynamic scope}, or \emph{dyscopes}
84for short. The dynamic scopes are represented by the ovals with
85double borders on the right side of Figure \ref{fig:scopestateex}.
86Each dyscope specifies a value for every variable declared in the
87corresponding static scope. In this case, the value $3$ has been
88assigned to variable \texttt{x}.
89
90The state of process $p_0$ is represented by a \emph{call stack}
91(green). The entries on this stack are \emph{activation frames}.
92Each frame contains two data: a reference to a dyscope (indicated by
93blue arrows) and a current location (or programmer counter vaule) in
94the static scope corresponding to that dyscope (not shown). The
95dyscope defines the environment in which the process evaluates
96expressions and executes statements. The currently executing function
97of a process, corresponding to the top frame in the call stack, can
98``see'' only the variables in its dyscope and those of all the
99ancestors of its dyscope in the dyscope tree.
100
101Returning to the example, $p_0$ enters scope 6, instanitating that
102scope, and then spawns procedure \texttt{f}. This creates process
103$p_1$, with a new stack with a frame pointing to a dyscope
104corresponding to static scope 1. The new process proceed to run
105concurrently with $p_0$. Meanwhile, $p_0$ calls procedure \texttt{g},
106which pushes a new entry onto its call stack, and instantiates scope
1075. Hence $p_0$ has two entries on its stack: the bottom one pointing
108to the instance of scope 6, the top one pointing to the instance of
109scope 5.
110
111Meanwhile, assume $\texttt{x}>0$, so that $p_1$ takes the \emph{true}
112branch of the \texttt{if} statement, instantiating scope 3 under the
113instance of scope 1. It then spawns two copies of procedure
114\texttt{f1}, creating processes $p_2$ and $p_3$ and two instances of
115scope 2. Then $p_1$ spawns \texttt{f2}, creating process $p_4$ and an
116instance of scope 4. Note that the instance of scope 4 is a child of
117the instance of scope 3, since the (static) scope 4 is a child of
118scope 3. Finally, $p_1$ calls \texttt{f2}, pushing a new entry on its
119stack and creating another instance of scope 4. The final state
120arrived at is the one shown.
121
122There are few key points to understand:
123\begin{itemize}
124\item In any state, there is a mapping from the dyscope tree to the
125 static scope tree which maps a dyscope to the static scope of which
126 it is an instance. This mapping is a \emph{tree homomorphism},
127 i.e., if dyscope $u$ is a child of dyscope $v$, then the static
128 scope corresponding to $u$ is a child of the static scope
129 corresponding to $v$.
130\item A static scope may have any number of instances, including 0.
131\item Dynamic scopes are created when control enters the corresponding
132 static scope; they disappear from the state when they become
133 unreachable. A dyscope $v$ is ``reachable'' if some process has a
134 frame pointing to a dyscope $u$ and there is a path from $u$ up to
135 $v$ that follows the parent edges in the dyscope tree.
136\item Processes are created when functions are spawned; they disappear
137 from the state when their stack becomes empty (either because the
138 process terminates normally or invokes the \emph{exit} system
139 function).
140\end{itemize}
141
142\section{Structure of a CIVL-C program}
143
144A CIVL-C program is structured very much like a standard C program.
145In particular, a CIVL-C program may use the preprocessor directives
146specified in the C Standard, and with the same meaning. A source
147program is preprocessed, then parsed, resulting in a translation unit,
148just as with standard C. The main differences are the nesting of
149function definitions and the new primitives beginning with
150\texttt{\$}, which are described in detail in the remainder of this
151part of the manual.
152
153A CIVL-C program must begin with the line
154\begin{verbatim}
155#include <civlc.h>
156\end{verbatim}
157which includes the main CIVL-C header file, which declares all the
158types and other CIVL primitives.
159
160As usual, a translation unit consists of a sequence of variable
161declarations, function prototypes, and function definitions in file
162scope. In addition, \emph{assume} statements may occur in the file
163scope. These are used to state assumptions on the input values
164to a program.
165
166\chapter{Sequential Elements}
167
168In this chapter we describe the main sequential elements of the
169language. For the most part these are the same as in C.
170Primitives dealing with concurrency are introduced in Chapter
171\ref{chap:concurrency}.
172
173\section{Types}
174
175\subsection{Standard types inherited from C}
176
177The \texttt{civlc.cvh} defines standard types inherited from C.
178The boolean type is denoted \verb!_Bool!, as in C. Its values are $0$
179and $1$, which are also denoted by $\cfalse$ and $\ctrue$,
180respectively.
181
182There is one integer type, corresponding to the mathematical integers.
183Currently, all of the C integer types \texttt{int}, \texttt{long},
184\texttt{unsigned\ int}, \texttt{short}, etc., are mapped to the CIVL
185integer type.
186
187There is one real type, corresponding to the mathematical real
188numbers. Currently, all of the C real types \texttt{double},
189\texttt{float}, etc., are mapped to the CIVL real type.
190
191Array types, \texttt{struct} and \texttt{union} types, \texttt{char},
192and pointer types (including pointers to functions) are all exactly as
193in C.
194
195% \subsection{The heap type $\cheap$ and handles}
196
197% Unlike C, a CIVL-C program does not necessarily have access to a
198% single, global heap. Instead, there is a $\cheap$ type, and heaps may
199% be declared explicitly wherever they are needed. Hence a CIVL-C
200% program may have several heaps, and these may exist in different
201% scopes.
202
203% A heap is declared and created as follows:
204% \begin{verbatim}
205% $heap h = $heap_create();
206% \end{verbatim}
207% The function \verb!$heap_create()! creates a new empty heap in the
208% current scope and returns a \emph{handle} to that heap. A handle is
209% like a pointer: it is a reference to another object. However, a handle
210% is much more restricted than a general pointer. In particular, it
211% cannot be dereferenced (by the \ct{*} operator). The underlying heap
212% object can only be accessed by using a handle to it as an argument to
213% a system function.
214
215% Handles can be used in assignments and passed as arguments to functions.
216% For example, this declaration could follow the one above:
217% \begin{verbatim}
218% $heap h2=h;
219% \end{verbatim}
220% After executing this code, \ct{h2} and \ct{h} will be aliased, i.e., the two
221% handles will refer to the same heap object.
222
223% The heap object exists in the scope in which it is created. In
224% particular, it will disappear when that scope disappears, i.e., when
225% control reaches the right curly brace that defines the end of the
226% scope. At that point, any references into the heap become invalid.
227
228% The following system functions deal with heaps:
229% \begin{verbatim}
230% void* $malloc($heap h, int size);
231% void free(void *p)
232% \end{verbatim}
233% The first function is like C's \texttt{malloc}, except that you
234% specify the heap in which the allocation takes place.
235% This modifies the specified heap and returns a pointer to the new object.
236% The function can only occur in a context in which the type of the object is
237% specified, as in:
238% \begin{verbatim}
239% $heap h;
240% int n = 10;
241% double *p = (double*)$malloc(h, n*sizeof(double));
242% \end{verbatim}
243% The function \ct{free} is exactly the same as in C. Note that
244% \texttt{free} modifies the heap which was used to allocate \texttt{p}.
245
246
247\subsection{The bundle type: \cbundle}
248\label{subsec:bundleType}
249
250CIVL-C includes a type named \cbundle, declared in the CIVL-C standard header \texttt{bundle.cvh}. A bundle is basically a
251sequence of data, wrapped into an atomic package. A bundle is created
252using a function that specifies a region of memory. One can create a
253bundle from an array of integers, and another bundle from an array of
254reals. Both bundles have the same type, \cbundle. They can therefore
255be entered into an array of \cbundle, for example. Hence bundles are
256useful for mixing objects of different (even statically unknown) types
257into a single data structure. Later, the contents of a bundle can be
258extracted with another function that specifies a region of memory into
259which to unpack the bundle; if that memory does not have the right
260type to receive the contents of the bundle, a runtime error is
261generated. The bundle type and its functions are provided by the library \texttt{bundle.cvh}.
262
263The relevant functions for creating and manipulating bundles
264are given in Section \ref{subsec:bundleLibrary}.
265
266\subsection{The \cscope{} type}
267\label{sec:scopetype}
268
269An object of type $\cscope$ is a reference to a dynamic scope. It may
270be thought of as a ``dynamic scope ID, '' but it is not an integer and
271cannot be converted to an integer. Operations defined on scopes are
272discussed in Section \ref{sec:scopeexpr}.
273
274\subsection{The \crange{} and \cdomain{} types}
275
276CIVL-C provides certain abstract datatypes that are useful for
277representing iteration spaces of loops in an abstract way.
278
279First, there is a built-in type $\crange$. An object of this type
280represents an ordered set of integers. There are expressions for
281specifying range values; these are described in Section
282\ref{sec:range_expr}. Ranges are typically used as a step
283in constructing \emph{domains}, described next.
284
285A domain type is used to represent a set of tuples of integer values.
286Every tuple in a domain object has the same arity (i.e., number of
287components). The arity must be at least 1, and is called the
288\emph{dimension} of the domain object.
289
290For each integer constant expression $n$, there is a type
291\cdomainof{\(n\)}, representing domains of dimension $n$.
292% \texttt{\cdomain{}(}]\(n\)\texttt{)}
293The \emph{universal domain type}, denoted \cdomain{}, represents
294domains of all positive dimensions, i.e., it is the union over all
295$n\geq 1$ of \cdomainof{\(n\)}. In particular, each \cdomainof{\(n\)}
296is a subtype of \cdomain{}.
297
298There are expressions for specifying domain values; these are
299described in Section \ref{sec:domain_expr}. There are also certains
300statements that use domains, such as the ``CIVL-\emph{for}'' loop
301\cfor; see Section \ref{sec:cfor}.
302
303
304\section{Expressions}
305
306\subsection{Expressions inherited from C}
307
308The following C expressions are included in CIVL:
309\begin{itemize}
310\item \emph{constant} expressions
311\item \emph{identifier} expressions (\texttt{x})
312\item parenthetical expressions (\verb!(e)!)
