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The Coq Se(xp)rialized Protocol

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$ opam install coq-serapi
$ sertop --help

SerAPI is a library for machine-to-machine interaction with the Coq proof assistant, with particular emphasis on IDE support and code analysis tools. SerAPI provides automatic serialization of OCaml datatypes from/to S-expressions.

SerAPI is a proof-of-concept and should be considered alpha-quality. However, it is fully functional and supports, among other things, asynchronous proof checking, full-document parsing, and serialization of Coq's core datatypes. SerAPI can also be run as WebWorker thread, providing a self-contained Coq system inside the browser. Typical load times in Google Chrome are less than a second.

The main design philosophy of SerAPI is to make clients' lives easy, by trying to provide a convenient, robust interface that hides most of the scary details involved in interacting with Coq.

Feedback from Coq users and developers is very welcome and intrinsic to the project. We are open to implementing new features and exploring new use cases.

Documentation and Help:

API WARNING: The protocol is experimental and may change often.

Quick Overview and Install:

SerAPI can be installed as the OPAM package coq-serapi. See build instructions for manual installation. The experimental in-browser version is also online.

SerAPI provides an interactive "Read-Print-Eval-Loop", sertop and a batch-oriented compiler sercomp. See the manual pages and --help pages of each command for more details.

To get familiar with SerAPI we recommend launching the sertop REPL, as it provides a reasonably human-friendly experience:

$ rlwrap sertop --printer=human

You can then input commands. Ctrl-C will interrupt a busy Coq process in the same way it interrupts coqtop.

The program sercomp provides a command-line interface to some key functionality of SerAPI and can be used for batch processing of Coq documents, e.g., to serialize Coq source files from/to lists of S-expressions. See sercomp --help for some usage examples and an overview of the main options.

Protocol Commands:

Interaction with sertop is done using commands, which can be optionally tagged in the form of (tag cmd); otherwise, an automatic tag will be assigned. For every command, SerAPI will always reply with (Answer tag Ack) to indicate that the command was successfully parsed and delivered to Coq, or with a SexpError if parsing failed.

There are three categories of commands:

  • Document manipulation: Add, Cancel, Exec, ...: these commands instruct Coq to perform some action on the current document. Every command will produce zero or more different tagged answers, and a final answer (Answer tag Completed), indicating that there won't be more output.

    SerAPI document commands are an evolution of the OCaml STM API, here and here you can find a few informal notes on how it works. We are working on a more detailed specification, for now you can get some more details in the issue tracker.

  • Queries: (Query ((opt value) ...) kind):

    Queries stream Coq objects of type kind. This can range from options, goals and hypotheses, tactics, etc... The first argument is a list of options: preds is a list of conjunctive filters, limit specifies how many values the query may return. pp controls the output format: PpSer for full serialization, or PpStr for "pretty printing". For instance:

    (tag (Query ((preds (Prefix "Debug")) (limit 10) (pp PpSexp)) Option))

    will stream all Coq options that start with "Debug", limiting to the first 10 and printing the full internal Coq datatype:

    (CoqOption (Default Goal Selector)
       ((opt_sync true) (opt_depr false) (opt_name "default goal selector")
       (opt_value (StringValue 1))))
    ...

    Options can be omitted, as in: (tag (Query ((limit 10)) Option)), and currently supported queries can be seen here

  • Printing: (Print opts obj): The Print command provides access to the Coq pretty printers. Its intended use is for printing (maybe IDE manipulated) objects returned by Query.

Roadmap:

SerAPI 0.7.x is based on Coq 8.10. These days, most work related to SerAPI is directly happening over Coq's upstream itself. The main objective is to improve the proof-document model; building a rich query language will be next.

Clients and Users:

SerAPI has been used in a few contexts already, we provide a few pointers here, feel free to add your own!

  • jsCoq allows you to run Coq in your browser. JsCoq is the predecessor of SerAPI and will shortly be fully based on it.
  • elcoq, an emacs technology demo based on SerAPI by Clément Pit--Claudel. elcoq is not fully functional but illustrates some noteworthy features of SerAPI.
  • PeaCoq, a Coq IDE for the browser, has an experimental branch that uses SerAPI.
  • GrammaTech's Software Evolution Library (SEL) provides tools for programmatically modifying and evaluating software. SEL operates over multiple software representations including source code in several languages and compiled machine code. Its Coq module uses SerAPI to serialize Coq source code into ASTs, which are parsed into Common Lisp objects for further manipulation. GrammaTech uses this library to synthesize modifications to software so that it satisfies an objective function, e.g., a suite of unit tests.
    @manual{sel2018manual,
      title        = {Software Evolution Library},
      author       = {Eric Schulte and Contributors},
      organization = {GrammaTech},
      address      = {eschulte@grammatech.com},
      month        = 1,
      year         = 2018,
      note         = {https://grammatech.github.io/sel/}
    }
    SerAPI support was added by Rebecca Swords.
  • SerAPI is being used to improve the Coq regression proof selection tool iCoq; see the paper.
  • SerAPI is being used to some software testing projects, we will update this link as papers get out of embargo.
  • CoqGym is "A Learning Environment for Theorem Proving with the Coq proof assistant". It uses SerAPI to interact with Coq and perform feature-extraction. Its author notes:

    CoqGym relies heavily on SerAPI for serializing the internal structures of Coq. I tried to use Coq's native printing functions when I started with this project, but soon I found SerAPI could save a lot of the headaches with parsing Coq's output. Thanks to SerAPI authors, this project wouldn't be possible (or at least in its current form) without SerAPI.

