Blog > 2017
Smart contracts conference starts in Athens
31 March 2017 4 mins read
Experts in law and cryptography are speaking today at a smart contracts day in Athens, organised by IOHK chief scientist Aggelos Kiayias, chair of cyber security and privacy at the University of Edinburgh as well as director of its Blockchain Technology Laboratory. Smart contracts are an emerging technology that run on the same infrastructure that supports Bitcoin: a blockchain. They are digital legal contracts between parties that rely not on the traditional rule of law and institutions such as legal offices and courts, but on cryptography. Professor Aggelos Kiayias says: "To understand the technology it is useful to contrast cryptography and law. Law regulates interactions between persons ensuring fairness and basic rights. In this way, law offers protection from other persons with conflicting interests by relying on rule of law and social institutions. On the other hand, cryptography is the science of redistributing trust in any system that emerges from the interaction of multiple persons. It also protects people from other persons with conflicting interests but its protection is achieved by relying on hard mathematical problems."
So how do smart contracts work? Prof Kiayias again: "A smart contract is a piece of code written in a formal language that records all terms for a certain engagement. It has the power to self execute when certain conditions are triggered and can enforce its outcomes in a cryptographic sense. There is a multitude of smart contract applications in areas such as intellectual property, financial instruments, rental and leasing agreements and others."
Also speaking at the conference are Charles Hoskinson, IOHK CEO and Co-Founder; Burkard Schafer, Professor of Computational Legal Theory and director of the SCRIPT Centre for IT and IP law at the University of Edinburgh; Peter Van Valkenburgh, Director of Research at Coin Center; and Christoph Sorge, holder of the juris professorship of legal informatics, co-director of the Institute for Law and Informatics, and member of the Center for IT Security, Privacy and Accountability at Saarland University.
Darryl McAdams, IOHK's Team Plutus manager is working on a new programming language for smart contracts (Plutus) and is in Athens for the conference. According to Darryl, "A smart contract is a program which can implement an agreement of one form or another between multiple parties. They can be simple transfers of money, contracts in the traditional sense involving rights and obligations of various parties, or things more complex such as a game of chess, a distributed library, or a decentralized DNS system. In all of these cases, the purpose and behaviour of the system needs to be well understood, and in many cases, such as financial contracts with large sums of money involved, the correctness of the program is absolutely vital. In my talk, I will discuss the design of the Plutus language, a new programming language for authoring smart contracts, and demonstrate its use. I'll also discuss the motivation behind its design, especially with a view towards correct implementation of a contract's purpose and behaviour."
The event – "Smart Contracts Day, Cryptography & Law: Information, Privacy and Smart Contracts" – is taking place at the Hotel Divani Caravel, in central Athens. It is highly anticipated and currently sold out with more than 200 participants. Here’s more information: law.bitcoinschool.gr
Prof Kiayias concludes: "In the near future, this technology will give rise to "cryptolegal" frameworks, that, by merging cryptography and law, will be able to regulate interactions of persons at a global scale. In this way, such frameworks will transcend geographic and jurisdictional boundaries and create a dynamic global social institution that belongs to all and can be abused by none."
Smart contracts conference starts in Athens
31 March 2017 4 mins read
Experts in law and cryptography are speaking today at a smart contracts day in Athens, organised by IOHK chief scientist Aggelos Kiayias, chair of cyber security and privacy at the University of Edinburgh as well as director of its Blockchain Technology Laboratory. Smart contracts are an emerging technology that run on the same infrastructure that supports Bitcoin: a blockchain. They are digital legal contracts between parties that rely not on the traditional rule of law and institutions such as legal offices and courts, but on cryptography. Professor Aggelos Kiayias says: "To understand the technology it is useful to contrast cryptography and law. Law regulates interactions between persons ensuring fairness and basic rights. In this way, law offers protection from other persons with conflicting interests by relying on rule of law and social institutions. On the other hand, cryptography is the science of redistributing trust in any system that emerges from the interaction of multiple persons. It also protects people from other persons with conflicting interests but its protection is achieved by relying on hard mathematical problems."
So how do smart contracts work? Prof Kiayias again: "A smart contract is a piece of code written in a formal language that records all terms for a certain engagement. It has the power to self execute when certain conditions are triggered and can enforce its outcomes in a cryptographic sense. There is a multitude of smart contract applications in areas such as intellectual property, financial instruments, rental and leasing agreements and others."
Also speaking at the conference are Charles Hoskinson, IOHK CEO and Co-Founder; Burkard Schafer, Professor of Computational Legal Theory and director of the SCRIPT Centre for IT and IP law at the University of Edinburgh; Peter Van Valkenburgh, Director of Research at Coin Center; and Christoph Sorge, holder of the juris professorship of legal informatics, co-director of the Institute for Law and Informatics, and member of the Center for IT Security, Privacy and Accountability at Saarland University.
Darryl McAdams, IOHK's Team Plutus manager is working on a new programming language for smart contracts (Plutus) and is in Athens for the conference. According to Darryl, "A smart contract is a program which can implement an agreement of one form or another between multiple parties. They can be simple transfers of money, contracts in the traditional sense involving rights and obligations of various parties, or things more complex such as a game of chess, a distributed library, or a decentralized DNS system. In all of these cases, the purpose and behaviour of the system needs to be well understood, and in many cases, such as financial contracts with large sums of money involved, the correctness of the program is absolutely vital. In my talk, I will discuss the design of the Plutus language, a new programming language for authoring smart contracts, and demonstrate its use. I'll also discuss the motivation behind its design, especially with a view towards correct implementation of a contract's purpose and behaviour."
