[Haskell-cafe] Re: Proofs and commercial code -- was Haskell Weekly News: Issue 85 - September 13, 2008

Daryoush Mehrtash dmehrtash at gmail.com
Mon Sep 15 02:52:46 EDT 2008


Does it make sense to use proof to validate that a given monad
implementation obeys its laws?

daryoush

2008/9/14 Greg Meredith <lgreg.meredith at biosimilarity.com>:
> Daryoush,
>
> One of the subtle points about computation is that -- via Curry-Howard --
> well-typed programs are already proofs. They may not be the proof you were
> seeking (there are a lot of programs from Int -> Int), or prove the theorem
> you were seeking to prove (Ord a => [a] -> [a] is a lot weaker than 'this
> program sorts lists of ordered types'), but they are witnesses of any type
> they type-check against. In a system that has principal types, they are
> proofs of their principal type. In this sense, the utility of proofs is
> widespread: they are programs.
>
> There is a really subtle dance between types that are rich enough to express
> the theorems you would have your programs be proofs of and the termination
> of type-checking for that type system. That's why people often do proofs by
> hand -- because the theorems they need to prove require a greater degree of
> expressiveness than is available in the type system supported by the
> language in which the programs are expressed. Research has really been
> pushing the envelope of what's expressible in types -- from region and
> resource analysis to deadlock-freedom. Again, in that setting the program is
> a witness of a property like
>
> won't leak URLs to unsavory agents
> won't hold on to handles past their garbage-collect-by date
> won't get caught in a 'deadly embrace' (A is waiting for B, B is waiting for
> A)
>
> Sometimes, however, and often in mission critical code, you need stronger
> assurances, like
>
> this code really does implement a FIFO queue, or
> this code really does implement sliding window protocol, or
> this code really does implement two-phase-commit-presumed-abort
>
> It's harder -- in fact i think it's impossible for bullet item 2 above -- to
> squeeze these into terminating type-checks. In those cases, you have to
> escape out to a richer relationship between 'theorem' (aka type) and 'proof'
> (aka program). Proof assistants, like Coq, or Hol or... can be very helpful
> for automating some of the tasks, leaving the inventive bits to the humans.
>
> In my experience, a proof of a theorem about some commercial code is pursued
> when the cost of developing the proof is less than some multiple of the cost
> of errors in the program in the life-cycle of that program. Intel, and other
> hardware vendors, for example, can lose a lot of business when the
> implementation of floating point operations is buggy; and, there is a
> breaking point where the complexity/difficulty/cost of proving the
> implementation correct is sufficiently less than that of business lost that
> it is to their advantage to obtain the kind of quality assurance that can be
> had from a proof of correctness.
>
> One other place where proofs of correctness will be pursued is in
> mathematical proofs, themselves. To the best of my knowledge, nothing
> mission-critical is currently riding on the proof of the 4-color theorem.
> The proof -- last i checked -- required programmatic checking of many cases.
> Proving the program -- that implements the tedious parts of the proof --
> correct is pursued because of the culture and standard of mathematical
> proof.
>
> Best wishes,
>
> --greg
>
> Date: Sat, 13 Sep 2008 22:24:50 -0700
> From: "Daryoush Mehrtash" <dmehrtash at gmail.com>
> Subject: Re: [Haskell-cafe] Haskell Weekly News: Issue 85 - September
>        13, 2008
> To: "Don Stewart" <dons at galois.com>
> Cc: Haskell Cafe <haskell-cafe at haskell.org>
> Message-ID:
>        <e5b8e9790809132224u3d29b858j5fda8e41b34566eb at mail.gmail.com
>>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
>
> What I am trying to figure out is that say on the code for the IRC bot that
> is show here
>
> http://www.haskell.org/haskellwiki/Roll_your_own_IRC_bot/Source
>
> What would theorem proofs do for me?
>
> Daryoush
> --
> L.G. Meredith
> Managing Partner
> Biosimilarity LLC
> 806 55th St NE
> Seattle, WA 98105
>
> +1 206.650.3740
>
> http://biosimilarity.blogspot.com
>
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