STGi - STG interpreter
STGi is a visual STG implementation to help understand Haskell's execution
model.
It does this by guiding through the running of a program, showing stack and
heap, and giving explanations of the applied transition rules. Here is what an
intermediate state looks like:
Table of contents
Quickstart guide
If you want to have a quick look at the STG, here is what you need to get going.
The program should build with both stack
and cabal
.
The app/Main.hs
file is written so you can easily switch out the prog
value
for other Program
s that contain a main
definition. The Stg.ExamplePrograms
module provides a number of examples that might be worth having a look, and are
a good starting point for modifications or adding your own programs. It's
probably easier to read in Haddock format, so go ahead and run
stack haddock --open stgi
and have a look at the example programs.
When you're happy with your app/Main.hs
, run
stack build --exec "stgi-exe --colour=true" | less -R
to get coloured output in less
. Type /====
to search for ====
, which
finds the top of every new step; use n
(next step) or N
(previous step) to
navigate through the execution.
About the machine
The spineless tagless graph reduction machine, STG for short, is an automaton
used to map non-strict functional languages onto stock hardware. It was
developed for, and is heavily used in, the Haskell compiler GHC.
This project implements an interpreter for the STG as it is described in the
1992 paper on the subject, with the main focus on being nice to a
human user. Things that might be important for an actual compiler backend, such
as performance or static analysis, are not considered in general, only if it
helps the understanding of the STG.
The idea behind the machine is to represent the program in its abstract syntax
tree form. However, due to references to other parts of the syntax tree, a
program is a graph, not a tree. By evaluating this graph using a small set of
rules, it can be systematically reduced to a final value, which will be the
result of the program.
The STG is
- spineless because the graph is not represented as a single data
structure in memory, but as a set of small, individual parts of the graph
that reference each other. An important part of the evaluation mechanism is
how to follow these references.
- tagless because all heap values - unevaluated values, functions, already
evaluated values - are represented alike on the heap, in form of closures.
Tagful would mean these closures have to be annotated with things like
type information, or whether they were previously evaluated already.
- graph reducing because heap objects can be overwritten by simpler values
the machine has found out to be equivalent. For example, the computation
1+1
on the heap might be overwritten by a constant 2
once that result
has been obtained somewhere.
Useful applications
STGi was started to teach myself about the STG. Not long into the project, I
decided to extend it to save others the many detours I had to take to implement
it. In that sense, it can be a useful tool if you're interested in the
lower-level properties of a Haskell implementation. I did my best to keep the
code readable, and added some decent Haddock/comment coverage. Speaking of
Haddock: it's an excellent tool to start looking around the project before
digging into the source!
The other benefit is for teaching others: instead (or in addition to!) of
explaining certain common Haskell issues on a whiteboard with boxes and arrows,
you can share an interactive view of common programs with others. The example
programs feature some interesting cases.
- Does this leak memory? On the stack or the heap?
- I heard GHC doesn't have a call stack?!
- Why is this value not garbage collected?
- Why are lists sometimes not very performant?
- How many steps does this small, innocent function take to produce a result?
Language introduction
The STG language can be seen as a mostly simplified version of Haskell with a
couple of lower level additions. The largest difference is probably that STG is
an untyped language.
The syntax will be discussed below. For now, as an appetizer, the familiar
Haskell code
foldl' _ acc [] = acc
foldl' f acc (y:ys) = case f acc y of
!acc' -> foldl' f acc' ys
sum = foldl' add 0
could be translated to
foldl' = \f acc xs -> case xs of
Nil -> acc;
Cons y ys -> case f acc y of
acc' -> foldl' f acc' ys;
badList -> Error_foldl' badList;
sum = \ -> foldl' add zero;
zero = \ -> Int# 0#
Top-level
An STG program consists of a set of bindings, each of the form
name = \(<free vars>) <bound vars> -> <expression body>
The right-hand side is called a lambda form, and is closely related to the
usual lambda from Haskell.
- Bound variables are the lambda parameters just like in Haskell.
- Free variables are the variables used in the
body
that are not bound or
global. This means that variables from the parent scope are not
automatically in scope, but you can get them into scope by adding them to
the free variables list.
The main
value, termination
In the default configuration, program execution starts by moving the definitions
given in the source code onto the heap, and then evaluating the main
value. It
will continue to run until there is no rule applicable to the current state. Due
to the lazy IO implementation, you can load indefinitely running programs in
your pager application and step as long forward as you want.
Expressions
Expressions can, in general, be one of a couple of alternatives.
-
Letrec
letrec <...bindings...> in <expression>
Introduce local definitions, just like Haskell's let
.
-
Let
let <...bindings...> in <expression>
Like letrec
, but the bindings cannot refer to each other (or themselves).
In other words, let
is non-recursive.
-
Case
case <expression> of <alts>
Evaluate the <expression>
(called scrutinee) to WHNF and continue
evaluating the matching alternative. Note that the WHNF part makes case
strict, and indeed it is the only construct that does evaluation.