The event – "Smart Contracts Day, Cryptography & Law: Information, Privacy and Smart Contracts" – is taking place at the Hotel Divani Caravel, in central Athens. It is highly anticipated and currently sold out with more than 200 participants. Here’s more information: law.bitcoinschool.gr
Prof Kiayias concludes: "In the near future, this technology will give rise to "cryptolegal" frameworks, that, by merging cryptography and law, will be able to regulate interactions of persons at a global scale. In this way, such frameworks will transcend geographic and jurisdictional boundaries and create a dynamic global social institution that belongs to all and can be abused by none."
Bidirectional proof refinement
16 March 2017 18 mins read
In my last blog post, we looked at the very basics of proof refinement systems. I noted at the end that there was a big drawback of the systems as shown, namely that information flows only in one direction: from the root of a proof tree to the leaves. In this post, we'll see how to get information to flow in the opposite direction as well. The code for this blog post can be found on GitHub here.
Addition Again
The addition judgment Plus
which we defined last time was a three-argument judgment. The judgment Plus L M N
was a claim that N
is the sum of L
and M
. But we might want to instead think about specifying only some of the arguments to this judgment. In a language like Prolog, this is implemented by the use of metavariables which get valued in the course of computation. In the proof refinement setting, however, we take a different approach. Instead, we make use of a notion called bidirectionality, where we specify that a judgment's arguments can come in two modes: input and output. This is somewhat related to viewing thing from a functional perspective, but in a more non-deterministic or relational fashion.
Let's start by deciding that the mode of the first two arguments to Plus
is that of input, and the third is output. This way we'll think about actually computing the sum of two numbers. Instead of three Nat
inputs, we'll instead use only two. We'll use a judgment name that reflects which two:
-- Haskell
data Judgment = Plus12 Nat Nat
deriving (Show)
// JavaScript
function Plus12(x,y) {
return { tag: "Plus12", args: [x,y] };
}
The behavior of the decomposer for Plus12
will have to be slightly different now, though, because there are only two arguments. But additionally, we want to not only expand a goal into subgoals, but also somehow synthesize a result from the results of the subgoals. So where before we had only to map from a goal to some new goals, now we must also provide something that maps from some subresults to a result.
Rather than giving two separate functions, we'll give a single function that returns both the new subgoals, and the function that composes a value from the values synthesized for those subgoals.
-- Haskell
decomposePlus12 :: Nat -> Nat -> Maybe ([Judgment], [Nat] -> Nat)
decomposePlus12 Zero y = Just ([], \zs -> y)
decomposePlus12 (Suc x) y = Just ([Plus12 x y], \[z] -> Suc z)
decompose :: Judgment -> Maybe ([Judgment], [Nat] -> Nat)
decompose (Plus12 x y) = decomposePlus12 x y
// JavaScript
function decomposePlus12(x,y) {
if (x.tag === "Zero") {
return Just([[], zs => y]);
} else if (x.tag === "Suc") {
return Just([[Plus12(x.arg,y)], zs => Suc(zs[0])]);
}
}
function decompose(j) {
if (j.tag === "Plus12") {
return decomposePlus12(j.args[0], j.args[1]);
}
}
The decompose
function is somewhat redundant in this example, but the shape of the problem is preserved by having this redundancy. The same is true of the Maybe
in the types. We can always decompose now, so the Nothing
option is never used, but I'm keeping it here to maintain parallelism with the general framework.
Building a proof tree in this setting proceeds very similarly to how it did before, except now we need to make use of the synthesis functions in parallel with building a proof tree:
-- Haskell
findProof :: Judgment -> Maybe (ProofTree, Nat)
findProof j =
case decompose j of
Nothing -> Nothing
Just (js, f) -> case sequence (map findProof js) of
Nothing -> Nothing
Just tns -> let (ts, ns) = unzip tns
in Just (ProofTree j ts, f ns)
// JavaScript
function unzip(xys) {
var xs = [];
var ys = [];
for (var i = 0; i < xys.length; i++) {
xs.push(xys[i][0]);
ys.push(xys[i][1]);
}
return [xs,ys]
}
function findProof(j) {
var mjs = decompose(j);
if (mjs.tag === "Nothing") {
return Nothing;
} else if (mjs.tag === "Just") {
var js = mjs.arg[0]
var f = mjs.arg[1]
var mtns = sequence(js.map(j => findProof(j)));
if (mtns.tag === "Nothing") {
return Nothing;
} else if (mtns.tag === "Just") {
var tsns = unzip(mtns.arg);
return Just([ProofTree(j, tsns[0]), f(tsns[1])]);
}
}
}
Now when we run this on some inputs, we get back not only a proof tree, but also the resulting value, which is the Nat
that would have been the third argument of Plus
in the previous version of the system.
Let's now add another judgment, Plus13
, which will synthesize the second argument of the original Plus
judgment from the other two. Therefore, the judgment Plus13 L N
means L
subtracted from N
. We'll add this judgment to the existing Judgment
declarations.
-- Haskell
data Judgment = Plus12 Nat Nat | Plus13 Nat Nat
deriving (Show)
// JavaScript
function Plus13(x,z) {
return { tag: "Plus13", args: [x,z] };
}
We can now define a decomposition function for this judgment. Notice that this one is partial, in that, for some inputs, there's no decomposition because the first argument is larger than the second. We'll also extend the decompose
function appropriately.