313\item numerical \emph{addition} (\verb!a+b!), \emph{subtraction} (\verb!a-b!),
314 \emph{multiplication} (\verb!a*b!), \emph{division} (\verb!a/b!),
315 \emph{unary plus} (\verb!+a!), \emph{unary minus} (\verb!-a!),
316 \emph{integer division} (\verb!a/b!) and \emph{modulus} (\verb!a%b!),
317 all with their ideal mathematical interpretations
318\item array \emph{index} expressions (\verb!a[e]!) and struct or union
319 \emph{navigation} expressions (\verb!x.f!, \verb!p->f!)
320\item \emph{address-of} (\verb!&e!), pointer \emph{dereference} (\verb!*p!),
321 pointer \emph{addition} (\verb!p+i!) and \emph{subtraction} (\verb!p-q!)
322 expressions
323\item relational expressions (\verb!a==b!, \verb~a!=b~, \verb!a>=b!,
324 \verb!a<=b!, \verb!a<b!, \verb!a>b!)
325\item logical \emph{not} (\verb~!p~), \emph{and} (\verb!p&&q!), and
326 \emph{or} (\verb!p||q!)
327\item \emph{sizeof} a type (\verb!sizeof(t)!) or expression (\verb!sizeof(e)!)
328\item \emph{assignment} expressions (\verb!a=b!, \verb!a+=b!, \verb!a-=b!,
329 \verb!a*=b!, \verb!a/=b!, \verb!a%=b!, \verb!a++!, \verb!a--!)
330\item function \emph{calls} \verb!f(e1,...,en)!
331\item \emph{conditional} expressions (\verb!b ? e : f!).
332\item \emph{cast} expressions (\verb!(t)e!)
333\end{itemize}
334
335Bit-wise operations are not yet supported.
336
337\subsection{Scope expressions}
338\label{sec:scopeexpr}
339
340As mentioned in Section \ref{sec:scopetype}, CIVL-C provides a type
341\cscope. An object of this type is a reference to a dynamic scope.
342Several constants, expressions, and functions dealing with the
343\cscope{} type are also provided.
344
345The $\cscope$ type is like any other object type. It may be used as
346the element type of an array, a field in a structure or union, and so
347on. Expressions of type $\cscope$ may occur on the left or right-hand
348sides of assignments and as arguments in function calls just like any
349other expression. Two different variables of type $\cscope$ may be
350aliased, i.e., they may refer to the same dynamic scope.
351
352A dynamic scope $\delta$ is \emph{reachable} if there exists a path
353which starts from the dyscope referenced by some frame on the call
354stack of a process, follows the parent edges in the dyscope tree, and
355terminates in $\delta$. If a dyscope is not reachable, it can never
356become reachable, and it cannot have any effect on the subsequent
357execution of the program.
358
359Normally, a dynamic scope will eventually become unreachable. At some
360point after it becomes unreachable, it will be collected in a
361garbage-collection-like sweep, and any existing references to that
362scope will become \emph{undefined}. An object of type $\cscope$ is
363also undefined before it is initialized. Any use of an undefined
364value is reported as an error by CIVL, so it is important to be sure
365that a scope variable is defined before using it.
366
367
368\subsubsection{Checking if a dyscope is defined: \cscopedefined}
369
370The header \texttt{civlc.cvh} provides a function \cscopedefined{}, which checks if a given
371value of \cscope{} type is defined, as described in Section \ref{subsubsec:scopedefined}.
372
373\subsubsection{The constant \chere}
374
375A constant \chere{} exists in every scope. This constant has
376type \cscope{} and refers to the dynamic scope in which it is
377contained. For example,
378\begin{verbatim}
379 { // scope s
380 int *p = (int*)$malloc($here, n*sizeof(int));
381 }
382\end{verbatim}
383allocates an object consisting of $n$ ints in the scope $s$.
384
385\subsubsection{The constant \cscoperoot{}}
386
387There is a global constant \cscoperoot{} of type $\cscope$ which
388refers to the root dynamic scope.
389
390
391\subsubsection{Scope relational operators}
392
393Let $s_1$ and $s_2$ be expressions of type \cscope. The following are
394all CIVL-C expressions of boolean type:
395\begin{itemize}
396\item $s_1$ \ct{==} $s_2$. This is \emph{true} iff $s_1$ and $s_2$
397 refer to the same dynamic scope.
398\item $s_1$ \ct{!=} $s_2$. This is \emph{true} iff $s_1$ and $s_2$
399 refer to different dynamic scopes.
400\item $s_1$ \ct{<=} $s_2$. This is \emph{true} iff $s_1$ is equal to
401 or a descendant of $s_2$, i.e., $s_1$ is equal to or contained in $s_2$.
402\item $s_1$ \ct{<} $s_2$. This is \emph{true} iff $s_1$ is a strict
403 descendant of $s_2$, i.e., $s_1$ is contained in $s_2$ and is not
404 equal to $s_2$.
405\item $s_1$ \ct{>} $s_2$. This is equivalent to $s_2$ \ct{<} $s_1$.
406\item $s_1$ \ct{>=} $s_2$. This is equivalent to $s_2$ \ct{<=} $s_1$.
407\end{itemize}
408If $s_1$ or $s_2$ is undefined in any of these expressions, an error
409will be reported.
410
411\subsubsection{Scope parent function \texorpdfstring{\cscopeparent}{\$scope\_parent}}
412
413The CIVL-C header \texttt{scope.cvh} provides the function \cscopeparent{} that computes the immediate
414parent of a dynamic scope, as described in Section \ref{subsec:scopeLibrary}.
415
416\subsubsection{Lowest Common Ancestor: \ct{+}}
417
418The expression $s_1$ \ct{+} $s_2$, where $s_1$ and $s_2$ are
419expressions of type \cscope, evaluates to the lowest common ancestor
420of $s_1$ and $s_2$ in the dynamic scope tree. This is the smallest
421dynamic scope containing both $s_1$ and $s_2$.
422
423\subsubsection{The \cscopeof{} expression}
424
425Given any left-hand-side expression \ct{expr}, the expression
426\begin{verbatim}
427 $scopeof(expr)
428\end{verbatim}
429evaluates to the dynamic scope containing the object specified by
430\ct{expr}.
431
432The following example illustrates the semantics of the \cscopeof{}
433operator. All of the assertions hold:
434\begin{verbatim}
435{
436 $scope s1 = $here;
437 int x;
438 double a[10];
439
440 {
441 $scope s2 = $here;
442 int *p = &x;
443 double *q = &a[4];
444
445 assert($scopeof(x)==s1);
446 assert($scopeof(p)==s2);
447 assert($scopeof(*p)==s1);
448 assert($scopeof(a)==s1);
449 assert($scopeof(a[5])==s1);
450 assert($scopeof(q)==s2);
451 assert($scopeof(*q)==s1);
452 }
453}
454\end{verbatim}
455
456\subsection{Range and domain expressions}
457
458\subsubsection{Regular range expressions}
459\label{sec:range_expr}
460
461An expression of the form
462\begin{verbatim}
463 lo .. hi
464\end{verbatim}
465where \texttt{lo} and \texttt{hi} are integer expressions, represents
466the range consisting of the integers $\texttt{lo}, \texttt{lo}+1,
467\ldots, \texttt{hi}$ (in that order).
468
469An expression of the form
470\begin{verbatim}
471 lo .. hi # step
472\end{verbatim}
473where \texttt{lo}, \texttt{hi}, and \texttt{step} are integer
474expressions is interpreted as follows. If \texttt{step} is positive,
475it represents the range consisting of $\texttt{lo},
476\texttt{lo}+\texttt{step}, \texttt{lo}+2*\texttt{step}, \ldots$, up to
477and possibly including \texttt{hi}. To be precise, the infinite
478sequence is intersected with the set of integers less than or equal to
479\texttt{hi}.
480
481If \texttt{step} is negative, the expression represents the range
482consisting of $\texttt{hi}, \texttt{hi}+\texttt{step},
483\texttt{hi}+2*\texttt{step}, \ldots$, down to and possibly including
484\texttt{lo}. Precisely, the infinite sequence is intersected with the
485set of integers greater than or equal to \texttt{lo}.
486
487\subsubsection{Cartesian domain expressions}
488\label{sec:domain_expr}
489
490An expression of the form
491\begin{verbatim}
492 ($domain) { r1, ..., rn }
493\end{verbatim}
494where \texttt{r1}, \ldots, \texttt{rn} are $n$ expressions of type
495\crange, is a \emph{Cartesian domain expression}. It represents the
496domain of dimension $n$ which is the Cartesian product of the $n$
497ranges, i.e., it consists of all $n$-tuples $(x_1,\ldots,x_n)$ where
498$x_1\in\texttt{r1}$, \ldots, $x_n\in\texttt{rn}$. The order on the
499domain is the dictionary order on tuples. The type of this expression
500is \cdomainof{\(n\)}.
501
502When a Cartesian domain expression is used to initialize an object of
503domain type, the ``\texttt{(}\cdomain\texttt{)}'' may be omitted.
504For example:
505\begin{verbatim}
506 $domain(3) dom = { 0 .. 3, r2, 10 .. 2 # -2 };
507\end{verbatim}
508
509
510\section{Statements}
511
512\subsection{C Statements}
513
514The usual C statements are supported:
515\begin{itemize}
516\item \emph{no-op} (\ct{;})
517\item expression statements (\ct{e;})
518\item labeled statements, including \ct{case} and \ct{default} labels
519 (\ct{l: s})
520\item \emph{for} (\ct{for (init; cond; inc) s}), \emph{while}
521 (\ct{while (cond) s}) and \emph{do} (\ct{do s while (cond)})
522 loops
523\item compound statements (\lb \ct{s1;s2;} \ldots \rb)
524\item \texttt{if} and \verb!if! \ldots \verb!else!
525\item \verb!goto!
526\item \verb!switch!
527\item \verb!break!
528\item \verb!continue!
529\item \verb!return!
