Authors: | Andreas Rumpf |
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Version: | 1.0.6 |
About this document
This document describes features of Nim that are to be considered experimental. Some of these are not covered by the .experimental pragma or --experimental switch because they are already behind a special syntax and one may want to use Nim libraries using these features without using them oneself.
Note: Unless otherwise indicated, these features are not to be removed, but refined and overhauled.
Package level objects
Every Nim module resides in a (nimble) package. An object type can be attached to the package it resides in. If that is done, the type can be referenced from other modules as an incomplete object type. This feature allows to break up recursive type dependencies across module boundaries. Incomplete object types are always passed byref and can only be used in pointer like contexts (var/ref/ptr IncompleteObject) in general since the compiler does not yet know the size of the object. To complete an incomplete object the package pragma has to be used. package implies byref.
As long as a type T is incomplete, neither sizeof(T) nor runtime type information for T is available.
Example:
# module A (in an arbitrary package) type Pack.SomeObject = object ## declare as incomplete object of package 'Pack' Triple = object a, b, c: ref SomeObject ## pointers to incomplete objects are allowed ## Incomplete objects can be used as parameters: proc myproc(x: SomeObject) = discard
# module B (in package "Pack") type SomeObject* {.package.} = object ## Use 'package' to complete the object s, t: string x, y: int
Void type
The void type denotes the absence of any type. Parameters of type void are treated as non-existent, void as a return type means that the procedure does not return a value:
proc nothing(x, y: void): void = echo "ha" nothing() # writes "ha" to stdout
The void type is particularly useful for generic code:
proc callProc[T](p: proc (x: T), x: T) = when T is void: p() else: p(x) proc intProc(x: int) = discard proc emptyProc() = discard callProc[int](intProc, 12) callProc[void](emptyProc)
However, a void type cannot be inferred in generic code:
callProc(emptyProc) # Error: type mismatch: got (proc ()) # but expected one of: # callProc(p: proc (T), x: T)
The void type is only valid for parameters and return types; other symbols cannot have the type void.
Covariance
Covariance in Nim can be introduced only though pointer-like types such as ptr and ref. Sequence, Array and OpenArray types, instantiated with pointer-like types will be considered covariant if and only if they are also immutable. The introduction of a var modifier or additional ptr or ref indirections would result in invariant treatment of these types.
proc types are currently always invariant, but future versions of Nim may relax this rule.
User-defined generic types may also be covariant with respect to some of their parameters. By default, all generic params are considered invariant, but you may choose the apply the prefix modifier in to a parameter to make it contravariant or out to make it covariant:
type AnnotatedPtr[out T] = metadata: MyTypeInfo p: ref T RingBuffer[out T] = startPos: int data: seq[T] Action {.importcpp: "std::function<void ('0)>".} [in T] = object
When the designated generic parameter is used to instantiate a pointer-like type as in the case of AnnotatedPtr above, the resulting generic type will also have pointer-like covariance:
type GuiWidget = object of RootObj Button = object of GuiWidget ComboBox = object of GuiWidget var widgetPtr: AnnotatedPtr[GuiWidget] buttonPtr: AnnotatedPtr[Button] ... proc drawWidget[T](x: AnnotatedPtr[GuiWidget]) = ... # you can call procs expecting base types by supplying a derived type drawWidget(buttonPtr) # and you can convert more-specific pointer types to more general ones widgetPtr = buttonPtr
Just like with regular pointers, covariance will be enabled only for immutable values:
proc makeComboBox[T](x: var AnnotatedPtr[GuiWidget]) = x.p = new(ComboBox) makeComboBox(buttonPtr) # Error, AnnotatedPtr[Button] cannot be modified # to point to a ComboBox
On the other hand, in the RingBuffer example above, the designated generic param is used to instantiate the non-pointer seq type, which means that the resulting generic type will have covariance that mimics an array or sequence (i.e. it will be covariant only when instantiated with ptr and ref types):
type Base = object of RootObj Derived = object of Base proc consumeBaseValues(b: RingBuffer[Base]) = ... var derivedValues: RingBuffer[Derived] consumeBaseValues(derivedValues) # Error, Base and Derived values may differ # in size proc consumeBasePointers(b: RingBuffer[ptr Base]) = ... var derivedPointers: RingBuffer[ptr Derived] consumeBaseValues(derivedPointers) # This is legal
Please note that Nim will treat the user-defined pointer-like types as proper alternatives to the built-in pointer types. That is, types such as seq[AnnotatedPtr[T]] or RingBuffer[AnnotatedPtr[T]] will also be considered covariant and you can create new pointer-like types by instantiating other user-defined pointer-like types.
The contravariant parameters introduced with the in modifier are currently useful only when interfacing with imported types having such semantics.
