1 | \chapter{\CFA Existing Features} |
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2 | |
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3 | \CFA (C-for-all)~\cite{Cforall} is an open-source project extending ISO C with |
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4 | modern safety and productivity features, while still ensuring backwards |
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5 | compatibility with C and its programmers. \CFA is designed to have an |
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6 | orthogonal feature-set based closely on the C programming paradigm |
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7 | (non-object-oriented) and these features can be added incrementally to an |
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8 | existing C code-base allowing programmers to learn \CFA on an as-needed basis. |
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9 | |
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10 | Only those \CFA features pertinent to this thesis are discussed. Many of the |
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11 | \CFA syntactic and semantic features used in the thesis should be fairly |
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12 | obvious to the reader. |
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13 | |
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14 | \section{Overloading and \lstinline{extern}} |
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15 | \CFA has extensive overloading, allowing multiple definitions of the same name |
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16 | to be defined.~\cite{Moss18} |
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17 | \begin{cfa} |
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18 | char i; int i; double i; $\C[3.75in]{// variable overload}$ |
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19 | int f(); double f(); $\C{// return overload}$ |
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20 | void g( int ); void g( double ); $\C{// parameter overload}\CRT$ |
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21 | \end{cfa} |
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22 | This feature requires name mangling so the assembly symbols are unique for |
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23 | different overloads. For compatibility with names in C, there is also a syntax |
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24 | to disable name mangling. These unmangled names cannot be overloaded but act as |
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25 | the interface between C and \CFA code. The syntax for disabling/enabling |
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26 | mangling is: |
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27 | \begin{cfa} |
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28 | // name mangling |
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29 | int i; // _X1ii_1 |
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30 | @extern "C"@ { // no name mangling |
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31 | int j; // j |
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32 | @extern "Cforall"@ { // name mangling |
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33 | int k; // _X1ki_1 |
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34 | } |
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35 | // no name mangling |
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36 | } |
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37 | // name mangling |
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38 | \end{cfa} |
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39 | Both forms of @extern@ affect all the declarations within their nested lexical |
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40 | scope and transition back to the previous mangling state when the lexical scope |
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41 | ends. |
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42 | |
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43 | \section{Reference Type} |
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44 | \CFA adds a rebindable reference type to C, but more expressive than the \Cpp |
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45 | reference. Multi-level references are allowed and act like auto-dereferenced |
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46 | pointers using the ampersand (@&@) instead of the pointer asterisk (@*@). \CFA |
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47 | references may also be mutable or non-mutable. If mutable, a reference variable |
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48 | may be assigned to using the address-of operator (@&@), which converts the |
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49 | reference to a pointer. |
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50 | \begin{cfa} |
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51 | int i, j; |
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52 | int @&@ ri = i, @&&@ rri = ri; |
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53 | rri = 3; // auto-dereference assign to i |
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54 | @&@ri = @&@j; // rebindable |
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55 | ri = 5; // assign to j |
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56 | \end{cfa} |
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57 | |
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58 | \section{Constructors and Destructors} |
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59 | |
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60 | Both constructors and destructors are operators, which means they are just |
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61 | functions with special operator names rather than type names in \Cpp. The |
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62 | special operator names may be used to call the functions explicitly (not |
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63 | allowed in \Cpp for constructors). |
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64 | |
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65 | In general, operator names in \CFA are constructed by bracketing an operator |
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66 | token with @?@, which indicates where the arguments. For example, infixed |
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67 | multiplication is @?*?@ while prefix dereference is @*?@. This syntax make it |
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68 | easy to tell the difference between prefix operations (such as @++?@) and |
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69 | post-fix operations (@?++@). |
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70 | |
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71 | The special name for a constructor is @?{}@, which comes from the |
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72 | initialization syntax in C. The special name for a destructor is @^{}@, where |
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73 | the @^@ has no special meaning. |
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74 | % I don't like the \^{} symbol but $^\wedge$ isn't better. |
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75 | \begin{cfa} |
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76 | struct T { ... }; |
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77 | void ?@{}@(@T &@ this, ...) { ... } // constructor |
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78 | void ?@^{}@(@T &@ this, ...) { ... } // destructor |
