-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 1
/
Preface.v
412 lines (336 loc) · 19.9 KB
/
Preface.v
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
(** * Preface *)
(* ###################################################################### *)
(** * Welcome *)
(** This electronic book is a course on _Software Foundations_, the
mathematical underpinnings of reliable software. Topics include
basic concepts of logic, computer-assisted theorem proving and the
Coq proof assistant, functional programming, operational
semantics, Hoare logic, and static type systems. The exposition
is intended for a broad range of readers, from advanced
undergraduates to PhD students and researchers. No specific
background in logic or programming languages is assumed, though a
degree of mathematical maturity will be helpful.
One novelty of the course is that it is one hundred per cent
formalized and machine-checked: the entire text is literally a
script for Coq. It is intended to be read alongside an
interactive session with Coq. All the details in the text are
fully formalized in Coq, and the exercises are designed to be
worked using Coq.
The files are organized into a sequence of core chapters, covering
about one semester's worth of material and organized into a
coherent linear narrative, plus a number of "appendices" covering
additional topics. All the core chapters are suitable for both
graduate and upper-level undergraduate students. *)
(* ###################################################################### *)
(** * Overview *)
(** Building reliable software is hard. The scale and complexity of
modern software systems, the number of people involved in building
them, and the range of demands placed on them make it extremely
difficult to build software that works as intended, even most of
the time. At the same time, the increasing degree to which
software is woven into almost every aspect of our society
continually amplifies the cost of bugs and insecurities.
Computer science and software engineering have responded to these
challenges by developing a whole host of techniques for improving
software reliability, ranging from recommendations about managing
software projects and structuring programming teams (e.g., extreme
programming) to design philosophies for libraries (e.g.,
model-view-controller, publish-subscribe, etc.) and programming
languages (e.g., object-oriented programming, aspect-oriented
programming, functional programming), to mathematical techniques
for specifying and reasoning about properties of software and
tools for helping validate these properties.
The present course is focused on this last set of techniques. The
text weaves together five conceptual threads:
(1) basic tools from _logic_ for making and justifying precise
claims about programs;
(2) the use of _proof assistants_ to construct rigorous logical
arguments;
(3) the idea of _functional programming_, both as a method of
programming and as a bridge between programming and logic;
(4) formal techniques for _reasoning about the properties of
specific programs_ (e.g., that a loop terminates on all
inputs, or that a sorting function actually fulfills its
specification); and
(5) the use of _type systems_ for establishing well-behavedness
guarantees for _all_ programs in a given programming
language (e.g., the fact that well-typed Java programs cannot
be subverted at runtime).
Each of these topics is easily rich enough to fill a whole course
in its own right; taking all of them together naturally means that
much will be left unsaid. But we hope readers will agree that the
themes illuminate and amplify each other in useful ways, and that
bringing them together creates a foundation from which it will be
easy to dig into any of them more deeply. Some suggestions for
supplemental texts can be found in the [Postscript] chapter. *)
(** ** Logic *)
(** Logic is the field of study whose subject matter is _proofs_ --
unassailable arguments for the truth of particular propositions.
Volumes have been written about the central role of logic in
computer science. Manna and Waldinger called it "the calculus of
computer science," while Halpern et al.'s paper _On the Unusual
Effectiveness of Logic in Computer Science_ catalogs scores of
ways in which logic offers critical tools and insights.
In particular, the fundamental notion of inductive proofs is
ubiquitous in all of computer science. You have surely seen them
before, in contexts from discrete math to analysis of algorithms,
but in this course we will examine them much more deeply than you
have probably done so far. *)
(** ** Proof Assistants *)
(** The flow of ideas between logic and computer science has not gone
only one way: CS has made its own contributions to logic. One of
these has been the development of tools for constructing proofs of
logical propositions. These tools fall into two broad categories:
- _Automated theorem provers_ provide "push-button" operation:
you give them a proposition and they return either _true_,
_false_, or _ran out of time_. Although their capabilities
are limited to fairly specific sorts of reasoning, they have
matured enough to be useful now in a huge variety of
settings. Examples of such tools include SAT solvers, SMT
solvers, and model checkers.
- _Proof assistants_ are hybrid tools that try to automate the
more routine aspects of building proofs while depending on
human guidance for more difficult aspects. Widely used proof
assistants include Isabelle, Agda, Twelf, ACL2, PVS, and Coq,
among many others.
This course is based around Coq, a proof assistant that has been
under development since 1983 at a number of French research labs
and universities. Coq provides a rich environment for interactive
development of machine-checked formal reasoning. The kernel of
the Coq system is a simple proof-checker which guarantees that
only correct deduction steps are performed. On top of this
kernel, the Coq environment provides high-level facilities for
proof development, including powerful tactics for constructing
complex proofs semi-automatically, and a large library of common
definitions and lemmas.
Coq has been a critical enabler for a huge variety of work across
computer science and mathematics.