Automatic dereferencing
If the experimental mode is active and no other match is found, the first argument a is dereferenced automatically if it's a pointer type and overloading resolution is tried with a[] instead.
Automatic self insertions
Note: The .this pragma is deprecated and should not be used anymore.
Starting with version 0.14 of the language, Nim supports field as a shortcut for self.field comparable to the this keyword in Java or C++. This feature has to be explicitly enabled via a {.this: self.} statement pragma (instead of self any other identifier can be used too). This pragma is active for the rest of the module:
type Parent = object of RootObj parentField: int Child = object of Parent childField: int {.this: self.} proc sumFields(self: Child): int = result = parentField + childField # is rewritten to: # result = self.parentField + self.childField
In addition to fields, routine applications are also rewritten, but only if no other interpretation of the call is possible:
proc test(self: Child) = echo childField, " ", sumFields() # is rewritten to: echo self.childField, " ", sumFields(self) # but NOT rewritten to: echo self, self.childField, " ", sumFields(self)
Do notation
As a special more convenient notation, proc expressions involved in procedure calls can use the do keyword:
sort(cities) do (x,y: string) -> int: cmp(x.len, y.len) # Less parenthesis using the method plus command syntax: cities = cities.map do (x:string) -> string: "City of " & x # In macros, the do notation is often used for quasi-quoting macroResults.add quote do: if not `ex`: echo `info`, ": Check failed: ", `expString`
do is written after the parentheses enclosing the regular proc params. The proc expression represented by the do block is appended to them. In calls using the command syntax, the do block will bind to the immediately preceding expression, transforming it in a call.
do with parentheses is an anonymous proc; however a do without parentheses is just a block of code. The do notation can be used to pass multiple blocks to a macro:
macro performWithUndo(task, undo: untyped) = ... performWithUndo do: # multiple-line block of code # to perform the task do: # code to undo it
Special Operators
dot operators
Note: Dot operators are still experimental and so need to be enabled via {.experimental: "dotOperators".}.
Nim offers a special family of dot operators that can be used to intercept and rewrite proc call and field access attempts, referring to previously undeclared symbol names. They can be used to provide a fluent interface to objects lying outside the static confines of the type system such as values from dynamic scripting languages or dynamic file formats such as JSON or XML.
When Nim encounters an expression that cannot be resolved by the standard overload resolution rules, the current scope will be searched for a dot operator that can be matched against a re-written form of the expression, where the unknown field or proc name is passed to an untyped parameter:
a.b # becomes `.`(a, b) a.b(c, d) # becomes `.`(a, b, c, d)
The matched dot operators can be symbols of any callable kind (procs, templates and macros), depending on the desired effect:
template `.` (js: PJsonNode, field: untyped): JSON = js[astToStr(field)] var js = parseJson("{ x: 1, y: 2}") echo js.x # outputs 1 echo js.y # outputs 2
The following dot operators are available:
operator .
This operator will be matched against both field accesses and method calls.
operator .()
This operator will be matched exclusively against method calls. It has higher precedence than the . operator and this allows one to handle expressions like x.y and x.y() differently if one is interfacing with a scripting language for example.
operator .=
This operator will be matched against assignments to missing fields.
a.b = c # becomes `.=`(a, b, c)
Concepts
Concepts, also known as "user-defined type classes", are used to specify an arbitrary set of requirements that the matched type must satisfy.
Concepts are written in the following form:
type Comparable = concept x, y (x < y) is bool Stack[T] = concept s, var v s.pop() is T v.push(T) s.len is Ordinal for value in s: value is T
The concept is a match if:
- all of the expressions within the body can be compiled for the tested type
- all statically evaluable boolean expressions in the body must be true
The identifiers following the concept keyword represent instances of the currently matched type. You can apply any of the standard type modifiers such as var, ref, ptr and static to denote a more specific type of instance. You can also apply the type modifier to create a named instance of the type itself:
type MyConcept = concept x, var v, ref r, ptr p, static s, type T ...
Within the concept body, types can appear in positions where ordinary values and parameters are expected. This provides a more convenient way to check for the presence of callable symbols with specific signatures:
type OutputStream = concept var s s.write(string)
In order to check for symbols accepting type params, you must prefix the type with the explicit type modifier. The named instance of the type, following the concept keyword is also considered to have the explicit modifier and will be matched only as a type.
type # Let's imagine a user-defined casting framework with operators # such as `val.to(string)` and `val.to(JSonValue)`. We can test # for these with the following concept: MyCastables = concept x x.to(type string) x.to(type JSonValue) # Let's define a couple of concepts, known from Algebra: AdditiveMonoid* = concept x, y, type T x + y is T T.zero is T # require a proc such as `int.zero` or 'Position.zero' AdditiveGroup* = concept x, y, type T x is AdditiveMonoid -x is T x - y is T
Please note that the is operator allows one to easily verify the precise type signatures of the required operations, but since type inference and default parameters are still applied in the concept body, it's also possible to describe usage protocols that do not reveal implementation details.
