The GFCC Grammar Format Aarne Ranta October 19, 2006 Author's address: [``http://www.cs.chalmers.se/~aarne`` http://www.cs.chalmers.se/~aarne] % to compile: txt2tags -thtml --toc gfcc.txt History: - 19 Oct: translation of lincats, new figures on C++ - 3 Oct 2006: first version ==What is GFCC== GFCC is a low-level format for GF grammars. Its aim is to contain the minimum that is needed to process GF grammars at runtime. This minimality has three advantages: - compact grammar files and run-time objects - time and space efficient processing - simple definition of interpreters The idea is that all embedded GF applications are compiled to GFCC. The GF system would be primarily used as a compiler and as a grammar development tool. Since GFCC is implemented in BNFC, a parser of the format is readily available for C, C++, Haskell, Java, and OCaml. Also an XML representation is generated in BNFC. A [reference implementation ../] of linearization and some other functions has been written in Haskell. ==GFCC vs. GFC== GFCC is aimed to replace GFC as the run-time grammar format. GFC was designed to be a run-time format, but also to support separate compilation of grammars, i.e. to store the results of compiling individual GF modules. But this means that GFC has to contain extra information, such as type annotations, which is only needed in compilation and not at run-time. In particular, the pattern matching syntax and semantics of GFC is complex and therefore difficult to implement in new platforms. The main differences of GFCC compared with GFC can be summarized as follows: - there are no modules, and therefore no qualified names - a GFCC grammar is multilingual, and consists of a common abstract syntax together with one concrete syntax per language - records and tables are replaced by arrays - record labels and parameter values are replaced by integers - record projection and table selection are replaced by array indexing - there is (so far) no support for dependent types or higher-order abstract syntax (which would be easy to add, but make interpreters much more difficult to write) Here is an example of a GF grammar, consisting of three modules, as translated to GFCC. The representations are aligned, with the exceptions due to the alphabetical sorting of GFCC grammars. ``` grammar Ex(Eng,Swe); abstract Ex = { abstract { cat S ; NP ; VP ; fun Pred : NP -> VP -> S ; Pred : NP,VP -> S = (Pred); She, They : NP ; She : -> NP = (She); Sleep : VP ; Sleep : -> VP = (Sleep); They : -> NP = (They); } } ; concrete Eng of Ex = { concrete Eng { lincat S = {s : Str} ; NP = {s : Str ; n : Num} ; VP = {s : Num => Str} ; param Num = Sg | Pl ; lin Pred np vp = { Pred = [(($0!1),(($1!0)!($0!0)))]; s = np.s ++ vp.s ! np.n} ; She = {s = "she" ; n = Sg} ; She = [0, "she"]; They = {s = "they" ; n = Pl} ; Sleep = {s = table { Sleep = [("sleep" + ["s",""])]; Sg => "sleeps" ; Pl => "sleep" They = [1, "they"]; } } ; } ; } concrete Swe of Ex = { concrete Swe { lincat S = {s : Str} ; NP = {s : Str} ; VP = {s : Str} ; param Num = Sg | Pl ; lin Pred np vp = { Pred = [(($0!0),($1!0))]; s = np.s ++ vp.s} ; She = {s = "hon"} ; She = ["hon"]; They = {s = "de"} ; They = ["de"]; Sleep = {s = "sover"} ; Sleep = ["sover"]; } } ; ``` ==The syntax of GFCC files== ===Top level=== A grammar has a header telling the name of the abstract syntax (often specifying an application domain), and the names of the concrete languages. The abstract syntax and the concrete syntaxes themselves follow. ``` Grammar ::= Header ";" Abstract ";" [Concrete] ; Header ::= "grammar" CId "(" [CId] ")" ; Abstract ::= "abstract" "{" [AbsDef] "}" ; Concrete ::= "concrete" CId "{" [CncDef] "}" ; ``` Abstract syntax judgements give typings and semantic definitions. Concrete syntax judgements give linearizations. ``` AbsDef ::= CId ":" Type "=" Exp ; CncDef ::= CId "=" Term ; ``` Also flags are possible, local to each "module" (i.e. abstract and concretes). ``` AbsDef ::= "%" CId "=" String ; CncDef ::= "%" CId "=" String ; ``` For the run-time system, the reference implementation in Haskell uses a