| Version 19 (modified by , 5 years ago) ( diff ) |
|---|
CIVL IR
Language principles
- CIVL-IR is a subset of CIVL-C. A CIVL-IR program is a CIVL-C program, and has the same semantics.
Grammar
program: typedef* decl* fundef+ ;
typedef:
enum ID '{' idnetifier-list '}' ';'
| struct ID '{' decl* '}' ';'
| union ID '{' decl* '}' ';'
| 'typedef' type-specifier declarator ';'
;
decl: type-qualifier? type-specifier declarator ';' ;
fundef: type-specifier declarator block ;
block: '{' typedef* vardecl* fundef* statement* '}' ;
statement: block | simpleStmt | chooseStmt ;
simpleStmt: label? guard? primitiveStmt gotoStmt? ;
chooseStmt: label? '$choose' '{' simpleStmt* '}' ;
label: ID ':' ;
guard: '$when' '(' expr ')' ;
gotoStmt: 'goto' ID ;
expr:
simpleStmt:
INT /* integer constant */
ID /* identifier */
conclause : 'assigns' expr ';'
| 'requires' expr ';'
| 'ensures' expr ';'
...
Types
type-specifier:
ID /* typedef use */
| '$int' /* mathematical integers */
| '$bool' /* boolean type ($true and $false, unrelated to integers) */
| '$char' /* character type (Unicode characters, unrelated to integers) */
| '$real' /* mathematical reals */
| '$float' '<' INT ',' INT '>' /* IEEE floating-point numbers e=significand bits, f=exponent bits */
| '$herbrand' '<' type-name '>' /* Herbrand type of non-Herbrand numeric type T */
| '$proc' /* process type */
| '$bundle' /* bundle type for sequence of any type (same as seq<T>?) */
| '$heap' /* heap type, for dynamic allocation */
| '$range' /* regular sequence of integers */
| '$domain' /* tuple of ranges */
| '$mem' /* set of memory locations */
| 'enum' ID /* enumerated type */
| 'struct' ID /* structure type */
| 'union' ID /* union type */
| 'void' /* use as pointer element-type and return type of a function */
| '$seq' '<' type-name '>' /* sequence of T */
| '$set' '<' type-name '>' /* set of T */
| '$map' '<' type-name ',' type-name '>' /* partial function from T1 to T2 */
| '$rel' '<' type-list '>' /* relation: set of n-tuples with specified component types */
;
type-qualifier: '$input' | '$output' ;
declarator: '*'* ID ('[' ']' | '(' type-list? ')')* ;
type-name: type-specifier '*'* ('[' ']' | '(' type-list? ')')* ;
type-list: type-name (',' type-name)* ;
complete-type-name: type-specifier '*'* ('[' expr ']' | '(' type-list? ')')* ;
Notes
- Sequences, sets, maps, and relations are immutable. An assignment using objects of this type creates a new copy of the object, just as with primitive types like
int. - The main difference between the array type and the sequence type is that elements of an array are addressable, i.e., one can form a pointer such as
&a[i]. This is not possible with sequences, sets, maps, or relations---there is no way to have a pointer to any component of such a type. - The difference between the function type and map type: a function is really a procedure in the language, so it can modify the state as well as return a value. This is like the C notion of "function". A map is a logical partial function: it is defined on some subset of the domain type, it will always "return" the same value on a given input, and reading it cannot modify the state.
Questions
- how to allocate an array
- how to initialize a variable (what are initial values?)
- how to go between sequences and arrays
- can you make types values? (reification)
Note:
See TracWiki
for help on using the wiki.