Much like generics, concepts are instantiated exactly once for each tested type and any static code included within the body is executed only once.
Concept diagnostics
By default, the compiler will report the matching errors in concepts only when no other overload can be selected and a normal compilation error is produced. When you need to understand why the compiler is not matching a particular concept and, as a result, a wrong overload is selected, you can apply the explain pragma to either the concept body or a particular call-site.
type MyConcept {.explain.} = concept ... overloadedProc(x, y, z) {.explain.}
This will provide Hints in the compiler output either every time the concept is not matched or only on the particular call-site.
Generic concepts and type binding rules
The concept types can be parametric just like the regular generic types:
### matrixalgo.nim import typetraits type AnyMatrix*[R, C: static int; T] = concept m, var mvar, type M M.ValueType is T M.Rows == R M.Cols == C m[int, int] is T mvar[int, int] = T type TransposedType = stripGenericParams(M)[C, R, T] AnySquareMatrix*[N: static int, T] = AnyMatrix[N, N, T] AnyTransform3D* = AnyMatrix[4, 4, float] proc transposed*(m: AnyMatrix): m.TransposedType = for r in 0 ..< m.R: for c in 0 ..< m.C: result[r, c] = m[c, r] proc determinant*(m: AnySquareMatrix): int = ... proc setPerspectiveProjection*(m: AnyTransform3D) = ... -------------- ### matrix.nim type Matrix*[M, N: static int; T] = object data: array[M*N, T] proc `[]`*(M: Matrix; m, n: int): M.T = M.data[m * M.N + n] proc `[]=`*(M: var Matrix; m, n: int; v: M.T) = M.data[m * M.N + n] = v # Adapt the Matrix type to the concept's requirements template Rows*(M: typedesc[Matrix]): int = M.M template Cols*(M: typedesc[Matrix]): int = M.N template ValueType*(M: typedesc[Matrix]): typedesc = M.T ------------- ### usage.nim import matrix, matrixalgo var m: Matrix[3, 3, int] projectionMatrix: Matrix[4, 4, float] echo m.transposed.determinant setPerspectiveProjection projectionMatrix
When the concept type is matched against a concrete type, the unbound type parameters are inferred from the body of the concept in a way that closely resembles the way generic parameters of callable symbols are inferred on call sites.
Unbound types can appear both as params to calls such as s.push(T) and on the right-hand side of the is operator in cases such as x.pop is T and x.data is seq[T].
Unbound static params will be inferred from expressions involving the == operator and also when types dependent on them are being matched:
type MatrixReducer[M, N: static int; T] = concept x x.reduce(SquareMatrix[N, T]) is array[M, int]
The Nim compiler includes a simple linear equation solver, allowing it to infer static params in some situations where integer arithmetic is involved.
Just like in regular type classes, Nim discriminates between bind once and bind many types when matching the concept. You can add the distinct modifier to any of the otherwise inferable types to get a type that will be matched without permanently inferring it. This may be useful when you need to match several procs accepting the same wide class of types:
type Enumerable[T] = concept e for v in e: v is T type MyConcept = concept o # this could be inferred to a type such as Enumerable[int] o.foo is distinct Enumerable # this could be inferred to a different type such as Enumerable[float] o.bar is distinct Enumerable # it's also possible to give an alias name to a `bind many` type class type Enum = distinct Enumerable o.baz is Enum
On the other hand, using bind once types allows you to test for equivalent types used in multiple signatures, without actually requiring any concrete types, thus allowing you to encode implementation-defined types:
type MyConcept = concept x type T1 = auto x.foo(T1) x.bar(T1) # both procs must accept the same type type T2 = seq[SomeNumber] x.alpha(T2) x.omega(T2) # both procs must accept the same type # and it must be a numeric sequence
As seen in the previous examples, you can refer to generic concepts such as Enumerable[T] just by their short name. Much like the regular generic types, the concept will be automatically instantiated with the bind once auto type in the place of each missing generic param.
