Domain-Specific Symbolic Compilation

Authors Rastislav Bodík, Kartik Chandra, Phitchaya Mangpo Phothilimthana, Nathaniel Yazdani



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Rastislav Bodík
Kartik Chandra
Phitchaya Mangpo Phothilimthana
Nathaniel Yazdani

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Rastislav Bodík, Kartik Chandra, Phitchaya Mangpo Phothilimthana, and Nathaniel Yazdani. Domain-Specific Symbolic Compilation. In 2nd Summit on Advances in Programming Languages (SNAPL 2017). Leibniz International Proceedings in Informatics (LIPIcs), Volume 71, pp. 2:1-2:17, Schloss Dagstuhl – Leibniz-Zentrum für Informatik (2017)
https://doi.org/10.4230/LIPIcs.SNAPL.2017.2

Abstract

A symbolic compiler translates a program to symbolic constraints, automatically reducing model checking and synthesis to constraint solving. We show that new applications of constraint solving require domain-specific encodings that yield the required orders of magnitude improvements in solver efficiency. Unfortunately, these encodings cannot be obtained with today's symbolic compilation. We introduce symbolic languages that encapsulate domain-specific encodings under abstractions that behave as their non-symbolic counterparts: client code using the abstractions can be tested and debugged on concrete inputs. When client code is symbolically compiled, the resulting constraints use domain-specific encodings. We demonstrate the idea on the first fully symbolic checker of type systems; a program partitioner; and a parallelizer of tree computations. In each of these case studies, symbolic languages improved on classical symbolic compilers by orders of magnitude.
Keywords
  • Symbolic evaluation
  • program synthesis
  • DSLs

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