This directory contains the implementation of CASS, a generic and distributed analysis system for Curry programs.
CASS (Curry Analysis Server System) is a tool for the analysis of Curry programs. CASS is generic so that various kinds of analyses (e.g., groundness, non-determinism, demanded arguments) can easily be integrated into CASS. Currently, CASS contains more than 30 kinds of program analyses which are used by various programming tools for Curry. The implementation of these analyses is contained in the package cass-analysis
In order to analyze larger applications consisting of dozens or hundreds of Curry modules, CASS supports a modular and incremental analysis of programs. Moreover, it can be used by different programming tools, like documentation generators, analysis environments, program optimizers, as well as Eclipse-based development environments. For this purpose, CASS can also be invoked as a server system to get a language-independent access to its functionality. CASS is completely implemented Curry as a master/worker architecture to exploit parallel or distributed execution environments.
The structure of CASS and the ideas behind its implementation can be found in this paper:
M. Hanus, F. Skrlac: A Modular and Generic Analysis Server System for Functional Logic Programs, ACM SIGPLAN 2014 Workshop on Partial Evaluation and Program Manipulation (PEPM’14), ACM Press, pp. 181-188, 2014
The analysis system is structured as a worker/server application where the workers are triggered by the main server to analyse individual modules.
The analysis system can also be used as a client from other
application programs by a socket interface. The protocol of this
interface is described in Protocol.txt
. The server is
explicitly started by the program cass
(generated via
make
) or implicitly by application programs that use of the
operation Configuration.getServerPortNumber
to find out the
port number to connect to the analysis server. The port number can
either be explicitly specified the starting the main server program
via
cass -p <port>
or a free port number is chosen when the analysis server is started.
The current port and process numbers of a running analysis server are
temporarily stored in the file $HOME/.curryanalysis.port
(in the tuple format (port,pid)
).
The program cass
can also be started on a console with
arguments:
cass <analysis> <module>
In this case, the analysis with the specified name is applied to the specified module without the use of the server protocol and the output is shown on stdout. Run the command
cass --help
to get a description of the arguments and a list of registered analysis names.
The analysis system can be configured in the file
$HOME/.curryanalysisrc
which is installed after the first
run of the system.
More details about the usage of CASS can be found in a short user manual.
The Curry program UsingCass
in directory
examples
contains a simple program demonstrating the use of
analysis results computed by CASS inside another Curry program.
If you want to try CASS on simple programs via a web interface, you can use a Web Demo Installation of CASS.
CASS.Registry
: All available analyses must be
registered here.CASS.Server
: The main module implementing the use of
the server.CASS.ServerFormats
: Definition and implementation of
output formats.CASS.WorkerFunctions
: Implementation of the analysis
workers (in particular, alternative fixpoint iterations to compute
dependency analyses, see option fixpoint
in the
configuration file, must be inserted here).In order to support a modular and incremental analysis of
applications consisting of several modules, CASS caches already computed
analysis results of modules in under the directory
~/.curry_analysis_cache
. This path is defined in
Analysis.Files
(a module contained in the package
cass-analysis
). To store the analysis results for different
Curry systems and abstract domains separately, the analysis results for
a Curry module which is stored in a file with path
MODULEPATH.curry
are contained in
~/.curry_analysis_cache/CURRYSYSTEMID/MODULEPATH.*
For instance, the results of the analysis Overlapping
of
the prelude for KiCS2 Version 3.1.0
~/.curry_analysis_cache/kics2-3.1.0/opt/kics2/lib/Prelude.Overlapping.*
provided that KiCS2 is installed at /opt/kics2
, i.e.,
the prelude is contained in the file
/opt/kics2/lib/Prelude.curry
. Actually, there are four
files (ending with pub
, priv
,
pub.rw
, priv.rw
) for each analysis result (for
the public and private operations in plain term representation and a
compact term representation).
All cache files (for the Curry system used to install this tool) for an anlysis can be deleted by the command
cass --delete <analysis>
This might be useful if the implementation of an analysis has been changed.
Contact: Michael Hanus