530\end{itemize}
531
532\subsection{Guards and nondeterminism}
533
534\subsubsection{Guarded commands: \cwhen}
535
536A guarded command is encoded in CIVL-C using a $\cwhen$ statement:
537\begin{verbatim}
538 $when (expr) stmt;
539\end{verbatim}
540All statements have a guard, either implicit or explicit. For most
541statements, the guard is \ctrue. The \cwhen{} statement allows one to
542attach an explicit guard to a statement.
543
544When \texttt{expr} is \emph{true}, the statement is enabled, otherwise
545it is disabled. A disabled statement is \emph{blocked}---it will not
546be scheduled for execution. When it is enabled, it may execute by
547moving control to the \texttt{stmt} and executing the first atomic
548action in the \texttt{stmt}.
549
550If \texttt{stmt} itself has a non-trivial guard, the guard of the
551\cwhen{} statement is effectively the conjunction of the \texttt{expr}
552and the guard of \texttt{stmt}.
553
554The evaluation of \texttt{expr} and the first atomic action of
555\texttt{stmt} effectively occur as a single atomic action. There is
556no guarantee that execution of \texttt{stmt} will continue atomically
557if it contains more than one atomic action, i.e., other processes may
558be scheduled.
559
560Examples:
561\begin{verbatim}
562 $when (s>0) s--;
563\end{verbatim}
564This will block until \texttt{s} is positive and then decrement
565\texttt{s}. The execution of \texttt{s--} is guaranteed to take place
566in an environment in which \texttt{s} is positive.
567
568\begin{verbatim}
569 $when (s>0) {s--; t++}
570\end{verbatim}
571The execution of \texttt{s--} must happen when \texttt{s>0}, but
572between \texttt{s--} and \texttt{t++}, other processes may execute.
573
574\begin{verbatim}
575 $when (s>0) $when (t>0) x=y*t;
576\end{verbatim}
577This blocks until both \texttt{x} and \texttt{t} are positive then
578executes the assignment in that state. It is equivalent to
579\begin{verbatim}
580 $when (s>0 && t>0) x=y*t;
581\end{verbatim}
582
583\subsubsection{Nondeterministic selection statement: \cchoose}
584
585A \cchoose{} statement has the form
586\begin{verbatim}
587 $choose {
588 stmt1;
589 stmt2;
590 ...
591 default: stmt
592 }
593\end{verbatim}
594The \texttt{default} clause is optional.
595
596The guards of the statements are evaluated and among those that are
597\emph{true}, one is chosen nondeterministically and executed. If none
598are \emph{true} and the \texttt{default} clause is present, it is
599chosen. The \texttt{default} clause will only be selected if all
600guards are \emph{false}. If no \texttt{default} clause is present and
601all guards are \emph{false}, the statement blocks. Hence the implicit
602guard of the \cchoose{} statement without a \texttt{default} clause is
603the disjunction of the guards of its sub-statements. The implicit
604guard of the \cchoose{} statement with a default clause is
605\emph{true}.
606
607Example: this shows how to encode a ``low-level'' CIVL guarded
608transition system:
609
610\begin{verbatim}
611 l1: $choose {
612 $when (x>0) {x--; goto l2;}
613 $when (x==0) {y=1; goto l3;}
614 default: {z=1; goto l4;}
615 }
616 l2: $choose {
617 ...
618 }
619 l3: $choose {
620 ...
621 }
622\end{verbatim}
623
624
625\subsubsection{Nondeterministic choice of integer:
626 \texorpdfstring{\cchooseint}{\$choose\_int}}
627The header \texttt{civlc.cvh} provides the function \cchooseint{} that returns an integer between 0 and the specified value
628in a nondeterministic way, as described in Section \ref{subsubsec:chooseint}.
629
630\subsection{Iteration using domains with \cfor}
631\label{sec:cfor}
632
633A \emph{CIVL-for} statement has the form
634\begin{verbatim}
635 $for (int i1, ..., in : dom) S
636\end{verbatim}
637where \texttt{i1}, \ldots, \texttt{in} are $n$ identifiers,
638\texttt{dom} is an expression of type \cdomainof{\(n\)}, and
639\texttt{S} is a statement. The identifiers declare $n$ variables of
640integer type. Control iterates over the values of the domain,
641assigning the integer variables the components of the current tuple in
642the domain at the start of each iteration. The scope of the variables
643extends to the end of \texttt{S}. The iterations takes place in the
644order specified by the domain, e.g., dictionary order for a Caretesian
645domain.
646
647There is a also a parallel version of this construct, \cparfor,
648described in \ref{sec:parfor}.
649
650\section{Functions}
651\subsection{Abstract function: \cabstract}
652
653An abstract function declares a function without a body, and it has the form
654
655\begin{verbatim}
656 $abstract type function(list-of-parameters);
657\end{verbatim}
658
659It is required that the function should have a non-void return type and take at least one parameter.
660The return value of the function is evaluated symbolically using the actual arguments of the function call.
661
662\chapter{Concurrency}
663\label{chap:concurrency}
664
665\section{Process creation and management}
666
667\subsection{The process type: \cproc}
668
669This is a primitive object type and functions like any other primitive
670C type (e.g., \texttt{int}). An object of this type refers to a
671process. It can be thought of as a process ID, but it is not an
672integer and cannot be cast to one. It is analogous to the $\cscope$
673type for dynamic scopes.
674
675Certain expressions take an argument of \cproc{} type and some return
676something of \cproc{} type. The operators \verb!==! and \verb~!=~ may
677be used with two arguments of type \cproc{} to determine whether the
678two arguments refer to the same process.
679
680\subsection{Checking if a process is defined: \cprocdefined}
681
682An object of type \cproc{} is initially undefined, so a use of that
683object would result in an error. One can check whether a \cproc{}
684object is defined using the function \cprocdefined, declared by the header \texttt{civlc.cvh}, as
685described in Section \ref{subsubsec:procdefined}.
686
687\subsection{The \emph{self} process constant: \cself}
688
689This is a constant of type \cproc. It can be used wherever an argument
690of type \cproc{} is called for. It refers to the process that is
691evaluating the expression containing \cself.
692
693\subsection{The \emph{null} process constant: \cprocNull}
694
695This is a constant of type \cproc. It can be used wherever an argument
696of type \cproc{} is called for. It simply means that the object doesnt refer to any process.
697
698\subsection{Spawning a new process: \cspawn}
699
700A \emph{spawn} expression is an expression with side-effects. It
701spawns a new process and returns a reference to the new process, i.e.,
702an object of type \cproc. The syntax is the same as a procedure
703invocation with the keyword \cspawn{} inserted in front:
704\begin{verbatim}
705 $spawn f(expr1, ..., exprn)
706\end{verbatim}
707Typically the returned value is assigned to a variable, e.g.,
708\begin{verbatim}
709 $proc p = $spawn f(i);
710\end{verbatim}
711If the invoked function \texttt{f} returns a value, that value is
712simply ignored.
713
714\subsection{Waiting for process(es) to terminate: \cwait\ and \cwaitall}
715
716Once the system function \cwait(\cwaitall) provided by the CIVL-C standard header \texttt{civlc.cvh}
717gets invoked, it will not return until the specified process(es) terminates(terminate), as described in Sections \ref{subsubsec:wait} and
718\ref{subsubsec:wait}.
719
720\subsection{Terminating a process immediately: \cexit}
721Once the function \cexit\, declared in the header \texttt{civlc.cvh}, is called, the calling process terminates immediately, as described in Section \ref{subsubsec:exit}.
722
723\section{Atomicity}
724
725\subsection{Atom blocks: \catom} This defines a number of statements
726to be executed as a single atomic transition. An \catom~block has the
727following form:
728\begin{verbatim}
729 $atom {
730 stmt1;
731 stmt2;
732 ...
733 }
734\end{verbatim}
735
736The statements inside an \catom\ block are to be executed as one
737transition. It is required that the execution of the statements in an
738\catom\ block satisfy all of the following properties:
739\begin{enumerate}
740\item \emph{deterministic}: at each step in the execution of the atom
741 block, there must be at most one enabled statement;
742\item \emph{nonblocking}: at each step in the execution, there must be
743 at least one enabled statement, hence, together with (1), there must
744 be exactly one enabled statement;
745\item \emph{finite}: the execution of the atom block must terminate
746 after a finite number of steps; and
747\item \emph{isolated}: there are no jumps from outside the atom block
748 to inside the atom block, or from inside the atomc block to outside
749 of it.
750\end{enumerate}
751
752Violations of the \emph{deterministic}, \emph{nonblocking}, or
753\emph{isolated} properties will be reported either statically or
754dynamically. If the \emph{finite} property is violated, the
755verification may just run forever.
756
757Once the process enters an \catom\ block is said to be \emph{executing
758 atomly}. The process remains executing atomly until it reaches the
759terminating right brace of the block. Hence \emph{executing atomly}
760is a dynamic, not static condition. For example, the block might
761contain a function call which takes the process to a point in code
762which is not statically contained in an atom block; that process is
763nevertheless still executing atomly and is subject to the rules above.
764The process only stops executing atomly when that function call
765returns and control finally reaches the right curly brace at the end
766of the atom block (assuming the block is not contained in another atom
767block).
768
769\emph{Note:} \cwait\ or \cwaitall\ calls are not allowed in \catom\ blocks.
770The rationale for this is that there is never a way to know for
771certain that another process has terminated (until \cwait\ or \cwaitall\ has
772returned) so there is never a way to be certain the \cwait\ or \cwaitall call
773will not block. If one does occur in an \catom\ block, an error will
774be reported statically (if it can be detected statically) or
775dynamically (otherwise). Note that it is not always possible to
776detect this statically because the \catom\ block may contain a
777function call, and the function may contain \cwait\ or \cwaitall\ calls.
778
779\subsection{Atomic blocks: \catomic}
780
781The statements in an \emph{atomic} block will be executed without
782other processes interleaving, to the extent possible. It has the
783form:
784\begin{verbatim}
785 $atomic {
786 stmt1;
787 stmt2;
788 ...
