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Homeomorphic Embedding for Online Termination
- STATIC ANALYSIS. PROCEEDINGS OF SAS’98, LNCS 1503
, 1998
"... Recently well-quasi orders in general, and homeomorphic embedding in particular, have gained popularity to ensure the termination of program analysis, specialisation and transformation techniques. In this paper, ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 57 (8 self)
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Recently well-quasi orders in general, and homeomorphic embedding in particular, have gained popularity to ensure the termination of program analysis, specialisation and transformation techniques. In this paper,
Logic program specialisation through partial deduction: Control issues
- THEORY AND PRACTICE OF LOGIC PROGRAMMING
, 2002
"... Program specialisation aims at improving the overall performance of programs by performing source to source transformations. A common approach within functional and logic programming, known respectively as partial evaluation and partial deduction, is to exploit partial knowledge about the input. It ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 46 (12 self)
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Program specialisation aims at improving the overall performance of programs by performing source to source transformations. A common approach within functional and logic programming, known respectively as partial evaluation and partial deduction, is to exploit partial knowledge about the input. It is achieved through a well-automated application of parts of the Burstall-Darlington unfold/fold transformation framework. The main challenge in developing systems is to design automatic control that ensures correctness, efficiency, and termination. This survey and tutorial presents the main developments in controlling partial deduction over the past 10 years and analyses their respective merits and shortcomings. It ends with an assessment of current achievements and sketches some remaining research challenges.
Redundant Argument Filtering of Logic Programs
- Logic Program Synthesis and Transformation. Proceedings of LOPSTR’96, LNCS 1207
, 1996
"... This paper is concerned with the problem of removing, from a given logic program, redundant arguments. These are arguments which can be removed without affecting correctness. Most program specialisation techniques, even though they perform argument filtering and redundant clause removal, fail to re ..."
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Cited by 40 (17 self)
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This paper is concerned with the problem of removing, from a given logic program, redundant arguments. These are arguments which can be removed without affecting correctness. Most program specialisation techniques, even though they perform argument filtering and redundant clause removal, fail to remove a substantial number of redundant arguments, yielding in some cases rather inefficient residual programs. We formalise the notion of a redundant argument and show that one cannot decide effectively whether a given argument is redundant. We then give a safe, effective approximation of the notion of a redundant argument and describe several simple and efficient algorithms calculating based on the approximative notion. We conduct extensive experiments with our algorithms on mechanically generated programs illustrating the practical benefits of our approach.
Offline specialisation in Prolog using a hand-written compiler generator
, 2004
"... The so called âcogen approachâ to program specialisation, writing a compiler generator instead of a specialiser, has been used with considerable success in partial evaluation of both functional and imperative languages. This paper demonstrates that this approach is also applicable to partial eva ..."
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Cited by 38 (21 self)
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The so called âcogen approachâ to program specialisation, writing a compiler generator instead of a specialiser, has been used with considerable success in partial evaluation of both functional and imperative languages. This paper demonstrates that this approach is also applicable to partial evaluation of logic programming languages, also called partial deduction. Self-application has not been as much in focus in logic programming as for functional and imperative languages, and the attempts to self-apply partial deduction systems have, of yet, not been altogether that successful. So, especially for partial deduction, the cogen approach should prove to have a considerable importance when it comes to practical applications. This paper first develops a generic offline partial deduction technique for pure logic programs, notably supporting partially instantiated datastructures via binding types. From this a very efficient cogen is derived, which generates very efficient generating extensions (executing up to several orders of magnitude faster than current online systems) which in turn perform very good and non-trivial specialisation, even rivalling existing online systems. All this is supported by extensive benchmarks. Finally, it is shown how the cogen can be extended to directly support a large part of Prologâs declarative and non-declarative features and how semi-online specialisation can be efficiently integrated.
Conjunctive Partial Deduction: Foundations, Control, Algorithms, and Experiments
- J. LOGIC PROGRAMMING
, 1999
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A Roadmap to Metacomputation by Supercompilation
, 1996
"... This paper gives a gentle introduction to Turchin's supercompilation and its applications in metacomputation with an emphasis on recent developments. First, a complete supercompiler, including positive driving and generalization, is defined for a functional language and illustrated with examples. Th ..."
