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PtFX: affine effect handling via POSIX threads

This C library provides a proof-of-concept encoding of affine effect handlers using POSIX threads (pthreads).

Encoding affine effect handlers with pthreads

The encoding strategy utilises the insights of Kumar et al. (1998), who implement one-shot delimited continuations using threads, as the basis for simulating the implementation of effect handlers in Multicore OCaml (Dolan et al. (2015)), which uses a variation of segmented stacks á la Bruggeman et al. (1996).

Simulating delimited control with threads

The key insight from Kumar et al. (1998) is that each thread has its own stack and by establishing a parent-child relationship between the thread-stacks, we can simulate delimited control. For all intents and purposes we can treat thread and stack as synonyms as the simulation do not take advantage of the concurrency or parallel aspects of (p)threads. In fact the control flow of any encoded program is intended to be sequential and entirely deterministic. As depicted in Figure 1 below, to run some computation f under some delimiter del the idea is to install the delimiter on top of the current thread/stack, s1, and subsequently spawn a new thread/stack, s2, to execute the computation. Conceptually, in terms of single-threaded programs, the stack pointer (sp) moves to the top of the new stack s2.

  s1         s2
+-----+    +-----+
|     |    |     |
|     |    | f() |
| del |<---|     |<- stack pointer (sp)
+-----+    +-----+
---------------------------------------
      Fig 1. Execution stacks

After spawning the new thread the parent thread s1 blocks and awaits either the completion of s2 or a continuation capture within s2. Capturing the continuation within f amounts to synchronising the threads s2 and s1, as the thread s2 has to unblock s1 and subsequently block itself to await being resumed. As depicted in Figure 2 below, a continuation capture conceptually replaces the delimiter del with a reference, k, to the child stack, s2, and sets the stack pointer to point to the top of the parent stack, s1. Similarly, to resume s2, the thread s1 simply has to unblock s2 and subsequently block itself --- whether del gets reinstalled depends on the exact nature of the control operator of choice. Following the resumption, the stack pointer is, conceptually, set to point to the top of the child stack s2.

After stack suspension
  s1             s2
+-----+        +-----+
|     |        |     |
|     |        | f() |
|  k  |------->|     |
|     |<- sp   +-----+
+-----+

After stack resumption
  s1         s2
+-----+    +-----+
|     |    |     |
|     |    | f() |
| del |<---|     |<- stack pointer (sp)
+-----+    +-----+
---------------------------------------------
   Fig 2. Suspending and resuming stacks

Stack synchronisation can readily be realised by using mutexes and condition variables.

Simulating effect handlers

The novelty of this encoding does not lie in how delimited control is simulated, but rather, how the technique outlined in the previous section is adapted to encode the structured interface of effect handlers.

TODO...

Building

The Makefile provides rules for building static and shared variations of this library, simply type

$ make lib

This rule assembles the static library libpthandlers.a and the shared library libpthandlers.so and outputs both in the lib/ directory. To build either library variant alone invoke make static or make shared respectively.

Examples

This repository contains some example programs. To build them all simply type make examples. Alternatively, they can be built individually

$ make examples/{coop,divzero,dobedobe,state}

The resulting binaries are placed in the root of this repository.

Caveats

This encoding relies heavily on tail-call optimisation (i.e. gcc's -foptimize-sibling-calls), which seems to be rather fragile, or unreliable, in C compilers. In addition this implementation also depends on one or more flags from the -O1 optimisation bundle that I have yet to discover. Currently, without passing -O1 it appears that gcc (version 7.5.0) fails to tail-call optimise some functions.

Future work

The current implementation only supports unary deep handlers. A natural extension would be to support unary shallow handlers. Going even further, it would be interesting to encode both deep and shallow variations of multi-handlers.

Acknowledgements

This work was done whilst I was being supported by EPSRC grant EP/L01503X/1 (EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training in Pervasive Parallelism) and by ERC Consolidator Grant Skye (grant number 682315).

References

  • Sanjeev Kumar, Carl Bruggeman, and R. Kent Dybvig. 1998. Threads Yield Continuations. Higher-Order and Symbolic Computation 10, 223–236 (1998).
    (DOI)
  • Carl Bruggeman, Oscar Waddell, and R. Kent Dybvig. 1996. Representing control in the presence of one-shot continuations. SIGPLAN Not. 31, 5 (May 1996), 99–107.
    (DOI)
  • Stephen Dolan, Leo White, KC Sivaramakrishnan, Jeremy Yallop and Anil Madhavapeddy. 2015. Effective Concurrency with Algebraic Effects. OCaml Workshop.
    (PDF)

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