Please note that generic concepts such as Enumerable[T] can be matched against concrete types such as string. Nim doesn't require the concept type to have the same number of parameters as the type being matched. If you wish to express a requirement towards the generic parameters of the matched type, you can use a type mapping operator such as genericHead or stripGenericParams within the body of the concept to obtain the uninstantiated version of the type, which you can then try to instantiate in any required way. For example, here is how one might define the classic Functor concept from Haskell and then demonstrate that Nim's Option[T] type is an instance of it:
import sugar, typetraits type Functor[A] = concept f type MatchedGenericType = genericHead(f.type) # `f` will be a value of a type such as `Option[T]` # `MatchedGenericType` will become the `Option` type f.val is A # The Functor should provide a way to obtain # a value stored inside it type T = auto map(f, A -> T) is MatchedGenericType[T] # And it should provide a way to map one instance of # the Functor to a instance of a different type, given # a suitable `map` operation for the enclosed values import options echo Option[int] is Functor # prints true
Concept derived values
All top level constants or types appearing within the concept body are accessible through the dot operator in procs where the concept was successfully matched to a concrete type:
type DateTime = concept t1, t2, type T const Min = T.MinDate T.Now is T t1 < t2 is bool type TimeSpan = type(t1 - t2) TimeSpan * int is TimeSpan TimeSpan + TimeSpan is TimeSpan t1 + TimeSpan is T proc eventsJitter(events: Enumerable[DateTime]): float = var # this variable will have the inferred TimeSpan type for # the concrete Date-like value the proc was called with: averageInterval: DateTime.TimeSpan deviation: float ...
Concept refinement
When the matched type within a concept is directly tested against a different concept, we say that the outer concept is a refinement of the inner concept and thus it is more-specific. When both concepts are matched in a call during overload resolution, Nim will assign a higher precedence to the most specific one. As an alternative way of defining concept refinements, you can use the object inheritance syntax involving the of keyword:
type Graph = concept g, type G of EqualyComparable, Copyable type VertexType = G.VertexType EdgeType = G.EdgeType VertexType is Copyable EdgeType is Copyable var v: VertexType e: EdgeType IncidendeGraph = concept of Graph # symbols such as variables and types from the refined # concept are automatically in scope: g.source(e) is VertexType g.target(e) is VertexType g.outgoingEdges(v) is Enumerable[EdgeType] BidirectionalGraph = concept g, type G # The following will also turn the concept into a refinement when it # comes to overload resolution, but it doesn't provide the convenient # symbol inheritance g is IncidendeGraph g.incomingEdges(G.VertexType) is Enumerable[G.EdgeType] proc f(g: IncidendeGraph) proc f(g: BidirectionalGraph) # this one will be preferred if we pass a type # matching the BidirectionalGraph concept
Type bound operations
There are 4 operations that are bound to a type:
- Assignment
- Moves
- Destruction
- Deep copying for communication between threads
These operations can be overridden instead of overloaded. This means the implementation is automatically lifted to structured types. For instance if type T has an overridden assignment operator = this operator is also used for assignments of the type seq[T]. Since these operations are bound to a type they have to be bound to a nominal type for reasons of simplicity of implementation: This means an overridden deepCopy for ref T is really bound to T and not to ref T. This also means that one cannot override deepCopy for both ptr T and ref T at the same time; instead a helper distinct or object type has to be used for one pointer type.
Assignments, moves and destruction are specified in the destructors document.
deepCopy
=deepCopy is a builtin that is invoked whenever data is passed to a spawn'ed proc to ensure memory safety. The programmer can override its behaviour for a specific ref or ptr type T. (Later versions of the language may weaken this restriction.)
The signature has to be:
proc `=deepCopy`(x: T): T
This mechanism will be used by most data structures that support shared memory like channels to implement thread safe automatic memory management.
The builtin deepCopy can even clone closures and their environments. See the documentation of spawn for details.
Case statement macros
A macro that needs to be called match can be used to rewrite case statements in order to implement pattern matching for certain types. The following example implements a simplistic form of pattern matching for tuples, leveraging the existing equality operator for tuples (as provided in system.==):
{.experimental: "caseStmtMacros".} import macros macro match(n: tuple): untyped = result = newTree(nnkIfStmt) let selector = n[0] for i in 1 ..< n.len: let it = n[i] case it.kind of nnkElse, nnkElifBranch, nnkElifExpr, nnkElseExpr: result.add it of nnkOfBranch: for j in 0..it.len-2: let cond = newCall("==", selector, it[j]) result.add newTree(nnkElifBranch, cond, it[^1]) else: error "'match' cannot handle this node", it echo repr result case ("foo", 78) of ("foo", 78): echo "yes" of ("bar", 88): echo "no" else: discard
Currently case statement macros must be enabled explicitly via {.experimental: "caseStmtMacros".}.
match macros are subject to overload resolution. First the case's selector expression is used to determine which match macro to call. To this macro is then passed the complete case statement body and the macro is evaluated.
In other words, the macro needs to transform the full case statement but only the statement's selector expression is used to determine which macro to call.