-- Haskell
decomposePlus13 :: Nat -> Nat -> Maybe ([Judgment], [Nat] -> Nat)
decomposePlus13 Zero z = Just ([], \xs -> z)
decomposePlus13 (Suc x) (Suc z) = Just ([Plus13 x z], \[x] -> x)
decomposePlus13 _ _ = Nothing
decompose :: Judgment -> Maybe ([Judgment], [Nat] -> Nat)
decompose (Plus12 x y) = decomposePlus12 x y
decompose (Plus13 x z) = decomposePlus13 x z
// JavaScript
function decomposePlus13(x,z) {
if (x.tag === "Zero") {
return Just([[], xs => z]);
} else if (x.tag === "Suc" && z.tag === "Suc") {
return Just([[Plus13(x.arg, z.arg)], xs => xs[0]]);
} else {
return Nothing;
}
}
function decompose(j) {
if (j.tag === "Plus12") {
return decomposePlus12(j.args[0], j.args[1]);
} else if (j.tag === "Plus13") {
return decomposePlus13(j.args[0], j.args[1]);
}
}
If we now try to find a proof for Plus13 (Suc Zero) (Suc (Suc (Suc Zero)))
, we get back Suc (Suc Zero)
, as expected, because 1 subtracted from 3 is 2. Similarly, if we try to find a proof for Plus13 (Suc (Suc Zero)) (Suc Zero)
, we find that we get no proof, because we can't subtract a number from something smaller than it.
Type Checking Again
We'll aim to do the same thing with the type checker as we did with addition. We'll split the HasType
judgment into two judgments, Check
and Synth
. The Check
judgment will be used precisely in those cases where a type must be provided for the proof to go through, while the Synth
judgment will be used for cases where the structure of the program is enough to tell us its type.
-- Haskell
data Judgment = Check [(String,Type)] Program Type
| Synth [(String,Type)] Program
deriving (Show)
// JavaScript
function Check(g,m,a) {
return { tag: "Check", args: [g,m,a] };
}
function Synth(g,m) {
return { tag: "Synth", args: [g,m] };
}
Additionally, because of these changes in information flow, we'll remove some type annotations from the various program forms, and instead introduce a general type annotation form that will be used to shift between judgments explicitly.
-- Haskell
data Program = Var String | Ann Program Type
| Pair Program Program | Fst Program | Snd Program
| Lam String Program | App Program Program
deriving (Show)
// JavaScript
function Var(x) {
return { tag: "Var", arg: x };
}
function Ann(m,a) {
return { tag: "Ann", args: [m,a] };
}
function Pair(m,n) {
return { tag: "Pair", args: [m,n] };
}
function Fst(m) {
return { tag: "Fst", arg: m };
}
function Snd(m) {
return { tag: "Snd", arg: m };
}
function Lam(x,m) {
return { tag: "Lam", args: [x,m] };
}
function App(m,n) {
return { tag: "App", args: [m,n] };
}
The last change that we'll make will be to change the notion of synthesis a little bit from what we had before. In the addition section, we said merely that we needed a function that synthesized a new value from some subvalues. More generally, though, we need that process to be able to fail, because we wish to place constraints on the synthesized values. To capture this, we'll wrap the return type in Maybe
.
-- Haskell
decomposeCheck
:: [(String,Type)]
-> Program
-> Type
-> Maybe ([Judgment], [Type] -> Maybe Type)
decomposeCheck g (Pair m n) (Prod a b) =
Just ([Check g m a, Check g n b], \as -> Just undefined)
decomposeCheck g (Lam x m) (Arr a b) =
Just ([Check ((x,a):g) m b], \as -> Just undefined)
decomposeCheck g m a =
Just ( [Synth g m]
, \[a2] -> if a == a2 then Just undefined else Nothing
)
decomposeSynth
:: [(String,Type)]
-> Program
-> Maybe ([Judgment], [Type] -> Maybe Type)
decomposeSynth g (Var x) =
case lookup x g of
Nothing -> Nothing
Just a -> Just ([], \as -> Just a)
decomposeSynth g (Ann m a) =
Just ([Check g m a], \as -> Just a)
decomposeSynth g (Fst p) =
Just ( [Synth g p]
, \[t] -> case t of
Prod a b -> Just a
_ -> Nothing
)
decomposeSynth g (Snd p) =
Just ( [Synth g p]
, \[t] -> case t of
Prod a b -> Just b
_ -> Nothing
)
decomposeSynth g (App f x) =
Just ( [Synth g f, Synth g x]
, \[s,t] -> case s of
Arr a b | a == t -> Just b
_ -> Nothing)
decomposeSynth _ _ = Nothing
decompose :: Judgment -> Maybe ([Judgment], [Type] -> Maybe Type)
decompose (Check g m a) = decomposeCheck g m a
decompose (Synth g m) = decomposeSynth g m
// JavaScript
function eq(x,y) {
if (x instanceof Array && y instanceof Array) {
if (x.length != y.length) { return false; }
for (var i = 0; i < x.length; i++) {
if (!eq(x[i], y[i])) { return false; }
}
return true;
} else if (x.tag === y.tag) {
if (x.args && y.args) {
return eq(x.args,y.args);
} else if (x.arg && y.arg) {
return eq(x.arg,y.arg);
} else if (!x.arg && !y.arg) {
return true;
} else {
return false;
}
}
}
function decomposeCheck(g,m,a) {
if (m.tag === "Pair" && a.tag === "Prod") {
return Just([ [Check(g, m.args[0], a.args[0]),
Check(g, m.args[1], a.args[1])],
as => Just(undefined)]);
} else if (m.tag === "Lam" && a.tag === "Arr") {
return Just([ [Check([[m.args[0], a.args[0]]].concat(g),
m.args[1],
a.args[1])],
as => Just(undefined)]);
} else {
return Just([ [Synth(g,m,a)],
as => eq(a,as[0]) ? Just(undefined) : Nothing ])
}
}
function decomposeSynth(g,m) {
if (m.tag === "Var") {
var ma = lookup(m.arg, g);
if (ma.tag === "Nothing") {
return Nothing;
} else if (ma.tag === "Just") {
return Just([[], as => Just(ma.arg)]);
}
} else if (m.tag === "Ann") {
return Just([ [Check(g, m.args[0], m.args[1])],
as => Just(m.args[1]) ]);
} else if (m.tag === "Fst") {
return Just([ [Synth(g, m.arg)],
as => as[0].tag === "Prod" ?