structure that gives efficient look-up: ``` data GFCC = GFCC { absname :: CId , cncnames :: [CId] , abstract :: Abstr , concretes :: Map CId Concr } data Abstr = Abstr { funs :: Map CId Type, -- find the type of a fun cats :: Map CId [CId] -- find the funs giving a cat } type Concr = Map CId Term ``` ===Abstract syntax=== Types are first-order function types built from category symbols. Syntax trees (``Exp``) are rose trees with the head (``Atom``) either a function constant, a metavariable, or a string, integer, or float literal. ``` Type ::= [CId] "->" CId ; Exp ::= "(" Atom [Exp] ")" ; Atom ::= CId ; -- function constant Atom ::= "?" ; -- metavariable Atom ::= String ; -- string literal Atom ::= Integer ; -- integer literal Atom ::= Double ; -- float literal ``` ===Concrete syntax=== Linearization terms (``Term``) are built as follows. Constructor names are shown to make the later code examples readable. ``` R. Term ::= "[" [Term] "]" ; -- array P. Term ::= "(" Term "!" Term ")" ; -- access to indexed field S. Term ::= "(" [Term] ")" ; -- sequence with ++ K. Term ::= Tokn ; -- token V. Term ::= "$" Integer ; -- argument C. Term ::= Integer ; -- array index FV. Term ::= "[|" [Term] "|]" ; -- free variation TM. Term ::= "?" ; -- linearization of metavariable ``` Tokens are strings or (maybe obsolescent) prefix-dependent variant lists. ``` KS. Tokn ::= String ; KP. Tokn ::= "[" "pre" [String] "[" [Variant] "]" "]" ; Var. Variant ::= [String] "/" [String] ; ``` Three special forms of terms are introduced by the compiler as optimizations. They can in principle be eliminated, but their presence makes grammars much more compact. Their semantics will be explained in a later section. ``` F. Term ::= CId ; -- global constant W. Term ::= "(" String "+" Term ")" ; -- prefix + suffix table RP. Term ::= "(" Term "@" Term ")"; -- record parameter alias ``` Identifiers are like ``Ident`` in GF and GFC, except that the compiler produces constants prefixed with ``_`` in the common subterm elimination optimization. ``` token CId (('_' | letter) (letter | digit | '\'' | '_')*) ; ``` ==The semantics of concrete syntax terms== ===Linearization and realization=== The linearization algorithm is essentially the same as in GFC: a tree is linearized by evaluating its linearization term in the environment of the linearizations of the subtrees. Literal atoms are linearized in the obvious way. The function also needs to know the language (i.e. concrete syntax) in which linearization is performed. ``` linExp :: GFCC -> CId -> Exp -> Term linExp mcfg lang tree@(Tr at trees) = case at of AC fun -> comp (Prelude.map lin trees) $ look fun AS s -> R [kks (show s)] -- quoted AI i -> R [kks (show i)] AF d -> R [kks (show d)] AM -> TM where lin = linExp mcfg lang comp = compute mcfg lang look = lookLin mcfg lang ``` The result of linearization is usually a record, which is realized as a string using the following algorithm. ``` realize :: Term -> String realize trm = case trm of R (t:_) -> realize t S ss -> unwords $ Prelude.map realize ss K (KS s) -> s K (KP s _) -> unwords s ---- prefix choice TODO W s t -> s ++ realize t FV (t:_) -> realize t TM -> "?" ``` Since the order of record fields is not necessarily the same as in GF source, this realization does not work securely for categories whose lincats more than one field. ===Term evaluation=== Evaluation follows call-by-value order, with two environments needed: - the grammar (a concrete syntax) to give the global constants - an array of terms to give the subtree linearizations The code is presented in one-level pattern matching, to enable reimplementations in languages that do not permit deep patterns (such as Java and C++). ``` compute :: GFCC -> CId -> [Term] -> Term -> Term compute mcfg lang args = comp where comp trm = case trm of P r p -> proj (comp r) (comp p) RP i t -> RP (comp i) (comp t) W s t -> W s (comp t) R ts -> R $ Prelude.map comp ts V i -> idx args (fromInteger i) -- already computed F c -> comp $ look c -- not computed (if contains V) FV ts -> FV $ Prelude.map comp ts S ts -> S $ Prelude.filter (/= S []) $ Prelude.map comp ts _ -> trm look = lookLin mcfg lang idx xs i = xs !! i proj r p = case (r,p) of (_, FV ts) -> FV $ Prelude.map (proj r) ts (W s t, _) -> kks (s ++ getString (proj t p)) _ -> comp $ getField r (getIndex p) getString t = case t of K (KS s) -> s _ -> trace ("ERROR in grammar compiler: string from "++ show t) "ERR" getIndex t = case t of C i -> fromInteger i RP p _ -> getIndex p TM -> 0 -- default value for parameter _ -> trace ("ERROR in grammar compiler: index from " ++ show t) 0 getField t i = case t of R rs -> idx rs i RP _ r -> getField r i TM -> TM _ -> trace ("ERROR in grammar compiler: field from " ++ show t) t ``` ===The special term constructors=== The three forms introduced by the compiler may a need special explanation. Global constants ``` Term ::= CId ; ``` are shorthands for complex terms. They are produced by the compiler by (iterated) common subexpression elimination. They are often more powerful than hand-devised code sharing in the source code. They could be computed off-line by replacing each identifier by its definition. Prefix-suffix tables ``` Term ::= "(" String "+" Term ")" ; ``` represent tables of word forms divided to the longest common prefix and its array of suffixes. In the example grammar above, we have ``` Sleep = [("sleep" + ["s",""])] ``` which in fact is equal to the array of full forms ``` ["sleeps", "sleep"] ``` The power of this construction comes from the fact that suffix sets tend to be repeated in a language, and can therefore be collected by common subexpression elimination. It is this technique that explains the used syntax rather than the more accurate ``` "(" String "+" [String] ")" ``` since we want the suffix part to be a ``Term`` for the optimization to take effect. The most curious construct of GFCC is the parameter array alias, ``` Term ::= "(" Term "@" Term ")"; ``` This form is used as the value of parameter records, such as the type ``` {n : Number ; p : Person} ``` The problem with parameter records is their double role. They can be used like parameter values, as indices in selection, ``` VP.s ! {n = Sg ; p = P3} ``` but also as records, from which parameters can be projected: ``` {n = Sg ; p = P3}.n ``` Whichever use is selected as primary, a prohibitively complex case expression must be generated at compilation to GFCC to get the other use. The adopted solution is to generate a pair containing both a parameter value index and an array of indices of record fields. For instance, if we have ``` param Number = Sg | Pl ; Person = P1 | P2 | P3 ; ``` we get the encoding ``` {n = Sg ; p = P3} ---> (2 @ [0,2]) ``` The GFCC computation rules are essentially ``` (t ! (i @ _)) = (t ! i) ((_ @ r) ! j) =(r ! j) ``` ==Compiling to GFCC== Compilation to GFCC is performed by the GF grammar compiler, and GFCC interpreters need not know what it does. For grammar writers, however, it might be interesting to know what happens to the grammars in the process. The compilation phases are the following + translate GF source to GFC, as always in GF + undo GFC back-end optimizations + perform the ``values`` optimization to normalize tables + create a symbol table mapping the GFC parameter and record types to fixed-size arrays, and parameter values and record labels to integers + traverse the linearization rules replacing parameters and labels by integers + reorganize the created GFC grammar so that it has just one abstract syntax and one concrete syntax per language + apply UTF8 encoding to the grammar, if not yet applied (this is told by the ``coding`` flag) + translate the GFC syntax tree to a GFCC syntax tree, using a simple compositional mapping + perform the word-suffix optimization on GFCC linearization terms + perform subexpression elimination on each concrete syntax module + print out the GFCC code Notice that a major part of the compilation is done within GFC, so that GFC-related tasks (such as parser generation) could be performed by using the old algorithms. ===Problems in GFCC compilation=== Two major problems had to be solved in compiling GFC to