Commit graph

13 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Sebastian Ullrich
f47dfe9e7f
perf: Options.hasTrace (#12001)
Drastically speeds up `isTracingEnabledFor` in the common case, which
has evolved from "no options set" to "`Elab.async` and probably some
linter options set but no `trace`".

## Breaking changes

`Lean.Options` is now an opaque type. The basic but not all of the
`KVMap` API has been redefined on top of it.
2026-01-16 09:03:40 +00:00
Mac Malone
79838834c1
refactor: port shell option processing to Lean (v2) (#11434)
This PR moves the processing of options passed to the CLI from
`shell.cpp` to `Shell.lean`.

As with previous ports, this attempts to mirror as much of the original
behavior as possible, Benefits to be gained from the ported code can
come in later PRs. There should be no significant behavioral changes
from this port. Nonetheless, error reporting has changed some, hopefully
for the better. For instance, errors for improper argument
configurations has been made more consistent (e.g., Lean will now error
if numeric arguments fall outside the expected range for an option).

(Redo of #11345 to fix Windows issue.)
2025-12-02 17:41:51 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
3772bb8685
chore: revert "refactor: port shell option processing to Lean" (#11378)
Needs a fix to unbreak the Windows build first.

Reverts leanprover/lean4#11345
2025-11-26 09:28:48 +00:00
Mac Malone
e1f8c147e7
refactor: port shell option processing to Lean (#11345)
This PR moves the processing of options passed to the CLI from
`shell.cpp` to `Shell.lean`.

As with previous ports, this attempts to mirror as much of the original
behavior as possible, Benefits to be gained from the ported code can
come in later PRs. There should be no significant behavioral changes
from this port. Nonetheless, error reporting has changed some, hopefully
for the better. For instance, errors for improper argument
configurations has been made more consistent (e.g., Lean will now error
if numeric arguments fall outside the expected range for an option).
2025-11-25 23:39:31 +00:00
Markus Himmel
96c4b9ee4d
feat: coercion from String to String.Slice (#11341)
This PR adds a coercion from `String` to `String.Slice`.

In our envisioned future, most functions operating on strings will
accept `String.Slice` parameters by default (like `str` in Rust), and
this enables calling such functions with arguments of type `String`.

Closes #11298.
2025-11-24 16:50:08 +00:00
Markus Himmel
e6a07ca6b1
refactor: deprecate String.posOf and variants in favor of unified String.find (#11276)
This PR cleans up the API around `String.find` and moves it uniformly to
the new position types `String.ValidPos` and `String.Slice.Pos`

Overview:

- To search for a character, character predicate, string or slice in a
string or slice `s`, use `s.find?` or `s.find`.
- To do the same, but starting at a position `p` of a string or slice,
use `p.find?` or `p.find`.
- To do the same but between two positions `p` and `q`, construct the
slice from `p` to `q` and then use `find?` or `find` on that.
- To search backwards, all of the above applies, except that the
function is called `revFind?`, there is no non-question-mark version
(use `getD` if there is a sane default return value in your specific
application), and that you can only search for characters and character
predicates, not strings or slices.
2025-11-23 18:39:53 +00:00
Markus Himmel
fa5d08b7de
refactor: use String.Slice in String.take and variants (#11180)
This PR redefines `String.take` and variants to operate on
`String.Slice`. While previously functions returning a substring of the
input sometimes returned `String` and sometimes returned
`Substring.Raw`, they now uniformly return `String.Slice`.

This is a BREAKING change, because many functions now have a different
return type. So for example, if `s` is a string and `f` is a function
accepting a string, `f (s.drop 1)` will no longer compile because
`s.drop 1` is a `String.Slice`. To fix this, insert a call to `copy` to
restore the old behavior: `f (s.drop 1).copy`.

Of course, in many cases, there will be more efficient options. For
example, don't write `f <| s.drop 1 |>.copy |>.dropEnd 1 |>.copy`, write
`f <| s.drop 1 |>.dropEnd 1 |>.copy` instead. Also, instead of `(s.drop
1).copy = "Hello"`, write `s.drop 1 == "Hello".toSlice` instead.
2025-11-18 16:13:48 +00:00
Markus Himmel
b28daa6d60
chore: rename String.endPos -> String.rawEndPos (#10853)
This PR renames `String.endPos` to `String.rawEndPos`, as in a future
release the name `String.endPos` will be taken by the function that is
currently called `String.endValidPos`.
2025-10-21 11:25:30 +00:00
Markus Himmel
dad541265c
refactor: move operations on String.Pos.Raw to the String.Pos.Raw namespace (#10735)
This PR moves many operations involving `String.Pos.Raw` to a the
`String.Pos.Raw` namespace with the eventual aim of freeing up the
`String` namespace to contain operations using `String.ValidPos` (to be
renamed to `String.Pos`) instead.

This PR adds the `String.ValidPos.set` and `String.ValidPos.modify`
functions.

After this PR, `String.pos_lt_eq` is no longer a `simp` lemma. Add
`String.Pos.Raw.lt_iff` as a `simp` lemma if your proofs break.
2025-10-18 12:12:55 +00:00
Mac Malone
db3fb47109
refactor: port more of shell.cpp to Lean (#10086)
This PR ports more of the post-initialization C++ shell code to Lean.

All that remains is the initialization of the profiler and task manager.
As initialization tasks rather than main shell code, they were left in
C++ (where the rest of the initialization code currently is).

The `max_memory` and `timeout` Lean options used by the the `--memory`
and `--timeout` command-line options are now properly registered. The
server defaults for max memory and max heartbeats (timeout) were removed
as they were not actually used (because the `server` option that was
checked was neither set nor exists).

This PR also makes better use of the module system in `Shell.lean` and
fixes a minor bug in a previous port where the file name check was
dependent on building the `.ilean` rather than the `.c` file (as was
originally the case).

Fixes #9879.
2025-08-26 20:02:42 +00:00
Sebastian Ullrich
ff1d3138bf
refactor: module-ize Lean (#9330) 2025-07-25 12:02:51 +00:00
Mac Malone
e0a793ae20
feat: ignore lean -R if module name is in setup (#8874)
This PR skips attempting to compute a module name from the file name and
root directory (i.e., `lean -R`) if a name is already provided via `lean
--setup`.

This is accomplished by porting the rest of the frontend code in the
`try` block to Lean.
2025-06-23 17:55:52 +00:00
Mac Malone
2a8cd373ca
feat: respect lean --setup module name in code generation (#8780)
This PR makes Lean code generation respect the module name provided
through `lean --setup`.

This is accomplished by porting to Lean the portion of `shell.cpp` that
spans running the frontend to exiting the process. This makes it easier
to load the module setup and control how its name is passed to the code
generation functions. This port attempts to minimize the changes made to
Lean. It marks the new Lean functions `private` and tries to preserve as
faithfully as possible the behavior of the original C++ code. Exposing
the new Lean interface publicly and/or further improving the code now
that is written in Lean is left for the future.
2025-06-15 01:11:58 +00:00