Major Section: STOBJ
The following event
(defstobj ms (pcn :type integer :initially 0) (mem :type (array integer (100000)) :initially -1) (code :type t :initially nil))introduces a single-threaded object named
ms
(which stands for
``machine state''). The object has three fields, a pcn
or program
counter, a mem
or memory, and a code
field.
The mem
field is occupied by an object initially of type
(array integer (100000))
. Logically speaking, this is a list of
length 100000
, each element of which is an integer. But in the
underlying implementation of the ms
object, this field is occupied
by a raw Lisp array, initially of size 100000.
You might expect the above defstobj
to define the accessor function
mem
and the updater update-mem
. That does not happen!.
The above event defines the accessor function memi
and the updater
update-memi
. These functions do not access/update the mem
field of
the ms
object; they access/update the individual elements of the
array in that field.
In particular, the logical definitions of the two functions are:
(defun memi (i ms) (declare (xargs :guard (and (msp ms) (integerp i) (<= 0 i) (< i (mem-length ms))))) (nth i (nth 1 ms)))(defun update-memi (i v ms) (declare (xargs :guard (and (msp ms) (integerp i) (<= 0 i) (< i (mem-length ms)) (integerp v)))) (update-nth-array 1 i v ms))
For example, to access the 511th (0-based) memory location of the
current ms
you could evaluate:
ACL2 !>(memi 511 ms) -1The answer is
-1
initially, because that is the above-specified
initial value of the elements of the mem
array.To set that element you could do
ACL2 !>(update-memi 511 777 ms) <ms> ACL2 !>(memi 511 ms) 777
The raw Lisp implementing these two functions is shown below.
(defun memi (i ms) (declare (type (integer 0 268435455) i)) (the integer (aref (the (simple-array integer (*)) (svref ms 1)) (the (integer 0 268435455) i))))(defun update-memi (i v ms) (declare (type (integer 0 268435455) i) (type integer v)) (progn (setf (aref (the (simple-array integer (*)) (svref ms 1)) (the (integer 0 268435455) i)) (the integer v)) ms))
If you want to see the raw Lisp supporting a defstobj
, execute the
defstobj
and then evaluate the ACL2 form
(nth 4 (global-val 'cltl-command (w state)))
.
To continue the stobj tour, see stobj-example-3.