Just(as[0].args[0]) :
Nothing ]);
} else if (m.tag === "Snd") {
return Just([ [Synth(g, m.arg)],
as => as[0].tag === "Prod" ?
Just(as[0].args[1]) :
Nothing ]);
} else if (m.tag === "App") {
return Just([ [Synth(g, m.args[0]), Synth(g, m.args[1])],
as => as[0].tag === "Arr" &&
eq(as[0].args[0], as[1]) ?
Just(as[0].args[1]) :
Nothing ]);
} else {
return Nothing;
}
}
function decompose(j) {
if (j.tag === "Check") {
return decomposeCheck(j.args[0], j.args[1], j.args[2]);
} else if (j.tag === "Synth") {
return decomposeSynth(j.args[0], j.args[1]);
}
}
Finally, the findProof
function has to be augmented slightly to deal with the new Maybe
in the return type of the synthesizing function:
-- Haskell
findProof :: Judgment -> Maybe (ProofTree, Type)
findProof j =
case decompose j of
Nothing -> Nothing
Just (js,f) -> case sequence (map findProof js) of
Nothing -> Nothing
Just tsas ->
let (ts,as) = unzip tsas
in case f as of
Nothing -> Nothing
Just a -> Just (ProofTree j ts, a)
// JavaScript
function findProof(j) {
var mjs = decompose(j);
if (mjs.tag === "Nothing") {
return Nothing;
} else if (mjs.tag === "Just") {
var js = mjs.arg[0]
var f = mjs.arg[1]
var mtns = sequence(js.map(j => findProof(j)));
if (mtns.tag === "Nothing") {
return Nothing;
} else if (mtns.tag === "Just") {
var tsns = unzip(mtns.arg);
var mn = f(tsns[1]);
if (mn.tag === "Nothing") {
return Nothing;
} else if (mn.tag === "Just") {
return Just([ProofTree(j, tsns[0]), mn.arg]);
}
}
}
}
If we now try to find proofs for some typical synthesis and checking examples, we find what we expect:
findProof (Check [] (Lam "p" (Fst (Var "p"))) (Arr (Prod Nat Nat) Nat))
findProof (Check [] (Lam "p" (Fst (Var "p"))) (Arr Nat Nat))
findProof (Synth [("p",Prod Nat Nat)] (Fst (Var "p")))
Conclusion
The bidirectional style in this post has some interesting limitations and drawbacks. Consider the case of the rule for App
: it has to synthesize the type of both the function and the argument and then compare them appropriately. This means that certain programs require additional type annotations to be written. But this is somewhat unnecessary, because once we synthesize the type of the function, we can use that information to check the argument. In the next blog post, I'll try to explain how to do this in a more elegant way, the combines both the upward and downward flows of information.
If you have comments or questions, get in touch. I'm @psygnisfive on Twitter, augur on freenode (in #haskell).
This post is the second part of a three part series, the first part is here, and the third part is here.
In this blog post, I'm going to discuss the overall structure of a proof refinement system. Such systems can be used for implementing automatic theorem provers, proof assistants, and type checkers for programming languages. The proof refinement literature is either old or hard to understand, so this post, and subsequent ones on the same topic, will present it in a more casual and current way. Work on proof refinement as a methodology for building type checkers and interactive proof systems has a long history, going back to LCF, HOL, Nuprl, and Coq. These techniques never really penetrated into the mainstream of programming language implementation, but perhaps this may change.
The GitHub repo for this project can be found here.
Prologue
As part of my work for IOHK, I've been designing and implementing a programming language called Plutus, which we use as the scripting language for our blockchains. Because IOHK cares deeply about the correctness of its systems, Plutus needs to be held to a very high standard, and needs to enable easy reasoning about its behavior. For that reason, I chose to make Plutus a pure, functional language with a static type system. Importantly, the language has a formal type theoretic specification.
To implement the type checker for the language, I used a fairly standard technique. However, recently I built a new framework for implementing programming languages which, while different from the usual way, has a more direct connection to the formal specification. This greater similarity makes it easier to check that the implementation is correct.
