From: John Skaller <skaller@users.sourceforge.net>
To: Alex Baretta <alex@barettadeit.com>
Cc: felix-language@lists.sourceforge.net,
Jonathan Roewen <jonathan.roewen@gmail.com>,
caml-list@yquem.inria.fr
Subject: Re: [Caml-list] Running bytecode...
Date: Sat, 18 Jun 2005 17:47:57 +1000 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <1119080877.6746.52.camel@rosella> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <42B29E7A.9000104@barettadeit.com>
On Fri, 2005-06-17 at 11:57 +0200, Alex Baretta wrote:
> Jonathan Roewen wrote:
> >>The short answer is you can't. It's a pity, but to the present day the
> >>vanilla Ocaml distribution does not support mixing native and byte-code.
> >>Also, it is not possibile to Dynlink native code, which is even more of
> >>a pity.
> >
> >
> > Well, dynlink with native code probably isn't desirable, as can't
> > really verify it.
>
> Actually, this is very desirable. Ask Jon Skaller, who is developing the
> Felix language mainly because Ocaml does not have this feature.
> Scaml does this, but there is no correctness proof for it. It is a patch
> to 3.07. Unluckily Xavier wants to have an provably perfect solution to
> this problem, which is definitely a good thing, but this delays such a
> great feature as native dynlink.
My opinion of the situation is:
INRIA people like to have a mathematical basis for things,
but that isn't the same as
requiring a perfect solution or demanding a correctness proof.
The usual reason for liking a constructive proof is that
it actually tells the algorithm.
I believe there are two reasons for not supporting native
code dynamic loading in Ocaml:
(1) It is a lot of work. The first step, dynamic loading
of C parts of the system, has already been implemented.
It makes sense to deal with the issues arising from this
first.
(2) A too hasty design would preclude a better one
permanently .. an example is the -pack switch ;(
As to Felix: it is designed to inter-operate with C/C++
on both source and binary levels. At this stage you
can 'dlopen()' any C library and 'dlsym()' any function
in it. However the binding is exactly as in C: you have
to use string names for functions, which basically means
you have to use extern "C" names.
This is not very safe: the only error check is whether
a symbol exists. There's no type checking, even less
than what C++ would provide with typesafe linkage.
The main difference to Ocaml is that it can actually
be done, albeit unsafely, which is a correct first
order solution for Felix, since binding to non-Felix
C libraries is a requirement (and that can't be safe
because C isn't).
I will be working on better solutions, in particular
leveraging C++ type safe linkage, however a full
scale native Felix-Felix dynamic linkage has
as a precondition separate compilation, which is
currently not supported: Felix can generate and
call C libraries of course: the compiler targets
shared libraries, a program is just a library
with an init function.
There is an example of Felix plugins in the
tutorial and in the Alioth Shootout.
--
John Skaller <skaller at users dot sf dot net>
Download Felix: http://felix.sf.net
prev parent reply other threads:[~2005-06-18 7:48 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 5+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2005-06-17 7:33 Jonathan Roewen
2005-06-17 9:47 ` [Caml-list] " Alex Baretta
2005-06-17 9:51 ` Jonathan Roewen
2005-06-17 9:57 ` Alex Baretta
2005-06-18 7:47 ` John Skaller [this message]
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