789 }
790\end{verbatim}
791It is essentially a weaker form of \catom. Unlike \catom, there are
792no restrictions on the statements that can go inside an \catomic\
793block. A process executing an \catomic~block will try to execute the
794statements without interleaving with other processes, unless it
795becomes blocked. Unlike an \catom, the statements in an atomic block
796do not necessarily execute as a single transition; they may be spread
797out over multiple transitions.
798
799When no statement is enabled, the execution of the \catomic\ block
800will be interrupted. At this point, other processes are allowed to
801execute. Eventually, if the original process becomes enabled due to
802the actions of other processes, it may be scheduled again, in which
803case it regains atomicity and continues where it left off. For
804example, after executing the first loop, the process executing the
805following code will become blocked at the first \cwait\ or \cwaitall\ call:
806 \begin{verbatim}
807$atomic {
808 for (int i = 0; i < 5; i++) p[i] = $spawn foo(i);
809 for (int i = 0; i < 5; i++) $wait p[i];
810}
811\end{verbatim}
812Other processes will then execute. Eventually, if the process being
813waited on terminates, the original process becomes enabled and may be
814scheduled, in which case it regain atomicity, increments \texttt{i}
815and proceeds to the next $\cwait$ or \cwaitall\ call. This is in fact a common
816idiom for spawning and waiting on a set of processes.
817
818A process that enters an $\catomic$ block is said to be
819\emph{executing atomically}; it remains executing atomically until it
820reaches the closing curly brace.
821
822Both $\catom$ and $\catomic$ blocks can be nested arbitrarily, but
823$\catom$ overrides $\catomic$: a process that is executing atomly will
824continue executing atomly if it encounters an $\catomic$ statement;
825but a process executing atomically that encounters an $\catom$ will
826begin executing atomly.
827
828The atomic semantics are defined more precisely as follows: there is a
829single global variable called the \emph{atomic lock}. This variable
830can either be null (meaning the atomic lock is ``free''), or it can
831hold the PID of a process; that process is said to ``hold'' the atomic
832lock. Moreover, each process contains a special integer variable, its
833\emph{atomic counter}, which is initially 0. Every time a process
834enters an atomic block, it increments its atomic counter; every time
835it exits an atomic block, it decrements its counter. In order to
836increment its counter from $0$ to $1$, it must first wait for the
837atomic lock to become free, and then take the lock. When it
838decrements its counter from $1$ to $0$, it releases the atomic lock.
839When a process executing atomically becomes blocked, it releases the
840lock (without changing the value of its atomic counter).
841
842\section{Parallel loops with \cparfor}
843\label{sec:parfor}
844
845A parallel loop statement has the form
846\begin{verbatim}
847 $parfor (int i1, ..., in : dom) S
848\end{verbatim}
849The syntax is exactly the same as that for the sequential loop \cfor
850(Section \ref{sec:cfor}), only with \cparfor{} replacing \cfor.
851
852The semantics are as follows: when control reaches the loop, one
853process in spawned for each element of the domain. That process has
854local variables corresponding to the iteration variables, and those
855local variables are initialized with the components of the tuple for
856the element of the domain that process is assigned. Each process
857executes the statement \texttt{S} in this context. Finally, each of
858these processes is waited on at the end. In particular, there is an
859effective barrier at the end of the loop, and all the spawned
860processes disappear after this point.
861
862\section{Message-Passing}
863
864CIVL-C provides a number of additional primitives that can be used to
865model message-passing systems. This part of the language is built in
866two layers: the lower layer defines an abstract data type for
867representing messages; the higher layer defines an abstract data type
868of \emph{communicators} for managing sets of messages being
869transferred among some set of processes.
870
871\subsection{Messages: \cmessage}
872
873Messages are similar to bundles, but with some additional meta-data.
874The \emph{data} component of the message is the ``contents'' of the
875message and is formed and extracted much like a bundle. The meta-data
876consists of an integer identifier for the \emph{source} place of the
877message, an integer identifier for the message \emph{destination}
878place, and an integer \emph{tag} which can be used by a process to
879discriminate among messages for reception. This is very similar to
880MPI.
881
882The functions for creating, and extracting information from, messages
883are given in Section \ref{subsubsec:messaging}.
884
885\subsection{Communicators: \cgcomm{} and \ccomm}
886\label{sec:communicators}
887
888CIVL-C defines a \emph{global communicator} type $\cgcomm$ and a
889\emph{local communicator} type $\ccomm$. The global communicator is an
890abstraction for a ``communication universe'' that stores buffered
891messages and perhaps other data. The local communicator wraps
892together a reference to a global communicator and an integer
893\emph{place}. Most of the message-passing commands take a local
894communicator as an argument to specify the communication universe used
895for that operation and the place from which that operation will be
896executed. The communication universes are isolated from one
897another---a message sent on one can never be received using a
898different communicator, for example.
899
900The global communicator is the shared object that must be declared in
901a scope containing all scopes in which communication in that universe
902will take place. It is created by specifying the number of
903\emph{places} that will comprise the communicator. A place is an
904address to which messages may be sent or where they may be received.
905There is not necessarily a one-to-one correspondence between places and
906processes: many processes can use the same place.
907
908Local communicators are created (typically in some child scope of the
909scope in which the global communicator is declared) by specifying the
910gobal communicator to which the local one will be associated and the
911place ID. The local communicator will be used in most of the
912message-passing functions; it may be thought of as an ordered pair
913consisting of a reference to the global communicator and the integer
914place ID. The place ID must be in $[0,\texttt{size}-1]$, where
915\texttt{size} is the size of the global communicator. The place ID
916specifies the place in the global communication universe that will be
917occupied by the local communicator. The local communicator handle may
918be used by more than one process, but all of those processes will be
919viewed as occupying the same place. Only one call to \ccommcreate{}
920may occur for each gcomm-place pair.
921
922
923Both types ($\cgcomm$ and $\ccomm$) are handle types. When declared
924with a call to the corresponding creation function, they create an
925object in the specified scope and return a handle to that object. The
926object can only be accessed through the specified system functions
927that take this handle as an argument.
928
929 % This local communicator handle will be used as an
930 % * argument in most message-passing functions. The place must be in
931 % * [0,size-1] and specifies the place in the global communication universe
932 % * that will be occupied by the local communicator. The local communicator
933 % * handle may be used by more than one process, but all of those
934 % * processes will be viewed as occupying the same place.
935 % * Only one call to $comm_create may occur for each gcomm-place pair.
936
937The communicator interface is given in Sections \ref{subsubsec:gcomm} and \ref{subsubsec:comm}.
938
939Certain restrictions are enforced on some relations between the
940objects involved in a communication universe.
941
942Fix a \cgcomm{} object. This object corresponds to a single
943communication universe with, say, $n$ places. At any time, there can
944be \emph{at most one} \ccomm{} object associated to a given place. If
945a program attempts to create a \ccomm{} object with the same \cgcomm{}
946and place as an earlier created \ccomm{} object, a runtime error will
947occur. In particular, there can be at most $n$ \ccomm{} objects
948associated to the \cgcomm.
949
950The relation between processes and \ccomm{} objects is unconstrained.
951One process may use any number of \ccomm{} objects. (Of course, the
952process must have access to handles for those \ccomm{} objects.)
953Dually, a single \ccomm{} object may be used by any number of
954processes; this situation arises naturally when modeling a
955multi-threaded MPI program.
956
957\begin{figure}
958 \begin{small}
959\begin{verbatim}
960$gcomm gcomm = $gcomm_create($here, nprocs);
961void Process(int rank) {
962 $comm comm = $comm_create($here, gcomm, rank);
963
964 void Thread(int tid) {
965 ...$comm_enqueue(comm, msg)...
966 ...$comm_dequeue(comm, source, tag)...
967 }
968
969 for (int i=0; i<nthreads; i++) $spawn Thread(i);
970 ...
971 $comm_destroy(comm);
972}
973for (int i=0; i<nprocs; i++) $spawn Process(i);
974...
975$gcomm_destroy(gcomm);
976\end{verbatim}
977 \end{small}
978 \caption{Code skeleton for model of multithreaded MPI program
979 showing placement of global and local communicator objects}
980 \label{fig:mpi-threads-comm}
981\end{figure}
982
983There is no special status given to the process which creates the
984\ccomm{} object of a given place. Any process which can access a
985handle for that \ccomm{} object can use it to send or receive
986messages, regardless of whether that process was the one that created
987the \ccomm{} object. However, users should be aware that verification
988is likely to be most efficient when variables are declared as locally
989as possible, so it is best to declare the \ccomm{} object in the
990innermost scope possible. Figure \ref{fig:mpi-threads-comm}
991illustrates an effective way to do this in the context of modeling a
992multithreaded MPI program. In the code skeleton, each thread can
993access the local communicator object of its process, but not that of
994any other process.
995
996\subsection{Barriers: \cgbarrier{} and \cbarrier}
997\label{sec:barriers}
998
999The CIVL-C header \texttt{concurrency.cvh} defines a \emph{global barrier} type $\cgbarrier$ and a
1000\emph{local barrier} type $\cbarrier$. They provide an implementation of
1001a barrier for concurrent programs.
1002
1003The global barrier is a shared object that must be declared in
1004a scope containing all scopes in which the barrier will be called.
1005 It is created by specifying the number of
1006\emph{places} that will comprise the barrier.
1007
1008Local barriers are created (typically in some child scope of the
1009scope in which the global barrier is declared) by specifying the
1010gobal barrier to which the local one will be associated and the
1011place ID. The local barrier will be used in the call to the barrier;
1012it may be thought of as an ordered pair
1013consisting of a reference to the global barrier and the integer
1014place ID. The place ID must be in $[0,\texttt{size}-1]$, where
1015\texttt{size} is the size of the global barrier.
1016Only one call to \cbarriercreate{}
1017may occur for each gbarrier-place pair.
1018
1019
1020Both types ($\cgbarrier$ and $\cbarrier$) are handle types. When declared
1021with a call to the corresponding creation function, they create an
1022object in the specified scope and return a handle to that object. The
1023object can only be accessed through the specified system functions
1024that take this handle as an argument. The barrier interface is presented in Section \ref{subsec:concurrencyLibrary}.