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Cited by 33 (4 self)
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This paper gives a gentle introduction to Turchin's supercompilation and its applications in metacomputation with an emphasis on recent developments. First, a complete supercompiler, including positive driving and generalization, is defined for a functional language and illustrated with examples. Then a taxonomy of related transformers is given and compared to the supercompiler. Finally, we put supercompilation into the larger perspective of metacomputation and consider three metacomputation tasks: specialization, composition, and inversion.
Logic Program Specialisation: How To Be More Specific
- Proceedings of the International Symposium on Programming Languages, Implementations, Logics and Programs (PLILP'96), LNCS 1140
, 1996
"... Standard partial deduction suffers from several drawbacks when compared to topdown abstract interpretation schemes. Conjunctive partial deduction, an extension of standard partial deduction, remedies one of those, namely the lack of side-ways information passing. But two other problems remain: the l ..."
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Cited by 33 (21 self)
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Standard partial deduction suffers from several drawbacks when compared to topdown abstract interpretation schemes. Conjunctive partial deduction, an extension of standard partial deduction, remedies one of those, namely the lack of side-ways information passing. But two other problems remain: the lack of success-propagation as well as the lack of inference of global success-information. We illustrate these drawbacks and show how they can be remedied by combining conjunctive partial deduction with an abstract interpretation technique known as more specific program construction. We present a simple, as well as a more refined integration of these methods. Finally we illustrate the practical relevance of this approach for some advanced applications, like proving functionality or specialising certain meta-programs written in the ground representation, where it surpasses the precision of current abstract interpretation techniques. 1 Introduction The heart of any technique for partial deduc...
Program specialisation and abstract interpretation reconciled
- In Joint International Conference and Symposium on Logic Programming
, 1998
"... We clarify the relationship between abstract interpretation and program specialisation in the context of logic programming. We present a generic top-down abstract specialisation framework, along with a generic correctness result, into which a lot of the existing specialisation techniques can be cast ..."
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Cited by 27 (13 self)
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We clarify the relationship between abstract interpretation and program specialisation in the context of logic programming. We present a generic top-down abstract specialisation framework, along with a generic correctness result, into which a lot of the existing specialisation techniques can be cast. The framework also shows how these techniques can be further improved by moving to more refined abstract domains. It, however, also highlights inherent limitations shared by all these approaches. In order to overcome them, and to fully unify program specialisation with abstract interpretation, we also develop a generic combined bottom-up/top-down framework, which allows specialisation and analysis outside the reach of existing techniques. 1
Conjunctive Partial Deduction in Practice
- Proceedings of the International Workshop on Logic Program Synthesis and Transformation (LOPSTR'96), LNCS 1207
, 1996
"... . Recently, partial deduction of logic programs has been extended to conceptually embed folding. To this end, partial deductions are no longer computed of single atoms, but rather of entire conjunctions; Hence the term "conjunctive partial deduction". Conjunctive partial deduction aims at achieving ..."
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Cited by 26 (19 self)
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. Recently, partial deduction of logic programs has been extended to conceptually embed folding. To this end, partial deductions are no longer computed of single atoms, but rather of entire conjunctions; Hence the term "conjunctive partial deduction". Conjunctive partial deduction aims at achieving unfold/fold-like program transformations such as tupling and deforestation within fully automated partial deduction. However, its merits greatly surpass that limited context: Also other major efficiency improvements are obtained through considerably improved side-ways information propagation. In this extended abstract, we investigate conjunctive partial deduction in practice. We describe the concrete options used in the implementation(s), look at abstraction in a practical Prolog context, include and discuss an extensive set of benchmark results. From these, we can conclude that conjunctive partial deduction indeed pays off in practice, thoroughly beating its conventional precursor on a wide...
Homeomorphic embedding for online termination of symbolic methods
- In The essence of computation, volume 2566 of LNCS
, 2002
"... Abstract. Well-quasi orders in general, and homeomorphic embedding in particular, have gained popularity to ensure the termination of techniques for program analysis, specialisation, transformation, and verification. In this paper we survey and discuss this use of homeomorphic embedding and clarify ..."
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Cited by 25 (5 self)
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Abstract. Well-quasi orders in general, and homeomorphic embedding in particular, have gained popularity to ensure the termination of techniques for program analysis, specialisation, transformation, and verification. In this paper we survey and discuss this use of homeomorphic embedding and clarify the advantages of such an approach over one using well-founded orders. We also discuss various extensions of the homeomorphic embedding relation. We conclude with a study of homeomorphic embedding in the context of metaprogramming, presenting some new (positive and negative) results and open problems.