- As a platform for the modeling of programming languages, it has
become a standard tool for researchers who need to describe and
reason about complex language definitions. It has been used,
for example, to check the security of the JavaCard platform,
obtaining the highest level of common criteria certification,
and for formal specifications of the x86 and LLVM instruction
sets.
- As an environment for the development of formally certified
programs, Coq has been used to build CompCert, a fully-verified
optimizing compiler for C, for proving the correctness of subtle
algorithms involving floating point numbers, and as the basis
for Certicrypt, an environment for reasoning about the security
of cryptographic algorithms.
- As a realistic environment for experiments with programming with
dependent types, it has inspired numerous innovations. For
example, the Ynot project at Harvard embeds "relational Hoare
reasoning" (an extension of the _Hoare Logic_ we will see later
in this course) in Coq.
- As a proof assistant for higher-order logic, it has been used to
validate a number of important results in mathematics. For
example, its ability to include complex computations inside
proofs made it possible to develop the first formally verified
proof of the 4-color theorem. This proof had previously been
controversial among mathematicians because part of it included
checking a large number of configurations using a program. In
the Coq formalization, everything is checked, including the
correctness of the computational part. More recently, an even
more massive effort led to a Coq formalization of the
Feit-Thompson Theorem -- the first major step in the
classification of finite simple groups.
By the way, in case you're wondering about the name, here's what
the official Coq web site says: "Some French computer scientists
have a tradition of naming their software as animal species: Caml,
Elan, Foc or Phox are examples of this tacit convention. In French,
“coq” means rooster, and it sounds like the initials of the
Calculus of Constructions CoC on which it is based." The rooster
is also the national symbol of France, and "Coq" are the first
three letters of the name of Thierry Coquand, one of Coq's early
developers. *)
(** ** Functional Programming *)
(** The term _functional programming_ refers both to a collection of
programming idioms that can be used in almost any programming
language and to a particular family of programming languages that are
designed to emphasize these idioms, including Haskell, OCaml,
Standard ML, F##, Scala, Scheme, Racket, Common Lisp, Clojure,
Erlang, and Coq.
Functional programming has been developed by researchers over many
decades -- indeed, its roots go back to Church's lambda-calculus,
developed in the 1930s before the era of the computer began! But
in the past two decades it has enjoyed a surge of interest among
industrial engineers and language designers, playing a key role in
high-value systems at companies like Jane St. Capital, Microsoft,
Facebook, and Ericsson.
The most basic tenet of functional programming is that, as much as
possible, computation should be _pure_: the only effect of running
a computation should be to produce a result; the computation
should be free from _side effects_ such as I/O, assignments to
mutable variables, or redirecting pointers. For example, whereas
an _imperative_ sorting function might take a list of numbers and
rearrange the pointers to put the list in order, a pure sorting
function would take the original list and return a _new_ list
containing the same numbers in sorted order.
One significant benefit of this style of programming is that it
makes programs easier to understand and reason about. If every
operation on a data structure yields a new data structure, leaving
the old one intact, then there is no need to worry about where
else in the program the structure is being shared, whether a
change by one part of the program might break an invariant that
another part of the program thinks is being enforced. These
considerations are particularly critical in concurrent programs,
where any mutable state that is shared between threads is a
potential source of pernicious bugs. Indeed, a large part of the
recent interest in functional programming in industry is due to its
simple behavior in the presence of concurrency.
Another reason for the current excitement about functional
programming is related to this one: functional programs are often
much easier to parallelize than their imperative counterparts. If
running a computation has no effect other than producing a result,
then it can be run anywhere. If a data structure is never
modified in place, it can be copied freely, across cores or across
the network. Indeed, the MapReduce idiom that lies at the heart
of massively distributed query processors like Hadoop and is used
at Google to index the entire web is an instance of functional
programming.
For purposes of this course, functional programming has one other
significant attraction: it serves as a bridge between logic and
computer science. Indeed, Coq itself can be seen as a combination
of a small but extremely expressive functional programming
language, together with a set of tools for stating and proving
logical assertions. However, when we come to look more closely,
we will find that these two sides of Coq are actually aspects of
the very same underlying machinery -- i.e., _proofs are programs_. *)
(** ** Program Verification *)
(** The first third of the book is devoted to developing the
conceptual framework of logic and functional programming and to
gaining enough fluency with the essentials of Coq to use it for
modeling and reasoning about nontrivial artifacts. From this
point on, we will increasingly turn our attention to two broad
topics of critical importance to the enterprise of building
reliable software (and hardware!): techniques for proving specific
properties of particular _programs_ and for proving general
properties of whole programming _languages_.
For both of these, the first thing we need is a way of
representing programs as mathematical objects (so we can talk
about them precisely) and of describing their behavior in terms of
mathematical functions or relations. Our tools for these tasks
will be _abstract syntax_ and _operational semantics_, a method of
specifying the behavior of programs by writing abstract
interpreters. At the beginning, we will work with operational
semantics in the so-called "big-step" style, which leads to
somewhat simpler and more readable definitions, in those cases
where it is applicable. Later on, we will switch to a more
detailed "small-step" style, which helps make some useful
distinctions between different sorts of "nonterminating" program
behaviors and which can be applied to a broader range of language
features, including concurrency.