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79 | { |
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80 | T s = @{@ ... @}@; // same constructor/initialization braces |
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81 | } // destructor call automatically generated |
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82 | \end{cfa} |
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83 | The first parameter is a reference parameter to the type for the |
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84 | constructor/destructor. Destructors may have multiple parameters. The compiler |
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85 | implicitly matches an overloaded constructor @void ^?{}(T &, ...);@ to an |
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86 | object declaration with associated initialization, and generates a construction |
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87 | call after the object is allocated. When an object goes out of scope, the |
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88 | matching overloaded destructor @void ^?{}(T &);@ is called. Without explicit |
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89 | definition, \CFA creates a default and copy constructor, destructor and |
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90 | assignment (like \Cpp). It is possible to define constructors/destructors for |
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91 | basic and existing types. |
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92 | |
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93 | \section{Polymorphism} |
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94 | \CFA uses parametric polymorphism to create functions and types that are |
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95 | defined over multiple types. \CFA polymorphic declarations serve the same role |
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96 | as \Cpp templates or Java generics. The ``parametric'' means the polymorphism is |
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97 | accomplished by passing argument operations to associate \emph{parameters} at |
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98 | the call site, and these parameters are used in the function to differentiate |
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99 | among the types the function operates on. |
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100 | |
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101 | Polymorphic declarations start with a universal @forall@ clause that goes |
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102 | before the standard (monomorphic) declaration. These declarations have the same |
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103 | syntax except they may use the universal type names introduced by the @forall@ |
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104 | clause. For example, the following is a polymorphic identity function that |
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105 | works on any type @T@: |
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106 | \begin{cfa} |
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107 | @forall( T )@ @T@ identity( @T@ val ) { return val; } |
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108 | int forty_two = identity( 42 ); // T bound to int, forty_two == 42 |
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109 | \end{cfa} |
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110 | |
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111 | To allow a polymorphic function to be separately compiled, the type @T@ must be |
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112 | constrained by the operations used on @T@ in the function body. The @forall@ |
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113 | clauses is augmented with a list of polymorphic variables (local type names) |
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114 | and assertions (constraints), which represent the required operations on those |
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115 | types used in a function, \eg: |
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116 | \begin{cfa} |
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117 | forall( T @| { void do_once(T); }@) // assertion |
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118 | void do_twice(T value) { |
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119 | do_once(value); |
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120 | do_once(value); |
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121 | } |
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122 | void do_once(int i) { ... } // provide assertion |
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123 | int i; |
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124 | do_twice(i); // implicitly pass assertion do_once to do_twice |
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125 | \end{cfa} |
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126 | Any object with a type fulfilling the assertion may be passed as an argument to |
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127 | a @do_twice@ call. |
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128 | |
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129 | A polymorphic function can be used in the same way as a normal function. The |
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130 | polymorphic variables are filled in with concrete types and the assertions are |
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131 | checked. An assertion is checked by verifying each assertion operation (with |
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132 | all the variables replaced with the concrete types from the arguments) is |
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133 | defined at a call site. |
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134 | |
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135 | Note, a function named @do_once@ is not required in the scope of @do_twice@ to |
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136 | compile it, unlike \Cpp template expansion. Furthermore, call-site inferencing |
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137 | allows local replacement of the most specific parametric functions needs for a |
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138 | call. |
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139 | \begin{cfa} |
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140 | void do_once(double y) { ... } // global |
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141 | int quadruple(int x) { |
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142 | void do_once(int y) { y = y * 2; } // local |
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143 | do_twice(x); // using local "do_once" |
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144 | return x; |
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145 | } |
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146 | \end{cfa} |
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147 | Specifically, the complier deduces that @do_twice@'s T is an integer from the |
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148 | argument @x@. It then looks for the most specific definition matching the |
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149 | assertion, which is the nested integral @do_once@ defined within the |
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150 | function. The matched assertion function is then passed as a function pointer |