The framework also makes a number of bugs easier to eliminate. One class of bugs that arose a number of times in the first implementation was that of metavariables and unification. Because the language supports a certain about of unification-driven type inference, it's necessary to propagate updates to the information state of the type checking algorithm, so that everything is maximally informative and the algorithm can run correctly. Propagating this information by hand is error prone, and the new framework makes it possible to do it once and for all, in a bug-free way.
The framework additionally makes some features easier to program. For example, good error reporting is extremely important. But good error messages need to have certain information about where the error occurs. Not just where in the source code, but where in the logical structure of the program. All sorts of important information about the nature of the error, and the possible solutions, depend on that. The framework I developed also makes this incredibly easy to implement, so much so that it's build right into the system, and any language implemented using it can take advantage of it.
Proofs and Proof Systems
In the context of modern proof theory and type theory, a proof can be seen as a tree structure with labeled nodes and the class of proof trees which are valid is defined by a set of rules that specify how a node in a tree may relate to its child nodes. The labels, in the context of proofs, are usually hypothetical judgments, and the rules are inference rules, but you can also use the same conceptual framework for many other things.
An example of a rule is for any choice of A and B, if you can show that A is true and that B is true, then it's permissible to conclude A∧B is true
. This is usually written with the notation
This rule explains one way that it's ok to have a node labeled
A is true
and B is true
. So this rule justifies the circled node in the following tree:When used as a tool for constructing a proof, however, we think about rule use in a directional fashion. We start from the conclusion — the parent node — because this is what we'd like to show, and we work backwards to the premises of the rule — the child nodes — to justify the conclusion. We think of this as a dynamic process of building a proof tree, not simply having one. From that perspective, the rule says that to build a proof tree with the root labeled A&B is true
, we can expand that node to have two child nodes A is true
and B is true
, and then try to build those trees.
In the dynamic setting, then, this rule means that we may turn the first tree below into the second:
https://ucarecdn.com/651f5f86-0dde-4cdd-8c2f-850e62377635/)
In this setting, though, It's important to be aware of a distinction between two kinds of nodes: nodes which may appear in finished proof trees as is, and nodes which must still expanded before they can appear in a finished proof tree. In the above trees, we indicated this by the fact that the nodes which may appear in finished proof trees have a bar above them labeled by the name of the rule that justified them. Nodes which must still be expanded had no such bar, and we call them goals.
Building a Proof Refinement System
Let's now build a proof refinement system for a toy system, namely the system of equality (x == y
) and addition (x + y = z
) as relations among natural numbers. We'll implement it in both Haskell and JavaScript to give a sense of how things work. We'll start by just making the proof refiner system, with no interactivity nor any automatic driving of the proof system. We'll have to rely on the REPL to manage these things for us.
So the first thing we need is a definition of the naturals. In Haskell, we'll just use a normal algebraic data type, but in JavaScript, we'll use an object with a mandatory tag
key and an optional arg
key, together with helpers:
-- Haskell
data Nat = Zero | Suc Nat
deriving (Show)
// JavaScript
var Zero = { tag: "Zero" };
function Suc(n) {
return { tag: "Suc", arg: n };
}
Similarly, we'll define the judgments in question:
-- Haskell
data Judgment = Equal Nat Nat | Plus Nat Nat Nat
deriving (Show)
// JavaScript
function Equal(x,y) {
return { tag: "Equal", args: [x,y] };
}
function Plus(x,y,z) {
return { tag: "Plus", args: [x,y,z] };
}
We'll next need some way to decompose a statement such as Plus (Suc Zero) (Suc Zero) Zero
into subproblems that would justify it. We'll do this by defining a function that performs the decomposition, returning a list of new goals. But, because the decomposition might fail, we'll wrap this in a Maybe
.
-- Haskell
decomposeEqual :: Nat -> Nat -> Maybe [Judgment]
decomposeEqual Zero Zero = Just []
decomposeEqual (Suc x) (Suc y) = Just [Equal x y]
decomposeEqual _ _ = Nothing
decomposePlus :: Nat -> Nat -> Nat -> Maybe [Judgment]
decomposePlus Zero y z = Just [Equal y z]
decomposePlus (Suc x) y (Suc z) = Just [Plus x y z]
