Awesome
IELE: Semantics of New Blockchain VM in K
In this repository we provide a model of IELE in K.
Structure
- The file iele-syntax.md contains the syntax definition of IELE, along with comments that guide the reader through the structure of the language and links to more detailed descriptions of various features. This file is a good starting point for getting familiar with the language.
- The file data.md explains the basic data of IELE (including words and some datastructures over them). This data is defined functionally.
- iele.md is the file containing the semantics of IELE. This file contains the configuration (a map of the state), and a simple imperative execution machine which IELE lives on top of. It deals with the semantics of opcodes and parsing/unparsing/assembling/disassembling.
- iele-gas.md describes gas price computations. iele-gas-summary.md summarizes them in a format readable by those who don't know K.
- iele-binary.md defines the mnemonic for each opcode, and the disassembler.
- iele-node.md defines the protobuf communication protocol used to plug the IELE VM into anonther client to make a full node.
- iele-testing.md loads test-files from the Ethereum Test Set and executes them, checking that the output is correct.
If the output is correct, the entire configuration is cleared.
If any check fails, the configuration retains the failed check at the top of the
<k>
cell. iele-testing.md is also capable of executing tests of arbitrary IELE transactions (subject to the fact that this first release of IELE is still built on top of an ethereum-like network layer). The test format is based off of, but slightly different from, the ethereum BlockchainTest json test format.
Using the Definition
Installing/Building
See INSTALL.md.
Help/Version
Calling kiele help
and kiele version
will output the user guide and the KIELE version, respectively.
Assembler
The assembler takes textual IELE and produces IELE bytecode.
For example, on the following file iele-examples/factorial.iele
:
contract Factorial {
define public @factorial(%n) {
%lt = cmp lt %n, 0
br %lt, throw
%result = 1
condition:
%cond = cmp le %n, 0
br %cond, after_loop
loop_body:
%result = mul %result, %n
%n = sub %n, 1
br condition
after_loop:
ret %result
throw:
call @iele.invalid()
}
define @init() {}
}
You can run:
kiele assemble iele-examples/factorial.iele
To produce output:
0000004C6303690009666163746F7269616C6800010001618001100042650003026101036600006180011200446500020466000102001B610101030040640000660002F6000103660003FE6700000000
NOTE: Right now, if you use the NixOS package, you must call iele-assemble
instead of kiele assemble
.
KIELE Node
You can run a KIELE node, specifying the port to run on and use the KIELE test harness to run some transactions through it. To start the KIELE node, call (in one terminal):
kiele vm --port 9001
Then in a separate terminal, send a transaction through:
iele-test-vm tests/iele/danse/factorial/factorial_positive.iele.json 9001
You'll see the launched node record to the terminal a list of messages it sends and receives.
NOTE: The iele-test-vm
executable is only available in a from-source build of KIELE.
You can still launch and use the KIELE VM node without this executable.
Interpreter
Tests in the Ethereum Test Suite format can be run directly by the IELE interpreter.
For example, from this repository, you can run:
make assemble-iele-test -j4
To prepare the Ethereum test-suite. Then you can run an individual test, and see the post-state with:
kiele interpret tests/iele/danse/factorial/factorial_positive.iele.json.test-assembled
You may also run the interpreter with the Haskell backend instead (though it is significantly slower):
kiele interpret --backend haskell tests/iele/danse/factorial/factorial_positive.iele.json.test-assembled
NOTE: Printing the post-state will not work unless you are using a from-source build of KIELE.
Instead, you should inspect the exit code of kiele interpret
to see if the test passed or failed, by adding option --no-unparse
to skip printing the post-state.
Well-Formedness Checker
The KIELE well-formedness checker will do some type-checking on the input IELE program, using exit code to indicate success/failure.
For example, we can type-check the ERC20 contract example iele-examples/erc20.iele
:
kiele check --schedule DANSE iele-examples/erc20.iele
NOTE: The KIELE well-formedness checker requires that (i) you are using a local build of KIELE, and (ii) you have installed K as well.
Contacting Us
To reach us, you can either use our chat, or open issues against this repository:
- #IELE Element Channel for chat.
- runtimeverification/iele-semantics for issues/pull-requests.