9. Executing WhyML Programs¶
This chapter shows how WhyML code can be executed, either by being interpreted or compiled to some existing programming language.
Let us consider the program of Section 3.2 that computes the maximum and the sum of an array of integers.
Let us assume it is contained in a file maxsum.mlw
.
9.1. Interpreting WhyML Code¶
To test function max_sum
, we can introduce a WhyML test function in
module MaxAndSum
let test () =
let n = 10 in
let a = make n 0 in
a[0] <- 9; a[1] <- 5; a[2] <- 0; a[3] <- 2; a[4] <- 7;
a[5] <- 3; a[6] <- 2; a[7] <- 1; a[8] <- 10; a[9] <- 6;
max_sum a n
and then we use the execute
command to interpret this function, as
follows:
> why3 execute maxsum.mlw MaxAndSum.test
Execution of MaxAndSum.test ():
type: (int, int)
result: (45, 10)
globals:
We get the expected output, namely the pair (45, 10)
.
9.2. Compiling WhyML to OCaml¶
An alternative to interpretation is to compile WhyML to OCaml. We do so
using the extract
command, as follows:
why3 extract -D ocaml64 maxsum.mlw -o max_sum.ml
The extract
command requires the name of a driver, which indicates
how theories/modules from the Why3 standard library are translated to
OCaml. Here we assume a 64-bit architecture and thus we pass
ocaml64
. We also specify an output file using option -o
, namely
max_sum.ml
. After this command, the file max_sum.ml
contains an
OCaml code for function max_sum
. To compile it, we create a file
main.ml
containing a call to max_sum
, e.g.,
let a = Array.map Z.of_int [| 9; 5; 0; 2; 7; 3; 2; 1; 10; 6 |]
let s, m = Max_sum.max_sum a (Z.of_int 10)
let () = Format.printf "sum=%s, max=%s@." (Z.to_string s) (Z.to_string m)
It is convenient to use ocamlbuild to compile and link both files
max_sum.ml
and main.ml
:
ocamlbuild -pkg zarith main.native
Since Why3’s type int
is translated to OCaml arbitrary precision
integers using the ZArith
library, we have to pass option
-pkg zarith
to ocamlbuild. In order to get extracted code that
uses OCaml’s native integers instead, one has to use Why3’s types for
63-bit integers from libraries mach.int.Int63
and
mach.array.Array63
.
9.2.1. Examples¶
We illustrate different ways of using the extract
command through
some examples.
Consider the program of Section 3.6.
If we are only interested in extracting function enqueue
, we can
proceed as follows:
why3 extract -D ocaml64 -L . aqueue.AmortizedQueue.enqueue -o aqueue.ml
Here we assume that file aqueue.mlw
contains this program, and that
we invoke the extract
command from the directory where this file is stored. File
aqueue.ml
now contains the following OCaml code:
let enqueue (x: 'a) (q: 'a queue) : 'a queue =
create (q.front) (q.lenf) (x :: (q.rear))
(Z.add (q.lenr) (Z.of_string "1"))
Choosing a function symbol as the entry point of extraction allows us to
focus only on specific parts of the program. However, the generated code
cannot be type-checked by the OCaml compiler, as it depends on function
create
and on type 'a queue
, whose definitions are not given. In
order to obtain a complete OCaml implementation, we can perform a
recursive extraction:
why3 extract --recursive -D ocaml64 -L . aqueue.AmortizedQueue.enqueue -o aqueue.ml
This updates the contents of file aqueue.ml
as follows:
type 'a queue = {
front: 'a list;
lenf: Z.t;
rear: 'a list;
lenr: Z.t;
}
let create (f: 'a list) (lf: Z.t) (r: 'a list) (lr: Z.t) : 'a queue =
if Z.geq lf lr
then
{ front = f; lenf = lf; rear = r; lenr = lr }
else
let f1 = List.append f (List.rev r) in
{ front = f1; lenf = Z.add lf lr; rear = []; lenr = (Z.of_string "0") }
let enqueue (x: 'a) (q: 'a queue) : 'a queue =
create (q.front) (q.lenf) (x :: (q.rear))
(Z.add (q.lenr) (Z.of_string "1"))
This new version of the code is now accepted by the OCaml compiler
(provided the ZArith
library is available, as above).
9.2.2. Custom Extraction Drivers¶
Several OCaml drivers can be specified on the command line, using option
-D
several times. In particular, one can provide a custom driver to
map some symbols of a Why3 development to existing OCaml code. Suppose
for instance we have a file file.mlw
containing a proof
parameterized with some type elt
and some binary function f
:
module M
type elt
val f (x y: elt) : elt
let double (x: elt) : elt = f x x
...
When it comes to extract this module to OCaml, we may want to
instantiate type elt
with OCaml’s type int
and function f
with OCaml’s addition. For this purpose, we provide the following in a
file mydriver.drv
:
module file.M
syntax type elt "int"
syntax val f "%1 + %2"
end
OCaml fragments to be substituted for Why3 symbols are given as
arbitrary strings, where %1
, %2
, etc., will be replaced with
actual arguments. Here is the extraction command line and its output:
> why3 extract -D ocaml64 -D mydriver.drv -L . file.M
let double (x: int) : int = x + x
...
When using such custom drivers, it is not possible to pass Why3 file names on the command line; one has to specify module names to be extracted, as done above.