decomposePlus _ _ _ = Nothing
// JavaScript
var Nothing = { tag: "Nothing" };
function Just(x) {
return { tag: "Just", arg: x };
}
function decomposeEqual(x,y) {
if (x.tag === "Zero" && y.tag == "Zero") {
return Just([]);
} else if (x.tag === "Suc" && y.tag === "Suc") {
return Just([Equal(x.arg, y.arg)]);
} else {
return Nothing;
}
}
function decomposePlus(x,y,z) {
if (x.tag === "Zero") {
return Just([Equal(y,z)]);
} else if (x.tag === "Suc" && z.tag === "Suc") {
return Just([Plus(x.arg, y, z.arg)]);
} else {
return Nothing;
}
}
If we explore what these mean when used, we can build some intuitions. If we want to decompose a judgment of the form Plus (Suc Zero) (Suc Zero) (Suc (Suc (Suc Zero)))
in Haskell/Plus(Suc(Zero), Suc(Zero), Suc(Suc(Suc(Zero))))
in JavaScript, we simply apply the decomposePlus
function to the three arguments of the judgment:
-- Haskell
decomposePlus (Suc Zero) (Suc Zero) (Suc (Suc (Suc Zero)))
= Just [Plus Zero (Suc Zero) (Suc (Suc Zero))]
// JavaScript
decomposePlus(Suc(Zero), Suc(Zero), Suc(Suc(Suc(Zero))))
= Just([Plus(Zero, Suc(Zero), Suc(Suc(Zero)))])
We'll define a general
-- Haskell
decompose :: Judgment -> Maybe [Judgment]
decompose (Equal x y) = decomposeEqual x y
decompose (Plus x y z) = decomposePlus x y z
// JavaScript
function decompose(j) {
if (j.tag === "Equal") {
return decomposeEqual(j.args[0], j.args[1]);
} else if (j.tag === "Plus") {
return decomposePlus(j.args[0], j.args[1], j.args[2]);
}
}
Now let's define what constitutes a proof tree:
-- Haskell
data ProofTree = ProofTree Judgment [ProofTree]
deriving (Show)
// JavaScript
function ProofTree(c,ps) {
return { tag: "ProofTree", args: [c,ps] };
}
The first argument of the constructor ProofTree
is the label for the node, which is the conclusion of inference that justifies the node. The second argument is the sub-proofs that prove each of the premises of inference. So for example, the proof tree
would be represented by
-- Haskell
ProofTree (Plus (Suc (Suc Zero)) (Suc Zero) (Suc (Suc (Suc Zero))))
[ ProofTree (Plus (Suc Zero) (Suc Zero) (Suc (Suc Zero)))
[ ProofTree (Plus Zero (Suc Zero) (Suc Zero))
[ ProofTree (Equal (Suc Zero) (Suc Zero))
[ ProofTree (Equal Zero Zero)
[]
]
]
]
]
// JavaScript
ProofTree(Plus(Suc(Suc(Zero)), Suc(Zero), Suc(Suc(Suc(Zero)))),
[ ProofTree(Plus(Suc(Zero), Suc(Zero), Suc(Suc(Zero))),
[ ProofTree(Plus(Zero, Suc(Zero), Suc(Zero)),
[ ProofTree(Equal(Suc(Zero), Suc(Zero)),
[ ProofTree(Equal(Zero,Zero)
[])
])
])
])
])
We now can build a function, findProof
, which will use decompose
to try to find a proof for any judgment that it's given:
-- Haskell
findProof :: Judgment -> Maybe ProofTree
findProof j =
case decompose j of
Nothing -> Nothing
Just js -> case sequence (map findProof js) of
Nothing -> Nothing
Just ts -> Just (ProofTree j ts)
// JavaScript
function sequence(mxs) {
var xs = [];
for (var i = 0; i < mxs.length; i++) {
if (mxs[i].tag === "Nothing") {
return Nothing;
} else if (mxs[i].tag === "Just") {
xs.push(mxs[i].arg);
}
}
return Just(xs);
}
function findProof(j) {
var mjs = decompose(j);
if (mjs.tag === "Nothing") {
return Nothing;
} else if (mjs.tag === "Just") {
var mts = sequence(mjs.arg.map(j => findProof(j)));
if (mts.tag === "Nothing") {
return Nothing;
} else if (mts.tag === "Just") {
return Just(ProofTree(j, mts.arg));
}
}
}
If we now run this on some example triples of numbers, we find that it returns Just
s of proof trees exactly when the statement is true, and the trees show just how the statement is true. Try it on the above example for suc(suc(zero)) + suc(zero) = suc(suc(suc(zero)))
.
The choice above to use the Maybe
type operator reflects the idea that there is at most one proof of a judgment, but possible also none. If there can be many, then we need to use List
instead, which would give us alternative definitions of the various functions:
-- Haskell
decomposeEqual :: Nat -> Nat -> [[Judgment]]
decomposeEqual Zero Zero = [[]]
decomposeEqual (Suc x) (Suc y) = [[Equal x y]]
decomposeEqual _ _ = []
decomposePlus :: Nat -> Nat -> Nat -> [[Judgment]]
decomposePlus Zero y z = [[Equal y z]]
decomposePlus (Suc x) y (Suc z) = [[Plus x y z]]
decomposePlus _ _ _ = []
decompose :: Judgment -> [[Judgment]]
decompose (Equal x y) = decomposeEqual x y
decompose (Plus x y z) = decomposePlus x y z
findProof :: Judgment -> [ProofTree]
findProof j =
do js <- decompose j
ts <- sequence (map findProof js)
return (ProofTree j ts)
// JavaScript
function bind(xs,f) {
if (xs.length === 0) {
return [];
} else {
return f(xs[0]).concat(bind(xs.slice(1), f))
}
}
function sequence(xss) {
if (xss.length === 0) {
return [[]];
} else {
return bind(xss[0], x =>
bind(sequence(xss.slice(1)), xs2 =>
[[x].concat(xs2)]));
}
}
function findProof(j) {
return bind(decompose(j), js =>
bind(sequence(js.map(j2 => findProof(j2))), ts =>
[ProofTree(j,ts)]));
}
In fact, Haskell lets us abstract over the choice of Maybe
vs List
, provided that the type operator is a monad.