The <alts>
are semicolon-separated list of alternatives of the form
Constructor <args> -> <expression> -- algebraic
1# -> <expression> -- primitive
and can be either all algebraic or all primitive. In case of algebraic
alternatives, the constructor's arguments are in scope in the following
expression, just like in Haskell's pattern matching.
Each list of alts must include a default alternative at the end, which can
optinally bind a variable.
v -> <expression> -- bound default; v is in scope in the expression
default -> <expression> -- unbound default
-
Function application
function <args>
Like Haskell's function application. The <args>
are primitive values or
variables.
-
Primitive application
primop# <arg1> <arg2>
Primitive operation on unboxed integers.
The following operations are supported:
- Arithmetic
+#
: addition
-#
: subtraction
*#
: multiplication
/#
: integer division (truncated towards -∞)
%#
: modulo (truncated towards -∞)
- Boolean, returning
1#
for truth and 0#
for falsehood:
<#
, <=#
, ==#
, /=#
, >=#
, >#
-
Constructor application
Constructor <args>
An algebraic data constructor applied to a number of arguments, just like
function application. Note that constructors always have to be saturated
(not partially applied); to get a partially applied constructor, wrap it in
a lambda form that fills in the missing arguments with parameters.
-
Primitive literal
An integer postfixed with #
, like 123#
.
For example, Haskell's maybe
function could be implemented in STG like this:
maybe = \nothing just x -> case x of
Just j -> just j;
Nothing -> nothing;
badMaybe -> Error_badMaybe badMaybe
Some lambda expressions can only contain certain sub-elements; these special
cases are detailed in the sections below. To foreshadow these issues:
- Lambda forms always have lifted (not primitive) type
- Lambda forms with non-empty argument lists and standard constructors are never
updatable
Updates
A lambda form can optionally use a double arrow =>
, instead of a normal arrow ->
.
This tells the machine to update the lambda form's value in memory once it has
been calculated, so the computation does not have to be repeated should the
value be required again. This is the mechanism that is key to the lazy
evaluation model the STG implements. For example, evaluating main
in
add2 = … -- <add two boxed ints>
one = \ -> Int# 1#;
two = \ -> Int# 2#;
main = \ => add2 one two
would, once the computation returns, overwrite main
(modulo technical
details) with
main = \ -> Int# 3#
A couple of things to keep in mind:
- Closures with non-empty argument lists and constructors are already in WHNF,
so they are never updatable.
- When a value is only entered once, updating it is unnecessary work. Deciding
whether a potentially updatable closure should actually be updatable is what
the update analysis would do in a compiler when translating into the STG.
Pitfalls
-
Semicolons are an annoyance that allows the grammar to be simpler. This
tradeoff was chosen to keep the project's code simpler, but this may change
in the future.
For now, the semicolon rule is that bindings and alternatives are
semicolon-separated.
-
Lambda forms stand for deferred computations, and as such cannot have
primitive type, which are always in normal form. To handle primitive types,
you'll have to box them like in
three = \ -> Int# 3#
Writing
three' = \ -> 3#
is invalid, and the machine would halt in an error state. You'll notice that
the unboxing-boxing business is quite laborious, and this is precisely the
reason unboxed values alone are so fast in GHC.
-
Function application cannot be nested, since function arguments are primitives
or variables. Haskell's map f (map g xs)
would be written
let map_g_xs = \ -> map g xs
in map f map_g_xs
assuming all variables are in global scope. This means that nesting functions
in Haskell results in a heap allocation via let
.
-
Free variable values have to be explicitly given to closures. Function
composition could be implemented like
compose = \f g x -> let gx = \(g x) -> g x
in f gx
Forgetting to hand g
and x
to the gx
lambda form would mean that in the
g x
call neither of them was in scope, and the machine would halt with
a "variable not in scope" error.
This applies even for recursive functions, which have to be given to
their own list of free variables, like in rep
in the following example:
replicate = \x -> let rep = \(rep x) -> Cons x rep
in rep
Code example
The 1992 paper gives two implementations of the map
function in section 4.1.
The first one is the STG version of
map f [] = []
map f (y:ys) = f y : map f ys
which, in this STG implementation, would be written
map = \f xs -> case xs of
Nil -> Nil;
Cons y ys -> let fy = \(f y) => f y;
mfy = \(f ys) => map f ys
in Cons fy mfy;
badList -> Error_map badList
For comparison, the paper's version is
map = {} \n {f,xs} -> case xs of
Nil {} -> Nil {}
Cons {y,ys} -> let fy = {f,y} \u {} -> f {y}
mfy = {f,ys} \u {} -> map {f,ys}
in Cons {fy,mfy}
badList -> Error_map {badList}
You can find lots of further examples of standard Haskell functions implemented
by hand in STG in the Prelude
modules. Combined with the above explanations,
this is all you should need to get started.
Marshalling values
The Stg.Marshal
module provides functions to inject Haskell values into the
STG (toStg
), and extract them from a machine state again (toStg
). These
functions are tremendously useful in practice, make use of them! After chasing a
list value on the heap manually you'll know the value of fromStg
, and in order
to get data structures into the STG you have to write a lot of code, and be
careful doing it at that. Keep in mind that fromStg
requires the value to be
in normal form, or extraction will fail.