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151 | to @do_twice@ and called within it. |
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152 | |
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153 | To avoid typing long lists of assertions, constraints can be collect into |
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154 | convenient packages called a @trait@, which can then be used in an assertion |
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155 | instead of the individual constraints. |
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156 | \begin{cfa} |
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157 | trait done_once(T) { |
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158 | void do_once(T); |
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159 | } |
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160 | \end{cfa} |
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161 | and the @forall@ list in the previous example is replaced with the trait. |
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162 | \begin{cfa} |
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163 | forall(dtype T | @done_once(T)@) |
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164 | \end{cfa} |
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165 | In general, a trait can contain an arbitrary number of assertions, both |
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166 | functions and variables, and are usually used to create a shorthand for, and |
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167 | give descriptive names to, common groupings of assertions describing a certain |
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168 | functionality, like @sumable@, @listable@, \etc. |
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169 | |
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170 | Polymorphic structures and unions are defined by qualifying the aggregate type |
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171 | with @forall@. The type variables work the same except they are used in field |
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172 | declarations instead of parameters, returns, and local variable declarations. |
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173 | \begin{cfa} |
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174 | forall(dtype T) |
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175 | struct node { |
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176 | node(T) * next; // generic linked node |
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177 | T * data; |
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178 | } |
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179 | \end{cfa} |
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180 | The generic type @node(T)@ is an example of a polymorphic-type usage. Like \Cpp |
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181 | templates usage, a polymorphic-type usage must specify a type parameter. |
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182 | |
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183 | There are many other polymorphism features in \CFA but these are the ones used |
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184 | by the exception system. |
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185 | |
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186 | \section{Concurrency} |
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187 | \CFA has a number of concurrency features: @thread@, @monitor@, @mutex@ |
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188 | parameters, @coroutine@ and @generator@. The two features that interact with |
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189 | the exception system are @thread@ and @coroutine@; they and their supporting |
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190 | constructs are described here. |
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191 | |
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192 | \subsection{Coroutine} |
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193 | A coroutine is a type with associated functions, where the functions are not |
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194 | required to finish execution when control is handed back to the caller. Instead |
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195 | they may suspend execution at any time and be resumed later at the point of |
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196 | last suspension. (Generators are stackless and coroutines are stackful.) These |
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197 | types are not concurrent but share some similarities along with common |
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198 | underpinnings, so they are combined with the \CFA threading library. Further |
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199 | discussion in this section only refers to the coroutine because generators are |
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200 | similar. |
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201 | |
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202 | In \CFA, a coroutine is created using the @coroutine@ keyword, which is an |
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203 | aggregate type like @struct,@ except the structure is implicitly modified by |
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204 | the compiler to satisfy the @is_coroutine@ trait; hence, a coroutine is |
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205 | restricted by the type system to types that provide this special trait. The |
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206 | coroutine structure acts as the interface between callers and the coroutine, |
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207 | and its fields are used to pass information in and out of coroutine interface |
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208 | functions. |
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209 | |
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210 | Here is a simple example where a single field is used to pass (communicate) the |
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211 | next number in a sequence. |
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212 | \begin{cfa} |
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213 | coroutine CountUp { |
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214 | unsigned int next; // communication variable |
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215 | } |
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216 | CountUp countup; |
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217 | \end{cfa} |
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218 | Each coroutine has @main@ function, which takes a reference to a coroutine |
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219 | object and returns @void@. |
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220 | \begin{cfa}[numbers=left] |
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221 | void main(@CountUp & this@) { // argument matches trait is_coroutine |
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222 | unsigned int up = 0; // retained between calls |
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223 | while (true) { |
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224 | next = up; // make "up" available outside function |
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225 | @suspend;@$\label{suspend}$ |
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226 | up += 1; |
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227 | } |