Term rewriting macros
Term rewriting macros are macros or templates that have not only a name but also a pattern that is searched for after the semantic checking phase of the compiler: This means they provide an easy way to enhance the compilation pipeline with user defined optimizations:
template optMul{`*`(a, 2)}(a: int): int = a+a let x = 3 echo x * 2
The compiler now rewrites x * 2 as x + x. The code inside the curlies is the pattern to match against. The operators *, **, |, ~ have a special meaning in patterns if they are written in infix notation, so to match verbatim against * the ordinary function call syntax needs to be used.
Term rewriting macro are applied recursively, up to a limit. This means that if the result of a term rewriting macro is eligible for another rewriting, the compiler will try to perform it, and so on, until no more optimizations are applicable. To avoid putting the compiler into an infinite loop, there is a hard limit on how many times a single term rewriting macro can be applied. Once this limit has been passed, the term rewriting macro will be ignored.
Unfortunately optimizations are hard to get right and even the tiny example is wrong:
template optMul{`*`(a, 2)}(a: int): int = a+a proc f(): int = echo "side effect!" result = 55 echo f() * 2
We cannot duplicate 'a' if it denotes an expression that has a side effect! Fortunately Nim supports side effect analysis:
template optMul{`*`(a, 2)}(a: int{noSideEffect}): int = a+a proc f(): int = echo "side effect!" result = 55 echo f() * 2 # not optimized ;-)
You can make one overload matching with a constraint and one without, and the one with a constraint will have precedence, and so you can handle both cases differently.
So what about 2 * a? We should tell the compiler * is commutative. We cannot really do that however as the following code only swaps arguments blindly:
template mulIsCommutative{`*`(a, b)}(a, b: int): int = b*a
What optimizers really need to do is a canonicalization:
template canonMul{`*`(a, b)}(a: int{lit}, b: int): int = b*a
The int{lit} parameter pattern matches against an expression of type int, but only if it's a literal.
Parameter constraints
The parameter constraint expression can use the operators | (or), & (and) and ~ (not) and the following predicates:
Predicate | Meaning |
---|---|
atom | The matching node has no children. |
lit | The matching node is a literal like "abc", 12. |
sym | The matching node must be a symbol (a bound identifier). |
ident | The matching node must be an identifier (an unbound identifier). |
call | The matching AST must be a call/apply expression. |
lvalue | The matching AST must be an lvalue. |
sideeffect | The matching AST must have a side effect. |
nosideeffect | The matching AST must have no side effect. |
param | A symbol which is a parameter. |
genericparam | A symbol which is a generic parameter. |
module | A symbol which is a module. |
type | A symbol which is a type. |
var | A symbol which is a variable. |
let | A symbol which is a let variable. |
const | A symbol which is a constant. |
result | The special result variable. |
proc | A symbol which is a proc. |
method | A symbol which is a method. |
iterator | A symbol which is an iterator. |
converter | A symbol which is a converter. |
macro | A symbol which is a macro. |
template | A symbol which is a template. |
field | A symbol which is a field in a tuple or an object. |
enumfield | A symbol which is a field in an enumeration. |
forvar | A for loop variable. |
label | A label (used in block statements). |
nk* | The matching AST must have the specified kind. (Example: nkIfStmt denotes an if statement.) |
alias | States that the marked parameter needs to alias with some other parameter. |
noalias | States that every other parameter must not alias with the marked parameter. |
Predicates that share their name with a keyword have to be escaped with backticks. The alias and noalias predicates refer not only to the matching AST, but also to every other bound parameter; syntactically they need to occur after the ordinary AST predicates:
template ex{a = b + c}(a: int{noalias}, b, c: int) = # this transformation is only valid if 'b' and 'c' do not alias 'a': a = b inc a, c
Pattern operators
The operators *, **, |, ~ have a special meaning in patterns if they are written in infix notation.
The | operator
The | operator if used as infix operator creates an ordered choice:
template t{0|1}(): untyped = 3 let a = 1 # outputs 3: echo a
The matching is performed after the compiler performed some optimizations like constant folding, so the following does not work:
template t{0|1}(): untyped = 3 # outputs 1: echo 1
The reason is that the compiler already transformed the 1 into "1" for the echo statement. However, a term rewriting macro should not change the semantics anyway. In fact they can be deactivated with the --patterns:off command line option or temporarily with the patterns pragma.