  • SerAPI is being used in some more machine learning projects, we will update this link as papers get out of embargo.

Quick Demo (not always up to date):

$ rlwrap sertop --printer=human
(Add () "Lemma addn0 n : n + 0 = n. Proof. now induction n. Qed.")
  > (Answer 0 Ack)
  > (Answer 0 (Added 2 ((fname "") (line_nb 1) (bol_pos 0) (line_nb_last 1) (bol_pos_last 0) (bp 0) (ep 26))
  >            NewTip))
  > ...
  > (Answer 0 (Added 5 ... NewTip))
  > (Answer 0 Completed)

(Exec 5)
  > (Answer 1 Ack)
  > (Feedback ((id 5) (route 0) (contents (ProcessingIn master))))
  > ...
  > (Feedback ((id 5) (route 0) (contents Processed)))
  > (Answer 1 Completed)

(Query ((sid 3)) Goals)
  > (Answer 2 Ack)
  > (Answer 2
  >  (ObjList ((CoqGoal ((fg_goals (((name 5) (ty (App (Ind ...))))
                         (bg_goals ()) (shelved_goals ()) (given_up_goals ()))))))
  > (Answer 2 Completed)

(Query ((sid 3) (pp ((pp_format PpStr)))) Goals)
  > (Answer 3 Ack)
  > (Answer 3 (ObjList ((CoqString
  >   "\
  >    \n  n : nat\
  >    \n============================\
  >    \nn + 0 = n"))))
  > (Answer 3 Completed)

(Query ((sid 4)) Ast)
  > (Answer 4 Ack)
  > (Answer 4 (ObjList ((CoqAst ((((fname "") (line_nb 1) (bol_pos 0) (line_nb_last 1)
  >                                (bol_pos_last 0) (bp 34) (ep 50)))
  > ...
  >            ((Tacexp
  >              (TacAtom
  >                (TacInductionDestruct true false
  > ...
  > (Answer 4 Completed)

(pp_ex (Print ((pp_format PpStr)) (CoqConstr (App (Rel 0) ((Rel 0))))))
  > (Answer pp_ex Ack)
  > (Answer pp_ex(ObjList((CoqString"(_UNBOUND_REL_0 _UNBOUND_REL_0)"))))

(Query () (Vernac "Print nat. "))
  > (Answer 6 Ack)
  > (Feedback ((id 5) (route 0) (contents
  >    (Message Notice ()
  >    ((Pp_box (Pp_hovbox 0) ...)
  > (Answer 6 (ObjList ()))
  > (Answer 6 Completed)

(Query () (Definition nat))
  > (Answer 7 Ack)
  > (Answer 7 (ObjList ((CoqMInd (Mutind ....)))))
  > (Answer 7 Completed)

Technical Report:

There is a brief technical report describing the motivation, design, and implementation of SerAPI.

@techreport{GallegoArias2016SerAPI,
  title = {{SerAPI: Machine-Friendly, Data-Centric Serialization for Coq}},
  author = {Gallego Arias, Emilio Jes{\'u}s},
  url = {https://hal-mines-paristech.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01384408},
  institution = {MINES ParisTech},
  year = {2016},
  month = Oct,
}

Developer Information

Technical Details

SerAPI has four main components:

  • serapi: an extended version of the current IDE protocol;
  • serlib a library providing automatic de/serialization of most Coq data structures using ppx_conv_sexp. This should be eventually incorporated into Coq itself. Support for ppx_deriving_yojson is work in progress;
  • sertop, sertop_js, toplevels offering implementations of the protocol;
  • sercomp, a command-line tool providing access to key features of serlib.

Building your own toplevels using serlib and serapi is encouraged.

Advanced Use Cases

With a bit more development effort, you can also:

  • Use SerAPI as an OCaml library. The low-level serialization library serlib/ and the higher-level SerAPI protocol in serapi/serapi_protocol.mli can be linked standalone.

  • Use SerAPI's web worker JavaScript Worker from your web/node application. In this model, you communicate with SerAPI using the typical onmessage/postMessage worker API. Ready-to-use builds may be found at here, we provide an example REPL at: https://x80.org/rhino-hawk

We would also like to provide a Jupyter/IPython kernel.

Developer/Users Mailing List

SerAPI development is mainly discussed on GitHub and in the Gitter channel. You can also use the jsCoq mailing list by subscribing at: https://x80.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/jscoq

The mailing list archives should also be available at the Gmane group: gmane.science.mathematics.logic.coq.jscoq. You can post to the list using nntp.

Acknowledgments

SerAPI has been developed at the Centre de Recherche en Informatique of MINES ParisTech (former École de Mines de Paris) and partially supported by the FEEVER project.

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