A Type Checker with Proof Refinement
Let's now move on to building a type checker. We'll first define the types we're going to use. We'll have natural numbers, product types (pairs), and arrow types (functions). We'll also use a BNF definition as a reference:
<type> ::= "Nat" | <type> "×" <type> | <type> "→" <type>
-- Haskell
data Type = Nat | Prod Type Type | Arr Type Type
deriving (Show)
// JavaScript
var Nat = { tag: "Nat" };
function Prod(a,b) {
return { tag: "Prod", args: [a,b] };
}
function Arr(a,b) {
return { tag: "Arr", args: [a,b] };
}
Next we must specify what qualifies as a program, which we'll be type checking:
<program> ::= <name> | "〈" <program> "," <program> "〉"
| "fst" <program> | "snd" <program>
| "λ" <name> "." <program> | <program> <program>
-- Haskell
data Program = Var String
| Zero | Suc Program
| Pair Program Program | Fst Type Program | Snd Type Program
| Lam String Program | App Type Program Program
deriving (Show)
// JavaScript
function Var(x) {
return { tag: "Var", arg: x };
}
var Zero = { tag: "Zero" };
function Suc(m) {
return { tag: "Suc", arg: m };
}
function Pair(m,n) {
return { tag: "Pair", args: [m,n] };
}
function Fst(a,m) {
return { tag: "Fst", args: [a,m] };
}
function Snd(a,m) {
return { tag: "Snd", args: [a,m] };
}
function Lam(x,m) {
return { tag: "Lam", args: [x,m] };
}
function App(a,m,n) {
return { tag: "App", args: [a,m,n] };
}
The programs built with Fst
, Snd
, and App
have more arguments that usual because we want to do only type checking, so we need to supply information that's not present in the types when working in a bottom up fashion. We'll see how we can avoid doing this later.
We'll also make use of a judgment HasType G M A
, where G
is a type context that assigns Type
s to variables (represented by a list of string-type pairs), M
is some program, and A
is some type.
-- Haskell
data Judgment = HasType [(String,Type)] Program Type
deriving (Show)
// JavaScript
function HasType(g,m,a) {
return { tag: "HasType", args: [g,m,a] };
}
We can now define the decompose functions for these. We'll just use the Maybe
type for the decomposers here, because we don't need non-deterministic solutions. Type checkers either succeed or fail, and that's all.
-- Haskell
decomposeHasType
:: [(String,Type)] -> Program -> Type -> Maybe [Judgment]
decomposeHasType g (Var x) a =
case lookup x g of
Nothing -> Nothing
Just a2 -> if a == a2
then Just []
else Nothing
decomposeHasType g Zero Nat =
Just []
decomposeHasType g (Suc m) Nat =
Just [HasType g m Nat]
decomposeHasType g (Pair m n) (Prod a b) =
Just [HasType g m a, HasType g n b]
decomposeHasType g (Fst b p) a =
Just [HasType g p (Prod a b)]
decomposeHasType g (Snd a p) b =
Just [HasType g p (Prod a b)]
decomposeHasType g (Lam x m) (Arr a b) =
Just [HasType ((x,a):g) m b]
decomposeHasType g (App a m n) b =
Just [HasType g m (Arr a b), HasType g n a]
decomposeHasType _ _ _ =
Nothing
decompose :: Judgment -> Maybe [Judgment]
decompose (HasType g m a) = decomposeHasType g m a
// JavaScript
function lookup(x,xys) {
for (var i = 0; i < xys.length; i++) {
if (xys[i][0] === x) {
return Just(xys[i][1]);
}
}
return Nothing;
}
function decomposeHasType(g,m,a) {
if (m.tag === "Var") {
var ma2 = lookup(m.arg, g);
if (ma2.tag === "Nothing") {
return Nothing;
} else if (ma2.tag === "Just") {
return eq(a,ma2.arg) ? Just([]) : Nothing;
}
} else if (m.tag === "Zero" && a.tag === "Nat") {
return Just([]);
} else if (m.tag === "Suc" && a.tag === "Nat") {
return Just([HasType(g, m.arg, Nat)]);
} else if (m.tag === "Pair" && a.tag === "Prod") {
return Just([HasType(g, m.args[0], a.args[0]),
HasType(g, m.args[1], a.args[1])])
} else if (m.tag === "Fst") {
return Just([HasType(g, m.args[1], Prod(a,m.args[0]))]);
} else if (m.tag === "Snd") {
return Just([HasType(g, m.args[1], Prod(m.args[0],a))]);
} else if (m.tag === "Lam" && a.tag === "Arr") {
return Just([HasType([[m.args[0],a.args[0]]].concat(g),
m.args[1],
a.args[1])]);
} else if (m.tag === "App") {
return Just([HasType(g, m.args[1], Arr(m.args[0],a)),
HasType(g, m.args[2], m.args[0])]);
} else {
return Nothing;
}
}
function decompose(j) {
if (j.tag === "HasType") {
return decomposeHasType(j.args[0], j.args[1], j.args[2]);
}
}
Using the same definitions of proof trees, sequencing, and finding a proof that we had earlier for Maybe
, we can now perform some type checks on some programs. So for example, we can find that the program λx.x
does indeed have the type Nat → Nat
, or that it does not have the type (Nat × Nat) → Nat
.
Conclusion
That about wraps it up for the basics of proof refinement. One thing to observe about the above system is that its unidirectional: information flows from the bottom to the top, justifying expansions of goals into subtrees. No information flows back down from subtrees to parent nodes. In my next blog post, I'll discuss how we might go about adding bidirectional information flow to such a system. This will allow us to perform type checking computations where a judgment might return some information to be used for determining if a node expansion is justified. The practical consequence is that our programs become less cluttered with extraneous information.