The {} operator
A pattern expression can be bound to a pattern parameter via the expr{param} notation:
template t{(0|1|2){x}}(x: untyped): untyped = x+1 let a = 1 # outputs 2: echo a
The ~ operator
The ~ operator is the not operator in patterns:
template t{x = (~x){y} and (~x){z}}(x, y, z: bool) = x = y if x: x = z var a = false b = true c = false a = b and c echo a
The * operator
The * operator can flatten a nested binary expression like a & b & c to &(a, b, c):
var calls = 0 proc `&&`(s: varargs[string]): string = result = s[0] for i in 1..len(s)-1: result.add s[i] inc calls template optConc{ `&&` * a }(a: string): untyped = &&a let space = " " echo "my" && (space & "awe" && "some " ) && "concat" # check that it's been optimized properly: doAssert calls == 1
The second operator of * must be a parameter; it is used to gather all the arguments. The expression "my" && (space & "awe" && "some " ) && "concat" is passed to optConc in a as a special list (of kind nkArgList) which is flattened into a call expression; thus the invocation of optConc produces:
`&&`("my", space & "awe", "some ", "concat")
The ** operator
The ** is much like the * operator, except that it gathers not only all the arguments, but also the matched operators in reverse polish notation:
import macros type Matrix = object dummy: int proc `*`(a, b: Matrix): Matrix = discard proc `+`(a, b: Matrix): Matrix = discard proc `-`(a, b: Matrix): Matrix = discard proc `$`(a: Matrix): string = result = $a.dummy proc mat21(): Matrix = result.dummy = 21 macro optM{ (`+`|`-`|`*`) ** a }(a: Matrix): untyped = echo treeRepr(a) result = newCall(bindSym"mat21") var x, y, z: Matrix echo x + y * z - x
This passes the expression x + y * z - x to the optM macro as an nnkArgList node containing:
Arglist Sym "x" Sym "y" Sym "z" Sym "*" Sym "+" Sym "x" Sym "-"
(Which is the reverse polish notation of x + y * z - x.)
Parameters
Parameters in a pattern are type checked in the matching process. If a parameter is of the type varargs it is treated specially and it can match 0 or more arguments in the AST to be matched against:
template optWrite{ write(f, x) ((write|writeLine){w})(f, y) }(x, y: varargs[untyped], f: File, w: untyped) = w(f, x, y)
Example: Partial evaluation
The following example shows how some simple partial evaluation can be implemented with term rewriting:
proc p(x, y: int; cond: bool): int = result = if cond: x + y else: x - y template optP1{p(x, y, true)}(x, y: untyped): untyped = x + y template optP2{p(x, y, false)}(x, y: untyped): untyped = x - y
Example: Hoisting
The following example shows how some form of hoisting can be implemented:
import pegs template optPeg{peg(pattern)}(pattern: string{lit}): Peg = var gl {.global, gensym.} = peg(pattern) gl for i in 0 .. 3: echo match("(a b c)", peg"'(' @ ')'") echo match("W_HI_Le", peg"\y 'while'")
The optPeg template optimizes the case of a peg constructor with a string literal, so that the pattern will only be parsed once at program startup and stored in a global gl which is then re-used. This optimization is called hoisting because it is comparable to classical loop hoisting.
AST based overloading
Parameter constraints can also be used for ordinary routine parameters; these constraints affect ordinary overloading resolution then:
proc optLit(a: string{lit|`const`}) = echo "string literal" proc optLit(a: string) = echo "no string literal" const constant = "abc" var variable = "xyz" optLit("literal") optLit(constant) optLit(variable)
However, the constraints alias and noalias are not available in ordinary routines.
Parallel & Spawn
Nim has two flavors of parallelism:
- Structured parallelism via the parallel statement.
- Unstructured parallelism via the standalone spawn statement.
Nim has a builtin thread pool that can be used for CPU intensive tasks. For IO intensive tasks the async and await features should be used instead. Both parallel and spawn need the threadpool module to work.
Somewhat confusingly, spawn is also used in the parallel statement with slightly different semantics. spawn always takes a call expression of the form f(a, ...). Let T be f's return type. If T is void then spawn's return type is also void otherwise it is FlowVar[T].
Within a parallel section sometimes the FlowVar[T] is eliminated to T. This happens when T does not contain any GC'ed memory. The compiler can ensure the location in location = spawn f(...) is not read prematurely within a parallel section and so there is no need for the overhead of an indirection via FlowVar[T] to ensure correctness.
Note: Currently exceptions are not propagated between spawn'ed tasks!
Spawn statement
spawn can be used to pass a task to the thread pool:
import threadpool proc processLine(line: string) = discard "do some heavy lifting here" for x in lines("myinput.txt"): spawn processLine(x) sync()
For reasons of type safety and implementation simplicity the expression that spawn takes is restricted:
- It must be a call expression f(a, ...).
- f must be gcsafe.
- f must not have the calling convention closure.
- f's parameters may not be of type var. This means one has to use raw ptr's for data passing reminding the programmer to be careful.
- ref parameters are deeply copied which is a subtle semantic change and can cause performance problems but ensures memory safety. This deep copy is performed via system.deepCopy and so can be overridden.