1025
1026\chapter{Specification}
1027
1028\section{Overview}
1029
1030Specification is the means by which one expresses what a program is
1031supposed to do, i.e., what it means for it to be correct.
1032
1033There are several specification mechanisms in CIVL-C. First, there are
1034the default properties: these are generic properties which are checked
1035by default in any program, and require no additional specification
1036effort. These properties include absence of deadlocks, division by 0,
1037illegal pointer dereferences, and out of bounds array indexes.
1038
1039Many more program-specific properties can be specified using
1040assertions. CIVL-C has a rich assertion language which extends the
1041language of boolean-valued C expressions. Assumptions are a
1042specification dual to assertions in that they restrict the set
1043of executions on which the assertions are checked.
1044
1045Functional equivalence is a power specification mechanism. In this
1046approach, two programs are provided, one playing the role of the
1047specification, the other the role of the implementation. The
1048implementation is correct if, for all inputs $x$, it produces the same
1049output as that produced by the specification on input $x$. In other
1050words, the two programs define the same function; this is sometimes
1051known as \emph{input-output equivalence}. In order to take this
1052approach, one must first have a way to specify what the inputs and
1053outputs of a programs are; CIVL-C provides special keywords for this.
1054
1055Procedure contracts are another powerful specification mechanisms.
1056These typically involve specifying preconditions and postconditions
1057for a function. The function is correct if, whenever it is called in a
1058state satisfying the precondition, when it returns the state will
1059satsify the postcondition. A program is correct if all its functions
1060satsify their contract.
1061
1062\section{Input-output signature}
1063
1064\subsection{Input type qualifier: \cinput}
1065
1066The declaration of a variable in the root scope may
1067include the type qualifier \cinput, e.g.,
1068\begin{verbatim}
1069 $input int n;
1070\end{verbatim}
1071This declares the variable to be an input variable, i.e., one which is
1072considered to be an input to the program. Such a variable is
1073initialized with an arbitrary (unconstrained) value of its type. When
1074using symbolic execution to verify a program, such a variable will be
1075assigned a unique symbolic constant of its type.
1076
1077In contrast, variables in the root scope which are not input variables
1078will instead be initialized with the ``undefined'' value. If an
1079undefined value is used in some way (such as in an argument to an
1080operator), an error occurs.
1081
1082In addition, input variables may only be read, never written to.
1083
1084Alternatively, it is also possible to specify a particular concrete
1085initial value for an input variable. This is done using a command
1086line argument when verifying or running the program.
1087
1088An input variable declaration may contain an initializer. The
1089semantics are as follows: if no command line value is specified for
1090the variable, the initializer is used to initialize the variable. If
1091a command line value is specified, the command line value is used and
1092the initializer is ignored.
1093
1094Input (and output) variables also play a key role when determining
1095whether two programs are functionally equivalent. Two programs are
1096considered functionally equivalent if, whenever they are given the
1097same inputs (i.e., corresponding \cinput{} variables are initialized
1098with the same values) they will produce the same outputs (i.e.,
1099corresponding \coutput{} variables will end up with the same values at
1100termination).
1101
1102\subsection{Output type qualifier: \coutput}
1103
1104A variable in the root scope may be declared with this type qualifier
1105to declare it to be an output variable. Output variables are ``dual''
1106to input variables. They may only be written to, never read. They
1107are used primarily in functional equivalence checking.
1108
1109\section{Assertions and assumptions}
1110
1111\subsection{Assertions: \cassert}
1112
1113
1114An \emph{assert statement} has the either of the forms below
1115\begin{verbatim}
1116 $assert expr;
1117 $assert expr : msg, msg_arg0, msg_arg1, ... ;
1118\end{verbatim}
1119
1120It takes an boolean type expression and a number of optional expressions which are used to construct an error message.
1121Note that CIVL-C boolean expressions have a richer syntax than C
1122expressions, and may include universal or existential quantifiers
1123(see below), and the boolean values \ctrue{} and \cfalse{}.
1124
1125During verification, the assertion is checked. If it cannot be proved
1126that it must hold, a violation is reported. If additional arguments are present, then a specific message is prented as well if the assertion is violated. These
1127additional arguments are similar in form to those used in C's
1128\texttt{printf} statement: a format string, followed by some number of
1129arguments which are evaluated and substituted for successive codes in
1130the format string. For example,
1131\begin{verbatim}
1132 $assert x<=B : "x-coordinate %f exceeds bound %f", x, B;
1133\end{verbatim}
1134
1135%The C function \texttt{assert}, included in the standard library
1136%\texttt{assert.h}, is identical to \cassert. Programmers are
1137%free to use either one.
1138
1139
1140\subsection{Assume statements: \cassume}
1141
1142An \emph{assume statement} has the form
1143\begin{verbatim}
1144 $assume expr;
1145\end{verbatim}
1146During verification, the assumed expression is assumed to hold. If
1147this leads to a contradiction on some execution, that execution is
1148simply ignored. It never reports a violation, it only restricts the
1149set of possible executions that will be explored by the verification
1150algorithm.
1151
1152Like as assertion statement, as assume statement can be used any place
1153a statement is expected. In addition, as assume statement can be used
1154in file scope to place restrictions on the global variables of the
1155programs. For example,
1156\begin{verbatim}
1157$input int B;
1158$input int N;
1159$assume 0<=N && N<=B;
1160\end{verbatim}
1161declares \texttt{N} and \texttt{B} to be integer inputs and restricts
1162consideration to inputs satisfying $0\leq\texttt{N}\leq\texttt{B}$.
1163
1164
1165\section{Formulas}
1166
1167A formula is a boolean expression that can be used in an assert
1168statement, assume statement, procedure contract (below), or invariant.
1169Any ordinary C boolean expression is a formula. CIVL-C provides some
1170additional kinds of formulas, described below.
1171
1172\subsection{Implication: \cimplies}
1173
1174The binary operation \cimplies{} represents logical implication.
1175The expression \verb!p=>q! is equivalent to \verb~(!p)||q~.
1176
1177\subsection{Universal quantifier: \cforall}
1178
1179The universally quantified formula has the form
1180\begin{verbatim}
1181 $forall { type identifier | restriction} expr
1182\end{verbatim}
1183where \verb!type! is a type name (e.g., \texttt{int} or
1184\texttt{double}), \verb!identifier! is the name of the bound variable,
1185\verb!restriction! is a boolean expression which expresses some
1186restriction on the values that the bound variable can take, and
1187\verb!expr! is a formula. The universally quantified formula
1188holds iff for all values assignable to the bound variable
1189for which the restriction holds, the formula \ct{expr} holds.
1190
1191A variation on the construct above can be used in the special case
1192where the bound variable is to range over a finite interval
1193of integers. In this case the quantified formula may be written:
1194\begin{verbatim}
1195 $forall { type identifier=lower .. upper } expr
1196\end{verbatim}
1197where \ct{lower} and \ct{upper} are integer expressions.
1198
1199\subsection{Existential quantifier: \cexists}
1200
1201The syntax for existentially quantified expressions is exactly the
1202same as for universally quantified expressions, with \cexists{} in
1203place of \cforall{}.
1204
1205\section{Contracts}
1206
1207\subsection{Procedure contracts: \crequires{} and \censures{}}
1208The \crequires{} and \censures{} primitives are used to encode
1209procedure contracts. There are optional
1210elements that may occur in a procedure declaration or definition,
1211as follows. For a function prototype:
1212\begin{verbatim}
1213 T f(...)
1214 $requires expr;
1215 $ensures expr;
1216 ;
1217\end{verbatim}
1218For a function definition:
1219\begin{verbatim}
1220 T f(...)
1221 $requires expr;
1222 $ensures expr;
1223 {
1224 ...
1225 }
1226\end{verbatim}
1227The value \cresult{} may be used in post-conditions to refer
1228to the result returned by a procedure.
1229
1230\emph{Status}: parsed, but nothing is currently done with this
1231information.
1232
1233\subsection{Loop invariants: \cinvariant}
1234
1235This indicates a loop invariant. Each C loop
1236construct has an optional invariant clause as follows:
1237\begin{verbatim}
1238 while (expr) $invariant (expr) stmt
1239 for (e1; e2; e3) $invariant (expr) stmt
1240 do stmt while (expr) $invariant (expr) ;
1241\end{verbatim}
1242The invariant encodes the claim that if \texttt{expr} holds upon
1243entering the loop and the loop condition holds, then it will hold
1244after completion of execution of the loop body. The invariant is used
1245by certain verification techniques.
1246
1247\emph{Status:} parsed, but nothing is currently done with this
1248information.
1249
1250\section{Concurrency specification}
1251
1252\subsection{Remote expressions: \texttt{e@x}}.
1253
1254These have the form \verb!expr@x! and refer to a variable in another
1255process, e.g., \verb!procs[i]@x!. This special kind of expression is
1256used in collective expressions, which are used to formulate collective
1257assertions and invariants.
1258
1259The expression \verb!expr! must have \cproc{} type. The variable
1260\texttt{x} must be a statically visible variable in the context in
1261which it is occurs. When this expression is evaluated, the evaluation
1262context will be shifted to the process referred to by \texttt{expr}.
1263
1264\emph{Status}: not implemented.
1265
1266\subsection{Collective expressions: \ccollective}. These have the form
1267\begin{verbatim}
1268 $collective(proc_expr, int_expr) expr
1269\end{verbatim}
1270This is a collective expression over a set of processes. The
1271expression \texttt{proc{\U}expr} yields a pointer to the first element
1272of an array of \cproc. The expression \texttt{int{\U}expr} gives the
1273length of that array, i.e., the number of processes. Expression
1274\texttt{expr} is a boolean-valued expression; it may use remote
1275expressions to refer to variables in the processes specified in the
1276array. Example:
1277\begin{verbatim}
1278 $proc procs[N];
1279 ...
