Proposal: GHC.Generics marked UNSAFE for SafeHaskell

Johan Tibell johan.tibell
Sun Oct 6 21:46:34 UTC 2013


What would break if we changed it to Unsafe?

On Sun, Oct 6, 2013 at 2:32 PM, Ryan Newton <rrnewton at gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> We had a discussion on haskell-cafe, which only confirmed the unreliability
> of "Eq" and "Ord".  Fine.  But if I instead want to define a SafeEq class
> and instances based on GHC.Generics, then I can't have users writing Generic
> instances that lie about the structure of their types.
>
> But as you can see this module is currently marked "Trustworthy":
>
>
> http://www.haskell.org/ghc/docs/7.4.1/html/libraries/ghc-prim-0.2.0.0/GHC-Generics.html
>
> I simply propose that this is changed to "Unsafe"! [1]
>
> Context:
> The bottom line is that I believe in the Safe-Haskell mission here, and I
> want to be able to deliver practical libraries that give a strong guarantee
> that types can't be broken.   Currently, the LVish library has one big hole
> in it because of this Eq/Ord limitation; the problem is documented here.
>    If we can provide incontrovertible Safe-Haskel guarantees, this is a
> huge, qualitative difference compared to what's possible in the C++, Java's
> and MLs of the world.  There are plenty of libraries that provide guarantees
> like "deterministic parallelism" IFF the user does everything right and
> breaks no rules (CnC, Pochoir, etc).  But we can do better!
>
> Best,
>   -Ryan
>
> [1]  Small detail... some of these bindings, like the class name "Generic"
> itself, will still need to be accessible from a Trustworthy library.  I
> propose GHC.Generics.Safe for that, following existing precedent.
>
> On Sun, Oct 6, 2013 at 5:18 PM, Ryan Newton <rrnewton at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> Thanks for the responses all.
>>
>> I'm afraid the point about GHC.Generics got lost here.  I'll respond and
>> then rename this as a specific library proposal.
>>
>> I don't want to fix the world's Eq instances, but I am ok with requiring
>> that people "derive Generic" for any data they want to put in an LVar
>> container.  (From which I can give them a SafeEq instance.)
>>
>> It's not just LVish that is in this boat.... any library that tries to
>> provide deterministic parallelism outside of the IO monad has some very fine
>> lines to walk.  Take a look at Accelerate.  It is deterministic (as long as
>> you run only with the CUDA backend and only on one specific GPU... otherwise
>> fold topologies may look different and non-associative folds may leak).
>> Besides, "runAcc" does a huge amount of implicit IO (writing to disk,
>> calling nvcc, etc)!  At the very least this could fail if the disk if full.
>> But then again, regular "pure" computations fail when memory runs out... so
>> I'm ok grouping these in the same bucket for now.  "Determinism modulo
>> available resources."
>>
>>> A possible problem with marking "instance Eq" as an unsafe feature is
>>> that many modules would be only Trustworthy instead of Safe.
>>
>>
>> My proposal is actually more narrow than that.  My proposal is to mark
>> GHC.Generics as Unsafe.
>>
>> That way I can define my own SafeEq, and know that someone can't break it
>> by making a Generic instance that lies.  It is very hard for me to see why
>> people should be able to make their own Generic instances (that might lie
>> about the structure of the type), in Safe-Haskell.
>>>
>>>
>>> That would go against my "every purely functional module is automatically
>>> safe because the compiler checks that it cannot launch the missiles"
>>> understanding of Safe Haskell.
>>
>>
>> Heh, that may already be violated by the fact that you can't use other
>> extensions like OverlappingInstances, or provide your own Typeable
>> instances.
>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Actually, Eq instances are not unsafe per se, but only if I also use some
>>> other module that assumes certain properties about all Eq instances in
>>> scope. So in order to check safety, two independent modules (the provider
>>> and the consumer of the Eq instance) would have to cooperate.
>>
>>
>> I've found, that this is a very common problem that we have when trying to
>> make our libraries Safe-Haskell compliant -- often we want to permit and
>> deny combinations of modules.  I don't have a solution I'm afraid.
>>
>>
>
>
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