119,194 research outputs found
Action semantics in retrospect
This paper is a themed account of the action semantics project, which Peter Mosses has led since the 1980s. It explains his motivations for developing action semantics, the inspirations behind its design, and the foundations of action semantics based on unified algebras. It goes on to outline some applications of action semantics to describe real programming languages, and some efforts to implement programming languages using action semantics directed compiler generation. It concludes by outlining more recent developments and reflecting on the success of the action semantics project
Validating a Web Service Security Abstraction by Typing
An XML web service is, to a first approximation, an RPC service in which
requests and responses are encoded in XML as SOAP envelopes, and transported
over HTTP. We consider the problem of authenticating requests and responses at
the SOAP-level, rather than relying on transport-level security. We propose a
security abstraction, inspired by earlier work on secure RPC, in which the
methods exported by a web service are annotated with one of three security
levels: none, authenticated, or both authenticated and encrypted. We model our
abstraction as an object calculus with primitives for defining and calling web
services. We describe the semantics of our object calculus by translating to a
lower-level language with primitives for message passing and cryptography. To
validate our semantics, we embed correspondence assertions that specify the
correct authentication of requests and responses. By appeal to the type theory
for cryptographic protocols of Gordon and Jeffrey's Cryptyc, we verify the
correspondence assertions simply by typing. Finally, we describe an
implementation of our semantics via custom SOAP headers.Comment: 44 pages. A preliminary version appears in the Proceedings of the
Workshop on XML Security 2002, pp. 18-29, November 200
Dynamic IFC Theorems for Free!
We show that noninterference and transparency, the key soundness theorems for
dynamic IFC libraries, can be obtained "for free", as direct consequences of
the more general parametricity theorem of type abstraction. This allows us to
give very short soundness proofs for dynamic IFC libraries such as faceted
values and LIO. Our proofs stay short even when fully mechanized for Agda
implementations of the libraries in terms of type abstraction.Comment: CSF 2021 final versio
TreatJS: Higher-Order Contracts for JavaScript
TreatJS is a language embedded, higher-order contract system for JavaScript
which enforces contracts by run-time monitoring. Beyond providing the standard
abstractions for building higher-order contracts (base, function, and object
contracts), TreatJS's novel contributions are its guarantee of non-interfering
contract execution, its systematic approach to blame assignment, its support
for contracts in the style of union and intersection types, and its notion of a
parameterized contract scope, which is the building block for composable
run-time generated contracts that generalize dependent function contracts.
TreatJS is implemented as a library so that all aspects of a contract can be
specified using the full JavaScript language. The library relies on JavaScript
proxies to guarantee full interposition for contracts. It further exploits
JavaScript's reflective features to run contracts in a sandbox environment,
which guarantees that the execution of contract code does not modify the
application state. No source code transformation or change in the JavaScript
run-time system is required.
The impact of contracts on execution speed is evaluated using the Google
Octane benchmark.Comment: Technical Repor
HeTM: Transactional Memory for Heterogeneous Systems
Modern heterogeneous computing architectures, which couple multi-core CPUs
with discrete many-core GPUs (or other specialized hardware accelerators),
enable unprecedented peak performance and energy efficiency levels.
Unfortunately, though, developing applications that can take full advantage of
the potential of heterogeneous systems is a notoriously hard task. This work
takes a step towards reducing the complexity of programming heterogeneous
systems by introducing the abstraction of Heterogeneous Transactional Memory
(HeTM). HeTM provides programmers with the illusion of a single memory region,
shared among the CPUs and the (discrete) GPU(s) of a heterogeneous system, with
support for atomic transactions. Besides introducing the abstract semantics and
programming model of HeTM, we present the design and evaluation of a concrete
implementation of the proposed abstraction, which we named Speculative HeTM
(SHeTM). SHeTM makes use of a novel design that leverages on speculative
techniques and aims at hiding the inherently large communication latency
between CPUs and discrete GPUs and at minimizing inter-device synchronization
overhead. SHeTM is based on a modular and extensible design that allows for
easily integrating alternative TM implementations on the CPU's and GPU's sides,
which allows the flexibility to adopt, on either side, the TM implementation
(e.g., in hardware or software) that best fits the applications' workload and
the architectural characteristics of the processing unit. We demonstrate the
efficiency of the SHeTM via an extensive quantitative study based both on
synthetic benchmarks and on a porting of a popular object caching system.Comment: The current work was accepted in the 28th International Conference on
Parallel Architectures and Compilation Techniques (PACT'19
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