GFCC: - consistent order of tables and records, to permit the array translation - run-time variables in complex parameter values. The current implementation is still experimental and may fail to generate correct code. Any errors remaining are likely to be related to the two problems just mentioned. The order problem is solved in different ways for tables and records. For tables, the ``values`` optimization of GFC already manages to maintain a canonical order. But this order can be destroyed by the ``share`` optimization. To make sure that GFCC compilation works properly, it is safest to recompile the GF grammar by using the ``values`` optimization flag. Records can be canonically ordered by sorting them by labels. In fact, this was done in connection of the GFCC work as a part of the GFC generation, to guarantee consistency. This means that e.g. the ``s`` field will in general no longer appear as the first field, even if it does so in the GF source code. But relying on the order of fields in a labelled record would be misplaced anyway. The canonical form of records is further complicated by lock fields, i.e. dummy fields of form ``lock_C = <>``, which are added to grammar libraries to force intensionality of linearization types. The problem is that the absence of a lock field only generates a warning, not an error. Therefore a GFC grammar can contain objects of the same type with and without a lock field. This problem was solved in GFCC generation by just removing all lock fields (defined as fields whose type is the empty record type). This has the further advantage of (slightly) reducing the grammar size. More importantly, it is safe to remove lock fields, because they are never used in computation, and because intensional types are only needed in grammars reused as libraries, not in grammars used at runtime. While the order problem is rather bureaucratic in nature, run-time variables are an interesting problem. They arise in the presence of complex parameter values, created by argument-taking constructors and parameter records. To give an example, consider the GF parameter type system ``` Number = Sg | Pl ; Person = P1 | P2 | P3 ; Agr = Ag Number Person ; ``` The values can be translated to integers in the expected way, ``` Sg = 0, Pl = 1 P1 = 0, P2 = 1, P3 = 2 Ag Sg P1 = 0, Ag Sg P2 = 1, Ag Sg P3 = 2, Ag Pl P1 = 3, Ag Pl P2 = 4, Ag Pl P3 = 5 ``` However, an argument of ``Agr`` can be a run-time variable, as in ``` Ag np.n P3 ``` This expression must first be translated to a case expression, ``` case np.n of { 0 => 2 ; 1 => 5 } ``` which can then be translated to the GFCC term ``` ([2,5] ! ($0 ! $1)) ``` assuming that the variable ``np`` is the first argument and that its ``Number`` field is the second in the record. This transformation of course has to be performed recursively, since there can be several run-time variables in a parameter value: ``` Ag np.n np.p ``` A similar transformation would be possible to deal with the double role of parameter records discussed above. Thus the type ``` RNP = {n : Number ; p : Person} ``` could be uniformly translated into the set ``{0,1,2,3,4,5}`` as ``Agr`` above. Selections would be simple instances of indexing. But any projection from the record should be translated into a case expression, ``` rnp.n ===> case rnp of { 0 => 0 ; 1 => 0 ; 2 => 0 ; 3 => 1 ; 4 => 1 ; 5 => 1 } ``` To avoid the code bloat resulting from this, we chose the alias representation which is easy enough to deal with in interpreters. ===The representation of linearization types=== Linearization types (``lincat``) are not needed when generating with GFCC, but they have been added to enable parser generation directly from GFCC. The linearization type definitions are shown as a part of the concrete syntax, by using terms to represent types. Here is the table showing how different linearization types are encoded. ``` P* = size(P) -- parameter type {_ : I ; __ : R}* = (I* @ R*) -- record of parameters {r1 : T1 ; ... ; rn : Tn}* = [T1*,...,Tn*] -- other record (P => T)* = [T* ,...,T*] -- size(P) times Str* = () ``` The