1280 $assert $collective(procs, N) i==procs[(pid+1)%N]@i ;
1281\end{verbatim}
1282
1283\emph{Status}: not implemented.
1284
1285\chapter{Pointers and Heaps}
1286\label{chap:pointers}
1287
1288CIVL-C supports pointers, using the same operators with the same
1289meanings as C (\texttt{\&}, \texttt{*}, pointer arithmetic). There is
1290also a heap in every scope, and system functions to allocate and
1291deallocate objects in the specified scope.
1292
1293\section{Memory functions: \texttt{memcpy}}
1294
1295The function \texttt{memcpy} is defined in the standard C library
1296\texttt{string.h} and works exactly the same in CIVL: it copies
1297data from the region pointed to by \ct{q} to that pointed to by
1298\ct{p}. The signature is
1299
1300\begin{verbatim}
1301 void memcpy(void *p, void *q, size_t size);
1302\end{verbatim}
1303
1304\section{Heaps, \cmalloc{} and \cfree}
1305
1306As mentioned above, each dynamic scope has an implicit heap on which
1307objects can be allocated and deallocated dynamically. The CIVL-C header
1308\texttt{civlc.cvh} provides the functions \cmalloc{} and \cfree{} for allocating and dealocating
1309memory, repectively, as described in Section \ref{subsubsec:mallocandfree}.
1310
1311% \section{Pointer types}
1312
1313% Given any object type $T$ and a static scope $s$ in a CIVL-C program,
1314% there is a type \emph{pointer-to-$T$-in-$s$}. The type is used to
1315% represent a pointer to a memory location of type $T$ in scope $s$ or a
1316% descendant of $s$ (i.e., some scope contained in $s$).
1317
1318% If scope $s_1$ is a descendant of $s_2$ (i.e., $s_1$ is lexically
1319% contained in $s_2$), the type \emph{pointer-to-$T$-in-$s_1$} is a
1320% subtype of \emph{pointer-to-$T$-in-$s_2$}. This means that any
1321% expression of the first type can be used wherever an object of the
1322% second type is expected. In particular, any expression $e$ of the
1323% subtype can be assigned to a left-hand-side expression of the
1324% supertype without explicit casts; also $e$ can be used as an argument
1325% to a function for which the corresponding parameter has the supertype.
1326
1327% The syntax for denoting this type adheres to the usual C syntax for
1328% denoting the type \emph{pointer-to-$T$} with the addition of a scope
1329% parameter within angular brackets immediately following the \texttt{*}
1330% token. For example, to declare a variable \texttt{p} of type
1331% \emph{pointer-to-$T$-in-$s$}, one writes
1332% \begin{verbatim}
1333% int *<s> p;
1334% \end{verbatim}
1335% If the scope modifier \texttt{<...>} is absent, the scope is taken to
1336% be the root scope $s_0$. The object has type
1337% \emph{pointer-to-$T$-in-$s_0$}, which is abreviated as
1338% \emph{pointer-to-$T$}. In this way, stanard C programs can be
1339% interpreted as CIVL-C programs.
1340
1341% \section{Address-of operator}
1342
1343% The address-of operator \texttt{\&} returns a pointer of the
1344% appropriate subtype using the innermost scope in which its left-hand-side
1345% argument is declared. For example
1346
1347% \begin{verbatim}
1348% {
1349% $scope s1 = $here();
1350% int x;
1351% double a[N];
1352% int *<s1> p = &x;
1353% double *<s1> q = &a[2];
1354% }
1355% \end{verbatim}
1356% is correct (in particular, it is type-correct) because \texttt{\&x}
1357% has type \emph{pointer-to-\texttt{int}-in-\texttt{s1}}, since
1358% \texttt{s1} is the scope in which \texttt{x} is declared.
1359
1360% Another pointer example:
1361% \begin{small}
1362% \begin{verbatim}
1363% { $scope s0 = $here();
1364% { $scope s1 = $here();
1365% double x;
1366% { $scope s2 = $here();
1367% double y;
1368% double *<s1> p;
1369% /* p can only point to something in s1 or descendant, for example, s2 */
1370% p = &x; // fine
1371% p = &y; // fine
1372% p = (double*)$malloc(s0, 10*sizeof(double)); // static type error
1373% }
1374% }
1375% }
1376% \end{verbatim}
1377% \end{small}
1378
1379% \section{Pointer addition and subtractions}
1380
1381% If \texttt{e} is an expression of type \emph{pointer-to-$T$-in-$s$}
1382% and \texttt{i} is an expression of integer type then \texttt{e+i} also
1383% has type \emph{pointer-to-$T$-in-$s$}. In other words, pointer
1384% addition cannot leave the scope of the original pointer. This
1385% reflects the fact that every object is contained in one scope, and
1386% pointer addition cannot leave the object.
1387
1388% Pointer subtraction is defined on two pointers of the same type, where
1389% ``same'' includes the scope. That is checked statically. As in C, it
1390% is only defined if the two pointers point to the same object. In
1391% CIVL-C, a runtime error will be thrown if they do not point to the
1392% same object.
1393
1394% \section{Semantics of scopes and pointer types}
1395
1396% A variable of type \cscope{} is treated like any other variable.
1397% It becomes part of the state when the scope in which it is declared
1398% is instantiated to form a dynamic scope. The variable is
1399% initialized at that time and its value cannot change.
1400
1401% Each time a dynamic scope is instantiated, it is assigned a unique ID
1402% number. The exactly value of the ID number is not relevant, it just
1403% has to be distince from any other scope ID number that currently
1404% exists in the state. This is the value that is assigned to the scope
1405% variable. Therefore, if a static scope contains a scope variable, and
1406% that scope is instantiated twice to form two distinct dynamic scopes,
1407% the values assigned to the two variables will be distinct.
1408
1409% A pointer value is an ordered pair $\langle \delta,r \rangle$, where
1410% $\delta$ is a dynamic scope ID and $r$ is a reference to a memory
1411% location in the static scope associated to $\delta$. (We will define
1412% the exact form of a reference later.)
1413
1414% When a dynamic scope is instantiated, each new variable created is
1415% assigned a \emph{dynamic type}. This is a refinement of the static
1416% type associated to the static variable. Every dynamic type
1417% is an instance of exactly one static type. The dynamic
1418% type of the newly instantiated variable is an instance of the
1419% static type of the static variable.
1420
1421% The dynamic pointer types have the form
1422% \emph{pointer-to-$t$-in-$\delta$}, where $t$ is a dynamic type and
1423% $\delta$ is a dynamic scope ID. For a program to be dynamically type
1424% safe, such a variable should hold only values of the form $\langle
1425% \delta, r\rangle$. In particular, the variable should never be
1426% assigned a value where the dynamic scope component is a different
1427% instance of the static scope $s$ associated to $\delta$.
1428
1429% \section{Pointer casts}
1430
1431% If scope $s_1$ is contained in scope $s_2$, an expression of type
1432% \emph{pointer-to-$T$-in-$s_1$} can always be cast to
1433% \emph{pointer-to-$T$-in-$s_2$},
1434% because the first is a subtype of the second. (As described above,
1435% the cast is unnecessary.)
1436
1437% The cast in the other direction is also allowed, but the dynamic type
1438% safety of that cast will only be checked at runtime. In particular, a
1439% runtime error will result if the cast attempts to cast the pointer
1440% value to a dynamic scope which does not contain (is an ancestor of)
1441% the dynamic scope component of the pointer value.
1442
1443% A type \emph{pointer-to-$T_1$-in-$s$} can be cast to a type
1444% \emph{pointer-to-$T_2$-in-$s$} according to the usual rules of C. In
1445% other words, usual casting rules apply as long as you don't change the
1446% scope.
1447
1448% \section{Scope-Parameterized Functions}
1449
1450% Coming soon. (Parsed, type checked, not currently used otherwise.)
1451
1452% \section{Scope-Parameterized Type Definitions}
1453
1454% Coming soon. (Ditto.)
1455
1456\chapter{Libraries}
1457
1458\section{Standard CIVL-C headers}
1459CIVL-C headers have the suffix \texttt{.cvh}. Here is the list of standard libraries provided by CIVL:
1460\begin{itemize}
1461\item \texttt{civlc} provides types and functions that are used frequently by CIVL-C programs;
1462\item \texttt{scope} provides utility functions related to dynamic scopes;
1463\item \texttt{pointer} provides utility functions dealing with pointers;
1464\item \texttt{seq} provides utility functions of sequences (realized as incomplete array in CIVL-C);
1465\item \texttt{concurrency} provides concurrency utilities such as the barrier;
1466\item \texttt{bundle} provides bundle types and methods;
1467\item \texttt{comm} provides communicators and methods;
1468%\item \texttt{civlmpi} provides CIVL-C types for MPI.
1469\end{itemize}
1470
1471\subsection{CIVL basics \texttt{civlc.cvh}}
1472\label{subsec:civlcLibrary}
1473The header \texttt{civlc.cvh} declares four types, three macros and several functions. The types declared are \texttt{size\_t}, \texttt{\$proc},
1474\texttt{\$scope} and \texttt{\$int\_iter}. The declared macros are \texttt{\$true}, \texttt{\$false} and \texttt{NULL}. The functions provided in this header
1475will be described in the following.
1476
1477\subsubsection{The \cwait\ function}
1478\label{subsubsec:wait}
1479The \cwait\ function has signature
1480\begin{verbatim}
1481 void $wait($proc p);
1482\end{verbatim}
1483
1484When invoked, this function will not return until the process
1485referenced by \ct{p} has terminated. Note that $p$ can be any
1486expression of type \cproc{}, not just a variable.
1487
1488\subsubsection{The \cwaitall\ function}
1489\label{subsubsec:waitall}
1490The $\cwaitall$ function has signature
1491\begin{verbatim}
1492 void $waitall($proc *procs, int numProcs);
1493\end{verbatim}
1494When invoked, this function will not return until all the \ct{numProcs} processes
1495referenced by the memory specified by \ct{procs} have terminated.