- For safe data exchange between f and the caller a global TChannel needs to be used. However, since spawn can return a result, often no further communication is required.
spawn executes the passed expression on the thread pool and returns a data flow variable FlowVar[T] that can be read from. The reading with the ^ operator is blocking. However, one can use blockUntilAny to wait on multiple flow variables at the same time:
import threadpool, ... # wait until 2 out of 3 servers received the update: proc main = var responses = newSeq[FlowVarBase](3) for i in 0..2: responses[i] = spawn tellServer(Update, "key", "value") var index = blockUntilAny(responses) assert index >= 0 responses.del(index) discard blockUntilAny(responses)
Data flow variables ensure that no data races are possible. Due to technical limitations not every type T is possible in a data flow variable: T has to be of the type ref, string, seq or of a type that doesn't contain a type that is garbage collected. This restriction is not hard to work-around in practice.
Parallel statement
Example:
# Compute PI in an inefficient way import strutils, math, threadpool {.experimental: "parallel".} proc term(k: float): float = 4 * math.pow(-1, k) / (2*k + 1) proc pi(n: int): float = var ch = newSeq[float](n+1) parallel: for k in 0..ch.high: ch[k] = spawn term(float(k)) for k in 0..ch.high: result += ch[k] echo formatFloat(pi(5000))
The parallel statement is the preferred mechanism to introduce parallelism in a Nim program. A subset of the Nim language is valid within a parallel section. This subset is checked during semantic analysis to be free of data races. A sophisticated disjoint checker ensures that no data races are possible even though shared memory is extensively supported!
The subset is in fact the full language with the following restrictions / changes:
- spawn within a parallel section has special semantics.
- Every location of the form a[i] and a[i..j] and dest where dest is part of the pattern dest = spawn f(...) has to be provably disjoint. This is called the disjoint check.
- Every other complex location loc that is used in a spawned proc (spawn f(loc)) has to be immutable for the duration of the parallel section. This is called the immutability check. Currently it is not specified what exactly "complex location" means. We need to make this an optimization!
- Every array access has to be provably within bounds. This is called the bounds check.
- Slices are optimized so that no copy is performed. This optimization is not yet performed for ordinary slices outside of a parallel section.
Guards and locks
Apart from spawn and parallel Nim also provides all the common low level concurrency mechanisms like locks, atomic intrinsics or condition variables.
Nim significantly improves on the safety of these features via additional pragmas:
- A guard annotation is introduced to prevent data races.
- Every access of a guarded memory location needs to happen in an appropriate locks statement.
- Locks and routines can be annotated with lock levels to allow potential deadlocks to be detected during semantic analysis.
Guards and the locks section
Protecting global variables
Object fields and global variables can be annotated via a guard pragma:
var glock: TLock var gdata {.guard: glock.}: int
The compiler then ensures that every access of gdata is within a locks section:
proc invalid = # invalid: unguarded access: echo gdata proc valid = # valid access: {.locks: [glock].}: echo gdata
Top level accesses to gdata are always allowed so that it can be initialized conveniently. It is assumed (but not enforced) that every top level statement is executed before any concurrent action happens.
The locks section deliberately looks ugly because it has no runtime semantics and should not be used directly! It should only be used in templates that also implement some form of locking at runtime:
template lock(a: TLock; body: untyped) = pthread_mutex_lock(a) {.locks: [a].}: try: body finally: pthread_mutex_unlock(a)
The guard does not need to be of any particular type. It is flexible enough to model low level lockfree mechanisms:
var dummyLock {.compileTime.}: int var atomicCounter {.guard: dummyLock.}: int template atomicRead(x): untyped = {.locks: [dummyLock].}: memoryReadBarrier() x echo atomicRead(atomicCounter)
The locks pragma takes a list of lock expressions locks: [a, b, ...] in order to support multi lock statements. Why these are essential is explained in the lock levels section.
Protecting general locations
The guard annotation can also be used to protect fields within an object. The guard then needs to be another field within the same object or a global variable.
Since objects can reside on the heap or on the stack this greatly enhances the expressivity of the language:
type ProtectedCounter = object v {.guard: L.}: int L: TLock proc incCounters(counters: var openArray[ProtectedCounter]) = for i in 0..counters.high: lock counters[i].L: inc counters[i].v
The access to field x.v is allowed since its guard x.L is active. After template expansion, this amounts to:
proc incCounters(counters: var openArray[ProtectedCounter]) = for i in 0..counters.high: pthread_mutex_lock(counters[i].L) {.locks: [counters[i].L].}: try: inc counters[i].v finally: pthread_mutex_unlock(counters[i].L)
There is an analysis that checks that counters[i].L is the lock that corresponds to the protected location counters[i].v. This analysis is called path analysis because it deals with paths to locations like obj.field[i].fieldB[j].
