English

A Practical Mode System for Recursive Definitions

Programming Languages 2020-12-24 v4

Abstract

In call-by-value languages, some mutually-recursive value definitions can be safely evaluated to build recursive functions or cyclic data structures, but some definitions (let rec x = x + 1) contain vicious circles and their evaluation fails at runtime. We propose a new static analysis to check the absence of such runtime failures. We present a set of declarative inference rules, prove its soundness with respect to the reference source-level semantics of Nordlander, Carlsson, and Gill (2008), and show that it can be (right-to-left) directed into an algorithmic check in a surprisingly simple way. Our implementation of this new check replaced the existing check used by the OCaml programming language, a fragile syntactic/grammatical criterion which let several subtle bugs slip through as the language kept evolving. We document some issues that arise when advanced features of a real-world functional language (exceptions in first-class modules, GADTs, etc.) interact with safety checking for recursive definitions.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1811.08134,
  title  = {A Practical Mode System for Recursive Definitions},
  author = {Alban Reynaud and Gabriel Scherer and Jeremy Yallop},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1811.08134},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

Author version of POPL'21 article. 29 pages + Appendices