1496
1497\subsubsection{The \cexit\ function}
1498\label{subsubsec:exit}
1499This function takes no arguments. It causes the
1500calling process to terminate immediately, regardless of the state of
1501its call stack:
1502\begin{verbatim}
1503 void $exit(void);
1504\end{verbatim}
1505
1506\subsubsection{The \cchooseint{} function}
1507\label{subsubsec:chooseint}
1508
1509The function \cchooseint{} has the following signature:
1510\begin{verbatim}
1511 int $choose_int(int n);
1512\end{verbatim}
1513This function takes as input a positive integer \texttt{n} and
1514nondeterministicaly returns an integer in the range
1515$[0,\texttt{n}-1]$.
1516
1517\subsubsection{The \cscopedefined{} function}
1518\label{subsubsec:scopedefined}
1519
1520The function \cscopedefined{} has signature
1521\begin{verbatim}
1522 _Bool $scope_defined($scope s);
1523\end{verbatim}
1524It returns \emph{true} if the dynamic scope specified by \texttt{s} is
1525defined, else it returns \emph{false}.
1526
1527\subsubsection{The \cprocdefined{} function}
1528\label{subsubsec:procdefined}
1529
1530The function \cprocdefined{} has signature
1531\begin{verbatim}
1532 _Bool $proc_defined($proc p);
1533\end{verbatim}
1534
1535It returns \ctrue if and only if the given object of \cproc{} type is defined.
1536
1537
1538\subsubsection{The heap-related functions: \cmalloc{} and \cfree}
1539\label{subsubsec:mallocandfree}
1540
1541The memory allocation function $\cmalloc$ is like C's \texttt{malloc}, but takes
1542an extra scope argument:
1543\begin{verbatim}
1544 void * $malloc($scope scope, int size);
1545\end{verbatim}
1546To allocate an object, one first needs a reference to the dynamic scope to be used.
1547
1548The function \cfree{} is used to deallocate a heap object;
1549it is just like C's \texttt{free}:
1550\begin{verbatim}
1551 void $free(void *p);
1552\end{verbatim}
1553An error is generated if the pointer is not one that was returned by
1554\cmalloc, or if it was already freed.
1555
1556\subsection{Scope utilities \texttt{scope.cvh}}
1557\label{subsec:scopeLibrary}
1558
1559The header \texttt{scope.cvh} declares one function: \texttt{\$scope\_parent}, which has signature
1560
1561\begin{verbatim}
1562 $scope $scope_parent($scope s);
1563\end{verbatim}
1564This function returns the parent dynamic scope of the dynamic scope referenced by
1565\ct{s}. If \ct{s} is the root dynamic scope, it returns the undefined
1566value of type $\cscope$.
1567
1568\subsection{Pointer utilities \texttt{pointer.cvh}}
1569\label{subsec:pointerLibrary}
1570The header \texttt{pointer.cvh} declares functions taking pointers as the arguments for different purposes, including:
1571\begin{itemize}
1572\item function \cequals{} for equality checking;
1573\item function \ccontains{} for membership testing;
1574\item function \texttt{\$translate\_ptr} for pointer translation;
1575\item function \ccopy{} for copying data through pointers.
1576\end{itemize}
1577
1578\subsubsection{The \cequals{} function}
1579
1580The \cequals{} function has the signature
1581\begin{verbatim}
1582 _Bool $equals(void *x, void *y);
1583\end{verbatim}
1584
1585This function takes two non-null pointers as input. If the two objects that the pointers refer to have the same value, then the
1586function returns \ctrue. Otherwise, it returns \cfalse.
1587
1588\subsubsection{The \ccontains{} function}
1589
1590The function \ccontains{} has the signature
1591\begin{verbatim}
1592 _Bool $contains(void *ptr1, void *ptr2);
1593\end{verbatim}
1594
1595This function takes two non-null pointers as input. If the object that the pointer \texttt{ptr1} points to contains the object pointed to by \texttt{ptr2}, then the
1596function returns \ctrue. Otherwise, it returns \cfalse. For example, given
1597\begin{verbatim}
1598 int a[10];
1599 struct foo {int x; double y} f;
1600 struct foo b[10];
1601
1602 // ... initialize a, f and b
1603\end{verbatim}
1604
1605Here are the results of several invocations of \ccontains:
1606
1607\begin{itemize}
1608\item \texttt{\ccontains(\&a, \&a[3])} returns \ctrue, since the array \texttt{a} contains the cell \texttt{a[3]};
1609\item \texttt{\ccontains(\&a[2], \&a[3])} returns \cfalse;
1610\item \texttt{\ccontains(\&a[2], \&a[2])} returns \ctrue, because the relation is relexive;
1611\item \texttt{\ccontains(\&f, \&f.y)} returns \ctrue, since the struct \texttt{f} contains its field \texttt{f.y};
1612\item \texttt{\ccontains(\&b, \&b[2].x)} returns \ctrue.
1613\end{itemize}
1614
1615\subsubsection{The \texttt{\$translate\_ptr} function}
1616The function \texttt{\$translate\_ptr} has the signature
1617\begin{verbatim}
1618 void * $translate_ptr(void *ptr, void *obj);
1619\end{verbatim}
1620
1621This function translates a pointer into one object (\texttt{ptr}) to a pointer into a different object (\texttt{obj}) with similar structure.
1622
1623For example:
1624\begin{verbatim}
1625 typedef struct node{
1626 int x;
1627 int y;
1628 } node;
1629 typedef struct point{
1630 double a;
1631 double b;
1632 double c;
1633 }point;
1634 node nodes[3];
1635 point points[5];
1636 ... // initialize nodes and points
1637 double *p = $translate_ptr(&(nodes[2].y), &points);
1638 // after the translation, p = &(points[2].b);
1639\end{verbatim}
1640
1641\subsubsection{The \ccopy{} function}
1642
1643The \ccopy{} function has the signature
1644\begin{verbatim}
1645 void $copy(void *ptr, void *value_ptr);
1646\end{verbatim}
1647
1648It copies the value pointed to by \texttt{value\_ptr} to the memory
1649location specified by \texttt{ptr}. This function is different from \texttt{memcpy} only in the way that
1650it can take pointers to (incomplete) array as the argument and copy the whole array to the other.
1651
1652\subsection{Sequence utilities \texttt{seq.cvh}}
1653\label{subsec:seqLibrary}
1654The header \texttt{seq.cvh} provides utility functions dealing with sequences. A sequence is realized as an incomplete array (i.e., an array with no extent specified) of any type \texttt{T}, which applies for all functions of \texttt{seq.cvh}. Functions declared in this header include:
1655\begin{itemize}
1656\item function \cseqinit{} for initializing sequences;
1657\item function \cseqlen{} for computing the length of a sequence;
1658\item function \cseqinsert{} for element insertion to a sequence;
1659\item function \cseqrm{} for element removal of a sequence.
1660\end{itemize}
1661
1662\subsubsection{The \cseqinit{} function}
1663
1664The \cseqinit{} function has the signature
1665\begin{verbatim}
1666 void $seq_init(void *seq, int count, void *value);
1667\end{verbatim}
1668
1669Given a pointer to a sequence of type \texttt{T}, this function sets that sequence to be an array of length \texttt{count} in which every element has the same value, specified by the given pointer \texttt{value}. The parameter \texttt{seq} has the type pointer-to-incomplete-array-of-T, \texttt{count} has any integer type and must be nonnegative, and \texttt{value} has the type pointer-to-T.
1670
1671\subsubsection{The \cseqlen{} function}
1672The \cseqlen{} function has the signature
1673\begin{verbatim}
1674 int $seq_length(void *seq);
1675\end{verbatim}
1676This function returns the length of the sequence pointed to by the pointer \texttt{seq}. The contract is that \texttt{seq} must be a pointer of a sequence of type \texttt{T}, i.e., \texttt{seq} should have the type pointer-to-incomplete-array-of-T.
1677
1678\subsubsection{The \cseqinsert{} function}
1679The \cseqinsert{} function has the signature
1680\begin{verbatim}
1681 void $seq_insert(void *seq, int index, void *values, int count);
1682\end{verbatim}
1683
1684Given a pointer to a sequence of type T, this function inserts \texttt{count} elements into the sequence starting at position
1685 \texttt{index}. The subsequence elements of the original sequence are shifted up, and the final length of the array will be its original length
1686plus \texttt{count}. The values to be inserted are taken from the region specified by \texttt{values}, which has type pointer-to-T.
1687
1688It is required that \texttt{0<=index<=length}, where length is the orginal length of the seqence. If \texttt{index=length}, this function appends the elements to the end of the array. If \texttt{index=0}, this inserts the elements at the beginning of the sequence. If \texttt{count=0}, this function is a no-op and \texttt{values} will never be evaluated (hence may be NULL).
1689
1690\subsubsection{The \cseqrm{} function}
1691The \cseqrm{} function has the signature
1692\begin{verbatim}
1693 void $seq_remove(void *seq, int index, void *values, int count);
1694\end{verbatim}
1695
1696This function removes \texttt{count} elements from the sequence of type T pointed to by \texttt{seq}, starting at position
1697\texttt{index}.
1698
1699If \texttt{values} is not NULL, the removed elements will be copied to the memory region beginning with \texttt{values}, which shoud have the type pointer-to-T. It is required that \texttt{0<=index<length} and \texttt{0<=count<=length-index}. If \texttt{count=0}, this function is a no-op.
1700
1701\subsection{Concurrency utilities \texttt{concurrency.cvh}}
1702\label{subsec:concurrencyLibrary}
1703
1704The header \texttt{concurrency.cvh} declares two types,, \cgbarrier{} and \cbarrier{}, and several functions dealing with barriers, including:
1705\begin{itemize}
1706\item functions \cgbarriercreate{} and \cbarriercreate{} for creating a new global and local barrier, repectively;
1707\item functions \cgbarrierdestroy{} and \cbarrierdestroy{} for destroying a global and local barriere, respectively;
1708\item function \cbarriercall{} for a barrier synchronization request.