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228 | } |
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229 | \end{cfa} |
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230 | In this function, or functions called by this function (helper functions), the |
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231 | @suspend@ statement is used to return execution to the coroutine's caller |
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232 | without terminating the coroutine. |
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233 | |
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234 | A coroutine is resumed by calling the @resume@ function, \eg @resume(countup)@. |
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235 | The first resume calls the @main@ function at the top. Thereafter, resume calls |
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236 | continue a coroutine in the last suspended function after the @suspend@ |
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237 | statement, in this case @main@ line~\ref{suspend}. The @resume@ function takes |
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238 | a reference to the coroutine structure and returns the same reference. The |
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239 | return value allows easy access to communication variables defined in the |
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240 | coroutine object. For example, the @next@ value for coroutine object @countup@ |
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241 | is both generated and collected in the single expression: |
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242 | @resume(countup).next@. |
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243 | |
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244 | \subsection{Monitors and Mutex} |
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245 | Concurrency does not guarantee ordering; without ordering results are |
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246 | non-deterministic. To claw back ordering, \CFA uses monitors and @mutex@ |
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247 | (mutual exclusion) parameters. A monitor is another kind of aggregate, where |
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248 | the compiler implicitly inserts a lock and instances are compatible with |
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249 | @mutex@ parameters. |
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250 | |
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251 | A function that requires deterministic (ordered) execution, acquires mutual |
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252 | exclusion on a monitor object by qualifying an object reference parameter with |
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253 | @mutex@. |
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254 | \begin{cfa} |
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255 | void example(MonitorA & @mutex@ argA, MonitorB & @mutex@ argB); |
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256 | \end{cfa} |
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257 | When the function is called, it implicitly acquires the monitor lock for all of |
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258 | the mutex parameters without deadlock. This semantics means all functions with |
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259 | the same mutex type(s) are part of a critical section for objects of that type |
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260 | and only one runs at a time. |
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261 | |
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262 | \subsection{Threads} |
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263 | Functions, generators, and coroutines are sequential so there is only a single |
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264 | (but potentially sophisticated) execution path in a program. Threads introduce |
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265 | multiple execution paths that continue independently. |
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266 | |
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267 | For threads to work safely with objects requires mutual exclusion using |
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268 | monitors and mutex parameters. For threads to work safely with other threads, |
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269 | also requires mutual exclusion in the form of a communication rendezvous, which |
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270 | also supports internal synchronization as for mutex objects. For exceptions |
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271 | only the basic two basic operations are important: thread fork and join. |
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272 | |
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273 | Threads are created like coroutines with an associated @main@ function: |
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274 | \begin{cfa} |
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275 | thread StringWorker { |
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276 | const char * input; |
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277 | int result; |
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278 | }; |
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279 | void main(StringWorker & this) { |
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280 | const char * localCopy = this.input; |
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281 | // ... do some work, perhaps hashing the string ... |
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282 | this.result = result; |
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283 | } |
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284 | { |
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285 | StringWorker stringworker; // fork thread running in "main" |
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286 | } // implicitly join with thread $\(\Rightarrow\)$ wait for completion |
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287 | \end{cfa} |
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288 | The thread main is where a new thread starts execution after a fork operation |
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289 | and then the thread continues executing until it is finished. If another thread |
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290 | joins with an executing thread, it waits until the executing main completes |
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291 | execution. In other words, everything a thread does is between a fork and join. |
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292 | |
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293 | From the outside, this behaviour is accomplished through creation and |
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294 | destruction of a thread object. Implicitly, fork happens after a thread |
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295 | object's constructor is run and join happens before the destructor runs. Join |
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296 | can also be specified explicitly using the @join@ function to wait for a |
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297 | thread's completion independently from its deallocation (\ie destructor |
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298 | call). If @join@ is called explicitly, the destructor does not implicitly join. |
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