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lh-tactics-test

Replication package for Haskell'22 paper "Liquid Proof Macros".

Documentation

For now, please see our paper Liquid Proof Macros and the examples in props-done/ for details on how to use lh-tactics.

Installation

To clonse lh-tactics-test and install lh-tactics:

# clone the `lh-tatics-test` repository, 
# which includes `lh-tactics as a submodule
git clone https://github.com/Riib11/lh-tactics-test.git
cd lh-tactics-test/
git submodule update --init

# build and install `lh-tactics` library and executable
cd lh-tactics/
sh build-install

Running one of our tests

The following example shows how to run the lh-tactics tool on one of the examples included in the set of examples used in the evaluation mentioned in Liquid Proof Macros Inside lh-tactics-test/, run the following commands:

# copy the file that contains the example into `src/TIP/`
cp props-done/Prop1.hs src/TIP/

# run the `lh-tactics` tool on `Prop1`
stack clean
lh-tactics src/TIP/Prop1.hs:prop1_proof

This will output some debugging and logging information, and modify the file src/TIP/Prop1.hs in place. Give it a few seconds to complete (it will give you feedback as it runs). You can have the file open in a modern text editor such as VSCode in order to watch the proof term being generated.

IMPORTANT: Building lh-tactics-test straightforwardly with stack build will not run liquid-haskell (you can see it is commented out in package.yaml) because of some complications in how lh-tactics works. To actually run liquid haskell while building, you must use

stack build --ghc-options="-fplugin=LiquidHaskell"

To run other examples, cp the right file from props-done/ into src/TIP/.

Running your own test

Make a new stack package, let's call it test-package.

stack new test-package
cd test-package/

Include the following in the package's dependencies:

dependencies:
  - liquidhaskell == 0.8.10.7
  - liquid-base == 4.15.0.0
  - template-haskell == 2.17.0.0
  - lh-tactics

Say you want to use lh-tactics in a module Test. Then the file Test.hs should have the following structure, where proof is a definition that uses proof macros:

{-# LANGUAGE QuasiQuotes #-}
{-# LANGUAGE TemplateHaskell #-}

{-@ LIQUID "--reflection" @-}
{-@ LIQUID "--ple-local" @-}

module Test where

import Language.Haskell.TH.Syntax
import Proof
import Tactic.Core.Quote

--- ...

{-@ automatic-instances proof @-}
{-@
proof :: ... -- refined type signature
-@}
[tactic|
proof :: ... -- type signature
proof = ... -- tactics
|]

Then run lh-tactics like so in test-package/

stack clean
lh-tactics src/Test.hs:proof

This will give you some feedback, including syntax errors and the like. Then finally, to verify your proof, run the following:

stack build --ghc-options="-fplugin=LiquidHaskell"

If lh-tactics succeeded, it should have commented out your original proof macro usage and put a generated proof term directly underneath it.

Data

The evaluation in Liquid Proof Macros was based on the data available in data/. In particular:

  • data/easy-inductives.md shows which properties (from props-done) were successfully proven, and which of those only required "easy" proofs (via proof macros)
  • data/line-diffs.md shows the differences in line counts between each property's file before/after running lh-tactics, and additional line count diffs for before/after running the liquid proof macros pruning procedure

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