1709\end{itemize}
1710
1711
1712\subsubsection{The \cgbarriercreate{} and \cbarriercreate{} functions}
1713The \cgbarriercreate{} function has the signature
1714
1715\begin{verbatim}
1716 $gbarrier $gbarrier_create($scope scope, int size);
1717\end{verbatim}
1718
1719It creates a new global object of the given \texttt{size}, puts it in the heap of the given dynamic \texttt{scope}, and returns a handle to the created \cgbarrier{} object.
1720\\~\\
1721The \cbarriercreate{} function has the signature
1722
1723\begin{verbatim}
1724 $barrier $barrier_create($scope scope, $gbarrier gbarrier, int place);
1725\end{verbatim}
1726
1727It creates a local barrier that joins the specified global barrier \texttt{gbarrier} with the id \texttt{place}. The new local barrier object is stored in the heap of the given dynamic \texttt{scope} , and a handle to that object is returned.
1728
1729\subsubsection{The \cgbarrierdestroy{} and \cbarrierdestroy{} functions}
1730
1731The \cgbarrierdestroy{} and \cbarrierdestroy{} functions has the signatures
1732
1733\begin{verbatim}
1734 void $gbarrier_destroy($gbarrier barrier);
1735 void $barrier_destroy($barrier barrier);
1736\end{verbatim}
1737
1738These functions deallocated the heap memory regions occupied by the specified \cgbarrier{} or \cbarrier{} object. They should be invoked before the corresponding dynamic scope becomes unreachable. Otherwise, a memory leak error will be reported.
1739
1740\subsubsection{The \cbarriercall{} function}
1741
1742The \cbarriercall{} function has the signature
1743
1744\begin{verbatim}
1745 void $barrier_call($barrier barrier);
1746\end{verbatim}
1747
1748When this funciton is called, the calling process will be blocked until all other processes associated with the same global barrier refered to by the given \texttt{barrier} have made the barrier call.
1749
1750\subsection{Bundle type and functions \texttt{bundle.cvh}}
1751\label{subsec:bundleLibrary}
1752
1753The header \texttt{bundle.cvh} defines the type \cbundle{} (see Section \ref{subsec:bundleType}) and several functions dealing with bundles:
1754\begin{itemize}
1755\item function \cbundlesize{} for computing the size of a bundle;
1756\item function \cbundlepack{} for composing a bundle from some given data;
1757\item function \cbundleunpack{} for extracting the data contained by a given bundle;
1758\item function \cbundleunpackapply{} for extacting the data contained by a given bundle and apply some operation to them.
1759\end{itemize}
1760
1761\subsubsection{The \cbundlesize{} function}
1762
1763The \cbundlesize{} function has the signature
1764\begin{verbatim}
1765 int $bundle_size($bundle b);
1766\end{verbatim}
1767
1768It takes a bundle and returns its size.
1769
1770\subsubsection{The \cbundlepack{} function}
1771
1772The \cbundlepack{} function has the signature
1773\begin{verbatim}
1774 $bundle $bundle_pack(void *ptr, int size);
1775\end{verbatim}
1776
1777This function creates a bundle from the memory region specified by \texttt{ptr} and \texttt{size}, copying the data into the new bundle, and returns the new bundle.
1778
1779\subsubsection{The \cbundleunpack{} function}
1780
1781The \cbundleunpack{} function has the signature
1782\begin{verbatim}
1783 void $bundle_unpack($bundle bundle, void *ptr);
1784\end{verbatim}
1785
1786Opposite to \cbundlepack, this function copies the data from the given \texttt{bundle} into the memory region specified by \texttt{ptr}.
1787
1788\subsubsection{The \cbundleunpackapply{} function}
1789
1790The \cbundleunpackapply{} function has the signature
1791\begin{verbatim}
1792 void $bundle_unpack_apply($bundle data, void *buf, int size, $operation op);
1793\end{verbatim}
1794
1795This function unpacks the bundle and applies the specified operation on the content of the bundle. For every binary operarion defined in operation, the content of the bundle will be used as the left operand and buf will be used as the right operand. The result of the operation is stored in buf once is it is done.
1796
1797
1798\subsection{Communicators \texttt{comm.cvh}}
1799\label{subsec:commLibrary}
1800
1801The header \texttt{comm.cvh} declares three types, two macros and a number of functions for communication. The two maros are \texttt{\$COMM\_ANY\_SOURCE} and \texttt{\$COMM\_ANY\_TAG}. The three types declared are \cmessage, \cgcomm{} and \ccomm.
1802
1803\subsubsection{Messaging functions}
1804\label{subsubsec:messaging}
1805
1806The function \cmessagesize{} returns the size of a given message and has the signature
1807
1808\begin{verbatim}
1809 int $message_size($message message);
1810\end{verbatim}
1811
1812\noindent The function \cmessagesource{} returns the source of a given message and has the signature
1813
1814\begin{verbatim}
1815 int $message_source($message message);
1816\end{verbatim}
1817
1818\noindent The function \cmessagedest{} returns the destination of a given message and has the signature
1819
1820\begin{verbatim}
1821 int $message_dest($message message);
1822\end{verbatim}
1823
1824\noindent The function \cmessagetag{} returns the tag of a given message and has the signature
1825
1826\begin{verbatim}
1827 int $message_tag($message message);
1828\end{verbatim}
1829
1830\noindent The function \cmessagepack{} has the signature
1831
1832\begin{verbatim}
1833 $message $message_pack(int source, int dest, int tag, void *data, int size);
1834\end{verbatim}
1835
1836This function creates a new message of the specified \texttt{source}, \texttt{dest} and \texttt{tag}, copying data from the memory region specified \texttt{data} and \texttt{size}, and returns the newly created message object.
1837\\~\\
1838\noindent The function \cmessageunpack{} has the signature
1839
1840\begin{verbatim}
1841 void $message_unpack($message message, void *buf, int size);
1842\end{verbatim}
1843
1844This function transfers data from \texttt{message} the memory region specified by \texttt{buf} and \texttt{size}, reproting an error if the size of the message exceeds the specified \texttt{size}.
1845
1846\subsubsection{\cgcomm{} functions}
1847\label{subsubsec:gcomm}
1848
1849\begin{verbatim}
1850/* Creates a new global communicator object and returns a handle to it.
1851 * The global communicator will have size communication places. The
1852 * global communicator defines a communication "universe" and encompasses
1853 * message buffers and all other components of the state associated to
1854 * message-passing. The new object will be allocated in the given scope. */
1855$gcomm $gcomm_create($scope s, int size);
1856
1857void $gcomm_destroy($gcomm gcomm); // Destroys the gcomm
1858
1859_Bool $gcomm_defined($gcomm gcomm); // Is the gcomm object defined?
1860\end{verbatim}
1861
1862\subsubsection{\ccomm{} functions}
1863\label{subsubsec:comm}
1864
1865\begin{verbatim}
1866
1867/* Creates a new local communicator object and returns a handle to it.
1868 * The new communicator will be affiliated with the specified global
1869 * communicator. The new object will be allocated in the given scope. */
1870$comm $comm_create($scope s, $gcomm gcomm, int place);
1871
1872void $comm_destroy($comm comm); // Destroys the comm
1873
1874_Bool $comm_defined($comm comm); // Is the comm object defined?
1875
1876/* Returns the size (number of places) in the global communicator associated
1877 * to the given comm. */
1878int $comm_size($comm comm);
1879
1880/* Returns the place of the local communicator. This is the same as the
1881 * place argument used to create the local communicator. */
1882int $comm_place($comm comm);
1883
1884/* Adds the message to the appropriate message queue in the communication
1885 * universe specified by the comm. The source of the message must equal
1886 * the place of the comm. */
1887void $comm_enqueue($comm comm, $message message);
1888
1889/* Returns true iff a matching message exists in the communication universe
1890 * specified by the comm. A message matches the arguments if the destination
1891 * of the message is the place of the comm, and the sources and tags match. */
1892_Bool $comm_probe($comm comm, int source, int tag);
1893
1894/* Finds the first matching message and returns it without modifying
1895 * the communication universe. If no matching message exists, returns a message
1896 * with source, dest, and tag all negative. */
1897$message $comm_seek($comm comm, int source, int tag);
1898
1899/* Finds the first matching message, removes it from the communicator,
1900 * and returns the message */
1901$message $comm_dequeue($comm comm, int source, int tag);
1902\end{verbatim}
1903
1904\section{C libraries}
1905
1906Each of the following libraries is at least partially implemented and can
1907be included in a CIVL-C program:
1908\begin{itemize}
1909\item \ct{assert}
1910 \begin{itemize}
1911 \item \verb!void assert(_Bool expr);!\\This is equivalent to an \cassert{} statement without error messages.
1912 \end{itemize}
1913\item \ct{math}
1914 \begin{itemize}
1915 \item \verb!double sqrt(double x);!
1916 \item \verb!double ceil(double x);!
1917 \item \verb!double exp(double x);!
1918 \end{itemize}
1919\item \ct{stdlib}
1920 \begin{itemize}
1921 \item \verb!size_t!
1922 \item \verb!void * malloc(size_t size);!\\
1923 This is equivalent to \verb!$malloc($root, size)!.
1924 \item \verb!void free(void * ptr);!\\
1925 This is identical to \verb!$free(ptr)!.
1926 \end{itemize}
1927\item \ct{stdbool}
1928 \begin{itemize}
1929 \item \verb!true!\\
1930 This is equivalent to \ctrue.
1931 \item \verb!false!\\
1932 This is equivalent to \cfalse.
1933 \end{itemize}
1934\item \ct{stddef}
1935 \begin{itemize}
1936 \item \verb!size_t!
1937 \item \verb!NULL!
1938 \end{itemize}
1939\item \ct{stdio}
1940 \begin{itemize}
1941 \item \verb!int printf(const char * restrict format, ...);!
1942 \end{itemize}
1943\item \ct{string}
1944 \begin{itemize}
1945 \item \verb!size_t!
1946 \item \verb!NULL!
1947 \item \verb!void memcpy(void * restrict dst, const void * restrict src, size_t n);!
1948 \end{itemize}
1949\end{itemize}
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