category symbols are prefixed with two underscores (``__``). For example, the linearization type ``present/CatEng.NP`` is translated as follows: ``` NP = { a : { -- 6 = 2*3 values n : {ParamX.Number} ; -- 2 values p : {ParamX.Person} -- 3 values } ; s : {ResEng.Case} => Str -- 3 values } __NP = [(6@[2,3]),[(),(),()]] ``` ===Running the compiler and the GFCC interpreter=== GFCC generation is a part of the [developers' version http://www.cs.chalmers.se/Cs/Research/Language-technology/darcs/GF/doc/darcs.html] of GF since September 2006. To invoke the compiler, the flag ``-printer=gfcc`` to the command ``pm = print_multi`` is used. It is wise to recompile the grammar from source, since previously compiled libraries may not obey the canonical order of records. To ``strip`` the grammar before GFCC translation removes unnecessary interface references. Here is an example, performed in [example/bronzeage ../../../../../examples/bronzeage]. ``` i -src -path=.:prelude:resource-1.0/* -optimize=all_subs BronzeageEng.gf i -src -path=.:prelude:resource-1.0/* -optimize=all_subs BronzeageGer.gf strip pm -printer=gfcc | wf bronze.gfcc ``` ==The reference interpreter== The reference interpreter written in Haskell consists of the following files: ``` -- source file for BNFC GFCC.cf -- labelled BNF grammar of gfcc -- files generated by BNFC AbsGFCC.hs -- abstrac syntax of gfcc ErrM.hs -- error monad used internally LexGFCC.hs -- lexer of gfcc files ParGFCC.hs -- parser of gfcc files and syntax trees PrintGFCC.hs -- printer of gfcc files and syntax trees -- hand-written files DataGFCC.hs -- post-parser grammar creation, linearization and evaluation GenGFCC.hs -- random and exhaustive generation, generate-and-test parsing RunGFCC.hs -- main function - a simple command interpreter ``` It is included in the [developers' version http://www.cs.chalmers.se/Cs/Research/Language-technology/darcs/GF/doc/darcs.html] of GF, in the subdirectory [``GF/src/GF/Canon/GFCC`` ../]. To compile the interpreter, type ``` make gfcc ``` in ``GF/src``. To run it, type ``` ./gfcc ``` The available commands are - ``gr ``: generate a number of random trees in category. and show their linearizations in all languages - ``grt ``: generate a number of random trees in category. and show the trees and their linearizations in all languages - ``gt ``: generate a number of trees in category from smallest, and show their linearizations in all languages - ``gtt ``: generate a number of trees in category from smallest, and show the trees and their linearizations in all languages - ``p ``: "parse", i.e. generate trees until match or until the given number have been generated - ````: linearize tree in all languages, also showing full records - ``quit``: terminate the system cleanly ==Interpreter in C++== A base-line interpreter in C++ has been started. Its main functionality is random generation of trees and linearization of them. Here are some results from running the different interpreters, compared to running the same grammar in GF, saved in ``.gfcm`` format. The grammar contains the English, German, and Norwegian versions of Bronzeage. The experiment was carried out on Ubuntu Linux laptop with 1.5 GHz Intel centrino processor. || | GF | gfcc(hs) | gfcc++ | | program size | 7249k | 803k | 113k | grammar size | 336k | 119k | 119k | read grammar | 1150ms | 510ms | 100ms | generate 222 | 9500ms | 450ms | 800ms | memory | 21M | 10M | 20M To summarize: - going from GF to gfcc is a major win in both code size and efficiency - going from Haskell to C++ interpreter is not a win yet, because of a space leak in the C++ version ==Some things to do== Interpreter in Java. Parsing via MCFG - the FCFG format can possibly be simplified - parser grammars should be saved in files to make interpreters easier Hand-written parsers for GFCC grammars to reduce code size (and efficiency?) of interpreters. Binary format and/or file compression of GFCC output. Syntax editor based on GFCC. Rewriting of resource libraries in order to exploit the word-suffix sharing better (depth-one tables, as in FM).