The path analysis is currently unsound, but that doesn't make it useless. Two paths are considered equivalent if they are syntactically the same.
This means the following compiles (for now) even though it really should not:
{.locks: [a[i].L].}: inc i access a[i].v
Lock levels
Lock levels are used to enforce a global locking order in order to detect potential deadlocks during semantic analysis. A lock level is an constant integer in the range 0..1_000. Lock level 0 means that no lock is acquired at all.
If a section of code holds a lock of level M than it can also acquire any lock of level N < M. Another lock of level M cannot be acquired. Locks of the same level can only be acquired at the same time within a single locks section:
var a, b: TLock[2] var x: TLock[1] # invalid locking order: TLock[1] cannot be acquired before TLock[2]: {.locks: [x].}: {.locks: [a].}: ... # valid locking order: TLock[2] acquired before TLock[1]: {.locks: [a].}: {.locks: [x].}: ... # invalid locking order: TLock[2] acquired before TLock[2]: {.locks: [a].}: {.locks: [b].}: ... # valid locking order, locks of the same level acquired at the same time: {.locks: [a, b].}: ...
Here is how a typical multilock statement can be implemented in Nim. Note how the runtime check is required to ensure a global ordering for two locks a and b of the same lock level:
template multilock(a, b: ptr TLock; body: untyped) = if cast[ByteAddress](a) < cast[ByteAddress](b): pthread_mutex_lock(a) pthread_mutex_lock(b) else: pthread_mutex_lock(b) pthread_mutex_lock(a) {.locks: [a, b].}: try: body finally: pthread_mutex_unlock(a) pthread_mutex_unlock(b)
Whole routines can also be annotated with a locks pragma that takes a lock level. This then means that the routine may acquire locks of up to this level. This is essential so that procs can be called within a locks section:
proc p() {.locks: 3.} = discard var a: TLock[4] {.locks: [a].}: # p's locklevel (3) is strictly less than a's (4) so the call is allowed: p()
As usual locks is an inferred effect and there is a subtype relation: proc () {.locks: N.} is a subtype of proc () {.locks: M.} iff (M <= N).
The locks pragma can also take the special value "unknown". This is useful in the context of dynamic method dispatching. In the following example, the compiler can infer a lock level of 0 for the base case. However, one of the overloaded methods calls a procvar which is potentially locking. Thus, the lock level of calling g.testMethod cannot be inferred statically, leading to compiler warnings. By using {.locks: "unknown".}, the base method can be marked explicitly as having unknown lock level as well:
type SomeBase* = ref object of RootObj type SomeDerived* = ref object of SomeBase memberProc*: proc () method testMethod(g: SomeBase) {.base, locks: "unknown".} = discard method testMethod(g: SomeDerived) = if g.memberProc != nil: g.memberProc()
noRewrite pragma
Term rewriting macros and templates are currently greedy and they will rewrite as long as there is a match. There was no way to ensure some rewrite happens only once, eg. when rewriting term to same term plus extra content.
noRewrite pragma can actually prevent further rewriting on marked code, e.g. with given example echo("ab") will be rewritten just once:
template pwnEcho{echo(x)}(x: expr) = {.noRewrite.}: echo("pwned!") echo "ab"
noRewrite pragma can be useful to control term-rewriting macros recursion.
Taint mode
The Nim compiler and most parts of the standard library support a taint mode. Input strings are declared with the TaintedString string type declared in the system module.
If the taint mode is turned on (via the --taintMode:on command line option) it is a distinct string type which helps to detect input validation errors:
echo "your name: " var name: TaintedString = stdin.readline # it is safe here to output the name without any input validation, so # we simply convert `name` to string to make the compiler happy: echo "hi, ", name.string
If the taint mode is turned off, TaintedString is simply an alias for string.
Aliasing restrictions in parameter passing
Note: The aliasing restrictions are currently not enforced by the implementation and need to be fleshed out further.
"Aliasing" here means that the underlying storage locations overlap in memory at runtime. An "output parameter" is a parameter of type var T, an input parameter is any parameter that is not of type var.
- Two output parameters should never be aliased.
- An input and an output parameter should not be aliased.
- An output parameter should never be aliased with a global or thread local variable referenced by the called proc.
- An input parameter should not be aliased with a global or thread local variable updated by the called proc.
One problem with rules 3 and 4 is that they affect specific global or thread local variables, but Nim's effect tracking only tracks "uses no global variable" via .noSideEffect. The rules 3 and 4 can also be approximated by a different rule:
- A global or thread local variable (or a location derived from such a location) can only passed to a parameter of a .noSideEffect proc.