Templates and Recurrences: Better Together
March 30, 2020 ยท Declared Dead ยท ๐ ACM-SIGPLAN Symposium on Programming Language Design and Implementation
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Authors
Jason Breck, John Cyphert, Zachary Kincaid, Thomas Reps
arXiv ID
2003.13515
Category
cs.PL: Programming Languages
Citations
24
Venue
ACM-SIGPLAN Symposium on Programming Language Design and Implementation
Last Checked
1 month ago
Abstract
This paper is the confluence of two streams of ideas in the literature on generating numerical invariants, namely: (1) template-based methods, and (2) recurrence-based methods. A template-based method begins with a template that contains unknown quantities, and finds invariants that match the template by extracting and solving constraints on the unknowns. A disadvantage of template-based methods is that they require fixing the set of terms that may appear in an invariant in advance. This disadvantage is particularly prominent for non-linear invariant generation, because the user must supply maximum degrees on polynomials, bases for exponents, etc. On the other hand, recurrence-based methods are able to find sophisticated non-linear mathematical relations, including polynomials, exponentials, and logarithms, because such relations arise as the solutions to recurrences. However, a disadvantage of past recurrence-based invariant-generation methods is that they are primarily loop-based analyses: they use recurrences to relate the pre-state and post-state of a loop, so it is not obvious how to apply them to a recursive procedure, especially if the procedure is non-linearly recursive (e.g., a tree-traversal algorithm). In this paper, we combine these two approaches and obtain a technique that uses templates in which the unknowns are functions rather than numbers, and the constraints on the unknowns are recurrences. The technique synthesizes invariants involving polynomials, exponentials, and logarithms, even in the presence of arbitrary control-flow, including any combination of loops, branches, and (possibly non-linear) recursion. For instance, it is able to show that (i) the time taken by merge-sort is $O(n \log(n))$, and (ii) the time taken by Strassen's algorithm is $O(n^{\log_2(7)})$.
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