If you have comments or questions, get it touch. I'm @psygnisfive on Twitter, augur on freenode (in #languagengine and #haskell).
This post is the first part of a three part series, the second part is here, and the third part is here.
Thoughts on an ontology of smart contracts
6 March 2017 6 mins read
The concept of smart contracts has grown considerably since the birth of Ethereum. We've seen an explosion of interdisciplinary research and experimentation bundling legal, social, economic, cryptographic and even philosophical concerns into a rather strange milieu of tokenized intellect. Yet despite this digital cambrian explosion of thought, there seems to be a lack of a unified ontology for smart contracts. What exactly is an ontology? Eschewing the philosophical sense of the word, an ontology is simply a framework for connecting concepts or groups alongside their properties to the relationships between them. It's a fundamental word that generally is the attempt at bedrock for a topic. For example, it's meaningful to discuss the ontology of democracy or the ontology of mathematics.
Why would one want to develop an ontology for smart contracts? What is gained from this exercise? Is it mostly an academic exercise or is there a prescriptive value to it? I suppose there are more questions to glean, but let's take a stab at the why.
Smart contracts are essentially two concepts mashed together. One is the notion of software. Cold, austere code that does as it is written and executes for the world to see. The other is the idea of an agreement between parties. Both have semantical demands that humans have traditionally had issues with and both have connections to worlds beyond the scope in which the contract lives.
Much of the focus of our current platforms, such as Ethereum, is on performance or security, yet abstracting to a more ontological viewpoint, one ought to ask about semantics and scope.
From a semantical perspective, we are trying to establish what the authors and users of smart contracts believe to be the purpose of the contract. Here we have consent, potential for non est factum style circumstances, a hierarchy of enforceability and other factors that have challenged contract law. What about cultural and linguistic barriers? Ambiguity is also king in this land.
Where normal contracts tend to pragmatically bind to a particular jurisdiction and set of interpretations with the escape hatch of arbitration or courts to parse purposeful ambiguity, decentralized machines have no such luxury. For better or worse, there is a pipeline with smart contracts that amplifies the semantical gap and then encapsulates the extracted consensus into code that again suffers from its own gap (Loi Luu demonstrated this recently using Oyente).
Then these structures presume dominion over something of value. Whether this dominion be data, tokens or markers that represent real life commitments or things such as deeds or titles. For the last category, like software giving recommendations to act on something in physical world, the program can tell one what to do, but someone has to do it.
So we have an object that combines software and agreements that has a deep semantic and scope concern, but one could add more dimensions. There is the question of establishing facts and events. The relationship with time. The levels of interpretation for any given agreement. Should everything be strictly speaking parsed by machines? Is there room for human judgement in this model (see Nick Szabo, Wet and dry code and this presentation)?
One could make a fair argument that one of the core pieces of complexity behind protocols like Ethereum is that it actually isn't just flirting with self-enforcing smart contracts. There are inherited notions from the Bitcoin ecosystem such as maximizing decentralization, maintaining a certain level of privacy, the use of a blockchain to order facts and events. Let's not even explore the native unit of account.
These concepts and utilities are fascinating, but contaminate attempts at a reasonable ontology that could be constructive. A less opinionated effort has come from the fintech world with both Christopher Clack's work on Smart Contract Templates and Willi Brammertz’s work on Project ACTUS. Here we don't need immutability or blockchains. The execution environment doesn't matter as much. It's more about consensus on intent and evaluation to optimize processes.
What about the relationship of smart contracts with other smart contracts? In the cryptocurrency space, we tend to be blockchain focused, yet this concept actually obfuscates that there are three data domains in a system that uses smart contracts.
The blockchain accounts for facts, events and value. There is a graph of smart contracts in relation to each other. Then there is a social graph of nodes or things that can interact with smart contracts. These are all incredibly different actors. Adding relays into the mix, one could even discuss the internet of smart contract systems.
Perhaps where an ontology could be most useful is on this last point. There seems to be economic value in marrying code to law for at least the purpose of standardization and efficiency, yet the hundreds of implicit assumptions and conditions upon which these systems are built need to be modelled explicitly for interoperability.
For example, if one takes a smart contract hosted on Rootstock and then via a relay communicates with a contract hosted on Ethereum and then connects to a data feed from a service such as Bloomberg offers, then what's the trust model? What assumptions has one made about the enforceability of this agreement, the actors who can influence it and the risk to the value contained? Like using dozens of software libraries with different licenses, one is creating a digital mess.
To wrap up some of my brief thoughts, I think we need to do the following. First, decouple smart contracts conceptually from blockchains and their associated principles. Second, come to grips with the semantic gap and also scope of enforcement. Third, model the relationships of smart contracts with each other, the actors who use them and related systems. Fourth, extract some patterns, standards and common use practices from already deployed contracts to see what we can infer. Finally, come up with better ways of making assumptions explicit.
The benefits of this approach seem to be making preparations for sorting out how one will design systems that host smart contracts and how such systems will relate to each other. There seems to be a profound lack of metadata for smart contracts floating around. Perhaps an ontology could provide a coherent way of labeling things?
Thanks for reading,
Charles
Recent posts
2021: the year robots, and graffiti came to a decentralized, smarter Cardano by Anthony Quinn
27 December 2021
Cardano education in 2021: the year of the pioneers by Niamh Ahern
23 December 2021
Cardano at Christmas (and what to say if anyone asks…) by Fernando Sanchez
21 December 2021