{"title":"用于高阶程序验证的自动化技术","authors":"N. Kobayashi, Luke Ong, David Van Horn","doi":"10.2201/NIIPI.2013.10.9","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"interpretation techniques are used to derive a control-flow analysis for a simple higher-order functional language. The analysis approximates the interprocedural control-flow of both function calls and returns in the presence of first-class functions and tail-call optimization. The analysis is systematically derived by abstract interpretation of the stack-based CaEK abstract machine of Flanagan et al. using a series of Galois connections. The analysis induces an equivalent constraint-based formulation, thereby providing a rational reconstruction of a constraintbased, higher-order CFA from abstract interpretation principles. Joint work with Jan Midtgaard. CFA2: Pushdown Flow Analysis for Higher-Order Languages Dimitrios Vardoulakis (Northeastern University) Flow analysis is a valuable tool for creating better programming languages; its applications span optimization, debugging, verification and program understanding. Despite its apparent usefulness, flow analysis of higher-order programs has not been made practical. The reason is that existing analyses do not model function call and return well: they remember only a bounded number of pending calls because they approximate programs with control-flow graphs. Call/return mismatch results in imprecision and increases the analysis time. In this talk I will describe CFA, a flow analysis that provides unbounded call/return matching in","PeriodicalId":91638,"journal":{"name":"... Proceedings of the ... IEEE International Conference on Progress in Informatics and Computing. IEEE International Conference on Progress in Informatics and Computing","volume":"32 1","pages":"157-165"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2013-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Automated techniques for higher-order program verification\",\"authors\":\"N. Kobayashi, Luke Ong, David Van Horn\",\"doi\":\"10.2201/NIIPI.2013.10.9\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"interpretation techniques are used to derive a control-flow analysis for a simple higher-order functional language. The analysis approximates the interprocedural control-flow of both function calls and returns in the presence of first-class functions and tail-call optimization. The analysis is systematically derived by abstract interpretation of the stack-based CaEK abstract machine of Flanagan et al. using a series of Galois connections. The analysis induces an equivalent constraint-based formulation, thereby providing a rational reconstruction of a constraintbased, higher-order CFA from abstract interpretation principles. Joint work with Jan Midtgaard. CFA2: Pushdown Flow Analysis for Higher-Order Languages Dimitrios Vardoulakis (Northeastern University) Flow analysis is a valuable tool for creating better programming languages; its applications span optimization, debugging, verification and program understanding. Despite its apparent usefulness, flow analysis of higher-order programs has not been made practical. The reason is that existing analyses do not model function call and return well: they remember only a bounded number of pending calls because they approximate programs with control-flow graphs. Call/return mismatch results in imprecision and increases the analysis time. In this talk I will describe CFA, a flow analysis that provides unbounded call/return matching in\",\"PeriodicalId\":91638,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"... Proceedings of the ... IEEE International Conference on Progress in Informatics and Computing. IEEE International Conference on Progress in Informatics and Computing\",\"volume\":\"32 1\",\"pages\":\"157-165\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2013-03-01\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"... Proceedings of the ... IEEE International Conference on Progress in Informatics and Computing. 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Automated techniques for higher-order program verification
interpretation techniques are used to derive a control-flow analysis for a simple higher-order functional language. The analysis approximates the interprocedural control-flow of both function calls and returns in the presence of first-class functions and tail-call optimization. The analysis is systematically derived by abstract interpretation of the stack-based CaEK abstract machine of Flanagan et al. using a series of Galois connections. The analysis induces an equivalent constraint-based formulation, thereby providing a rational reconstruction of a constraintbased, higher-order CFA from abstract interpretation principles. Joint work with Jan Midtgaard. CFA2: Pushdown Flow Analysis for Higher-Order Languages Dimitrios Vardoulakis (Northeastern University) Flow analysis is a valuable tool for creating better programming languages; its applications span optimization, debugging, verification and program understanding. Despite its apparent usefulness, flow analysis of higher-order programs has not been made practical. The reason is that existing analyses do not model function call and return well: they remember only a bounded number of pending calls because they approximate programs with control-flow graphs. Call/return mismatch results in imprecision and increases the analysis time. In this talk I will describe CFA, a flow analysis that provides unbounded call/return matching in