This commit also adds several new theorems that are useful for implementing the simplifier.
TODO: perhaps we should remove the declarations at basic_thms.h?
Signed-off-by: Leonardo de Moura <leonardo@microsoft.com>
The environment object is a "smart-pointer".
Before this commit, the use of "const &" for environment objects was broken.
For example, suppose we have a function f that should not modify the input environment.
Before this commit, its signature would be
void f(environment const & env)
This is broken, f's implementation can easilty convert it to a read-write pointer by using
the copy constructor.
environment rw_env(env);
Now, f can use rw_env to update env.
To fix this issue, we now have ro_environment. It is a shared *const* pointer.
We can convert an environment into a ro_environment, but not the other way around.
ro_environment can also be seen as a form of documentation.
For example, now it is clear that type_inferer is not updating the environment, since its constructor takes a ro_environment.
Signed-off-by: Leonardo de Moura <leonardo@microsoft.com>
This commit allows us to build Lean without the pthread dependency.
It is also useful if we want to implement multi-threading on top of Boost.
Signed-off-by: Leonardo de Moura <leonardo@microsoft.com>
When LEAN_THREAD_UNSAFE=ON, we:
- Do not run tests at tests/lua/threads
- Disable thread object at Lua API
- par tactical becomes an alias for interleave
- Disable some unit tests that use threads
Signed-off-by: Leonardo de Moura <leonardo@microsoft.com>
Recursive functions that may go very deep should invoke the function check_stack. It throws an exception if the amount of stack space is limited.
The function check_system() is syntax sugar for
check_interrupted();
check_stack();
Signed-off-by: Leonardo de Moura <leonardo@microsoft.com>
Now, it produces the following outcomes:
1- A proof
2- A counterexample
3- A list of (unsolved) final states
Remark: the solve method does not check whether the proof or counterexample is correct.
Signed-off-by: Leonardo de Moura <leonardo@microsoft.com>