English

Relatively Complete Counterexamples for Higher-Order Programs

Programming Languages 2015-04-22 v2

Abstract

In this paper, we study the problem of generating inputs to a higher-order program causing it to error. We first study the problem in the setting of PCF, a typed, core functional language and contribute the first relatively complete method for constructing counterexamples for PCF programs. The method is relatively complete in the sense of Hoare logic; completeness is reduced to the completeness of a first-order solver over the base types of PCF. In practice, this means an SMT solver can be used for the effective, automated generation of higher-order counterexamples for a large class of programs. We achieve this result by employing a novel form of symbolic execution for higher-order programs. The remarkable aspect of this symbolic execution is that even though symbolic higher-order inputs and values are considered, the path condition remains a first-order formula. Our handling of symbolic function application enables the reconstruction of higher-order counterexamples from this first-order formula. After establishing our main theoretical results, we sketch how to apply the approach to untyped, higher-order, stateful languages with first-class contracts and show how counterexample generation can be used to detect contract violations in this setting. To validate our approach, we implement a tool generating counterexamples for erroneous modules written in Racket.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1411.3967,
  title  = {Relatively Complete Counterexamples for Higher-Order Programs},
  author = {Phuc C. Nguyen and David Van Horn},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1411.3967},
  year   = {2015}
}

Comments

In Proceedings of the 36th annual ACM SIGPLAN conference on Programming Language Design and Implementation, Portland, Oregon, June 2015

R2 v1 2026-06-22T06:59:18.783Z