The first programming language we consider in detail is Imp, a
tiny toy language capturing the most fundamental features of
conventional imperative languages: variables, assignment,
conditionals, and loops. We study two different ways of reasoning
about the properties of Imp programs.
First, we consider what it means to say that two Imp programs are
_equivalent_ in the sense that they give the same behaviors for
all initial memories. This notion of equivalence then becomes a
criterion for judging the correctness of _metaprograms_ --
programs that manipulate other programs, such as compilers and
optimizers. We build a simple optimizer for Imp and prove that it
is correct.
Second, we develop a methodology for proving that Imp programs
satisfy some formal specification of their behavior. We introduce
the notion of _Hoare triples_ -- Imp programs annotated with pre-
and post-conditions describing what should be true about the
memory in which they are started and what they promise to make
true about the memory in which they terminate -- and the reasoning
principles of _Hoare Logic_, a "domain-specific logic" specialized
for convenient compositional reasoning about imperative programs,
with concepts like "loop invariant" built in.
This part of the course will give you a taste of the key ideas and
mathematical tools used for a wide variety of real-world software
and hardware verification tasks.
*)
(** ** Type Systems *)
(** Our final major topic, covering the last third of the course, is
_type systems_, a powerful set of tools for establishing
properties of _all_ programs in a given language.
Type systems are the best established and most popular example of
a highly successful class of formal verification techniques known
as _lightweight formal methods_. These are reasoning techniques
of modest power -- modest enough that automatic checkers can be
built into compilers, linkers, or program analyzers and thus be
applied even by programmers unfamiliar with the underlying
theories. (Other examples of lightweight formal methods include
hardware and software model checkers and run-time property
monitoring, a collection of techniques that allow a system to
detect, dynamically, when one of its components is not behaving
according to specification).
In a sense, this topic brings us full circle: the language whose
properties we study in this part, called the _simply typed
lambda-calculus_, is essentially a simplified model of the core of
Coq itself!
*)
(* ###################################################################### *)
(** * Practicalities *)
(* ###################################################################### *)
(** ** System Requirements *)
(** Coq runs on Windows, Linux, and OS X. You will need:
- A current installation of Coq, available from the Coq home
page. Everything should work with version 8.4.
- An IDE for interacting with Coq. Currently, there are two
choices:
- Proof General is an Emacs-based IDE. It tends to be
preferred by users who are already comfortable with
Emacs. It requires a separate installation (google
"Proof General").
- CoqIDE is a simpler stand-alone IDE. It is distributed
with Coq, but on some platforms compiling it involves
installing additional packages for GUI libraries and
such. *)
(* ###################################################################### *)
(** ** Exercises *)
(** Each chapter includes numerous exercises. Each is marked with a
"star rating," which can be interpreted as follows:
- One star: easy exercises that underscore points in the text
and that, for most readers, should take only a minute or two.
Get in the habit of working these as you reach them.
- Two stars: straightforward exercises (five or ten minutes).
- Three stars: exercises requiring a bit of thought (ten
minutes to half an hour).
- Four and five stars: more difficult exercises (half an hour
and up).
Also, some exercises are marked "advanced", and some are marked
"optional." Doing just the non-optional, non-advanced exercises
should provide good coverage of the core material. "Advanced"
exercises are for readers who want an extra challenge (and, in
return, a deeper contact with the material). "Optional" exercises
provide a bit of extra practice with key concepts and introduce
secondary themes that may be of interest to some readers. *)
(* ###################################################################### *)
(** ** Chapter Dependencies *)
(** A diagram of the dependencies between chapters and some suggested
paths through the material can be found in the file [deps.html]. *)
(* ###################################################################### *)
(** ** Downloading the Coq Files *)
(** A tar file containing the full sources for the "release version"
of these notes (as a collection of Coq scripts and HTML files) is
available here:
<<
http://www.cis.upenn.edu/~bcpierce/sf
>>
If you are using the notes as part of a class, you may be given
access to a locally extended version of the files, which you
should use instead of the release version.
*)
(* ###################################################################### *)
(** * Note for Instructors *)
(** If you intend to use these materials in your own course, you will
undoubtedly find things you'd like to change, improve, or add.
Your contributions are welcome!
Please send an email to Benjamin Pierce, and we'll set you up with
read/write access to our subversion repository and developers'
mailing list; in the repository you'll find a [README] with further
instructions. *)
(* ###################################################################### *)
(** * Translations *)
(** Thanks to the efforts of a team of volunteer translators, _Software
Foundations_ can now be enjoyed in Japanese:
- http://proofcafe.org/sf
*)
(* $Date: 2014-06-05 07:22:21 -0400 (Thu, 05 Jun 2014) $ *)