Runtime behaviour
The following steps are an overview of the evaluation rules. Running the STG in
verbose mode (-v2
) will provide a more detailed description of what happened
each particular step.
Code segment
The code segment is the current instruction the machine evaluates.
- Eval evaluates expressions.
- Function application pushes the function's arguments on the stack
and Enters the address of the function.
- Constructor applications simply transition into the
ReturnCon state when evaluated.
- Similarly, primitive ints transition into the ReturnInt state.
- Case pushes a return frame, and proceeds evaluating the scrutinee.
- Let(rec) allocates heap closures, and extends the local environment
with the new bindings.
- Enter evaluates memory addresses by looking up the value at a memory
address on the heap, and evaluating its body.
- If the closure entered is updatable, push an update frame so it can later
be overwritten with the value it evaluates to.
- If the closure takes any arguments, supply it with values taken from
argument frames.
- ReturnCon instructs the machine to branch depending on which constructor
is present, by popping a return frame.
- ReturnInt does the same, but for primitive values.
Stack
The stack has three different kinds of frames.
- Argument frames store pending function arguments. They are pushed when
evaluating a function applied to arguments, and popped when entering a closure
that has a non-empty argument list.
- Return frames are pushed when evaluating a
case
expression, in order to
know where to continue once the scrutinee has been evaluated. They are popped
when evaluating constructors or primitive values.
- Update frames block access to argument and return frames. If an evaluation
step needs to pop one of them but there is an update frame in the way, it can
get rid the update frame by overriding the memory address pointed to by it
with the current value being evaluated, and retrying the evaluation now that
the update frame is gone. This mechanism is what enables lazy evaluation in
the STG.
Heap
The heap is a mapping from memory addresses to heap objects, which can be
closures or black holes (see below). Heap entries are allocated by let(rec)
,
and deallocated by garbage collection.
As a visual guide to the user, closures are annotated with Fun
(takes
arguments), Con
(data constructors), and Thunk
(suspended computations).
Black holes
The heap does not only contain closures, but also black holes. Black holes are
annotated with the step in which they were created; this annotation is purely
for display purposes, and not used by the machine.
At runtime, when an updatable closure is entered (evaluated), it is overwritten
by a black hole. Black holes do not only provide better overview over what
thunk is currently evaluated, but have two useful technical benefits:
-
Memory mentioned only in the closure is now ready to be collected,
avoiding certain space leaks. The 1992 paper gives the following
example in section 9.3.3:
list = \(x) => <long list>
l = \(list) => last list
When entering l
without black holes, the entire list
is kept in memory
until last
is done. On the other hand, overwriting l
with a black hole
upon entering deletes the last
pointer from it, and last
can run, and be
garbage collected, incrementally.
-
Entering a black hole means a thunk depends on itself, allowing the
interpreter to catch some non-terminating computations with a useful error
Garbage collection
Currently, two garbage collection algorithms are implemented:
- Tri-state tracing: free all unused memory addresses, and does not touch
the others. This makes following specific closures on the heap easy.
- Two-space copying: move all used memory addresses to the beginning of the
heap, and discard all those that weren't moved. This has the advantage of
reordering the heap roughly in the order the closures will be accessed by the
program again, but the disadvantage of making things harder to track, since
for example the
main
value might appear in several different locations
throughout the run of a program.
Unhelpful error message?
The goal of this project is being useful to human readers. If you find an error
message that is unhelpful or even misleading, please open an issue with a
minimal example on how to reproduce it!
Differences from the 1992 paper
Grammar
- Function application uses no parentheses or commas like in Haskell
f x y z
,
not with curly parentheses and commas like in the paper f {x,y,z}
.
- Comment syntax like in Haskell
- Constructors can end with a
#
to allow labelling primitive boxes
e.g. with Int#
.
- A lambda's head is written
\(free) bound -> body
, where free
and
bound
are space-separated variable lists, instead of the paper's
{free} \n {bound} -> body
, which uses comma-separated lists. The
update flag \u
is signified using a double arrow =>
instead of the
normal arrow ->
.
Evaluation
- The three stacks from the operational semantics given in the paper - argument,
return, and update - are unified into a single one, since they run
synchronously anyway. This makes the current location in the evaluation much
clearer, since the stack is always popped from the top. For example, having a
return frame at the top means the program is close to a
case
expression.
- Although heap closures are all represented alike, they are classified for the
user in the visual output:
- Constructors are closures with a constructor application body, and
only free variables.
- Other closures with only free variables are thunks.
- Closures with non-empty argument lists are functions.
GHC's current STG
The implementation here uses the push/enter evaluation model of the STG, which
is fairly elegant, and was initially thought to also be top in terms of
performance. As it turned out, the latter is not the case, and another
evaluation model called eval/apply, which treats (only) function application a
bit different, is faster in practice.
This notable revision is documented in the 2004 paper How to make a fast
curry. I don't have plans to support this evaluation model right
now, but it's on my list of long-term goals (alongside the current push/enter).