Kevin Donnelly and Assaf J. Kfoury
Some considerations on formal semantics for
weak references
Technical Report Don+Kfo:BUCS-TR-2005-X, Department of Computer
Science, Boston University, July 2005
Weak references are references that do not prevent the object they point to from being garbage collected. Most realistic languages, including Java, SML/NJ, and OCaml to name a few, have some facility for programming with weak references. Weak references are used in implementing idioms like memoizing functions and hash-consing in order to avoid potential memory leaks.
However, the semantics of weak references in many languages are not clearly specified. Without a formal semantics for weak references it becomes impossible to prove the correctness of implementations making use of this feature. Previous work by Hallett and Kfoury [?] extends [?], a language for modeling garbage collection, to , a similar language with weak references.
Using this previously formalized semantics for weak references, we consider two issues related to well-behavedness of programs. Firstly, we provide a new, simpler proof of the well-behavedness of the syntactically restricted fragment of defined in [?]. Secondly, we give a natural semantic criterion for well-behavedness much broader than the syntactic restriction, which is useful as principle for programming with weak references.
Furthermore we extend the result, proved in [?], which allows one to use type-inference to collect some reachable objects that are never used. We prove that this result holds of our language, and we extend this result to allow the collection of weakly-referenced reachable garbage without incurring the computation overhead sometimes associated with collecting weak bindings (e.g. the need to recompute a memoized function).
Lastly we use extend the semantic framework to model the key/value weak references found in Haskell and we prove the Haskell is semantics equivalent to a simpler semantics due to the lack of side-effects in our language.
[ bib |
.ps.gz |
.pdf ]
Back
This file has been generated by
bibtex2html 1.61
Copyright notice: The documents contained
in these pages are included by the contributing authors as a means to
ensure timely dissemination of scholarly and technical work on a
non-commercial basis. Copyright and all rights therein are maintained
by the authors or by other copyright holders, notwithstanding that
they have offered their works here electronically. It is understood that all persons copying this information will
adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by each author's
copyright. These works
may not be reposted without the explicit permission of the copyright
holder.
If you experience problems downloading any of the files above,
it is most likely because your browser does not handle compressed
files correctly.
In particular, Netscape might save the file in the compressed
gz-format with extension .ps or
.pdf (indicating postscript or PDF, resp.). You can work around this by saving the file,
renaming it to .ps.gz or .pdf.gz, and then
uncrompress it.