Mu explores ways to turn arbitrary manual tests into reproducible automated
tests. Hoped-for benefits:
1. Projects release with confidence without requiring manual QA or causing
regressions for their users.
1. Open source projects become easier for outsiders to comprehend, since they
can more confidently try out changes with the knowledge that they'll get
rapid feedback if they break something.
1. It becomes easier to teach programming by emphasizing tests far earlier
than we do today.
In this quest, Mu is currently experimenting with the following mechanisms:
1. New, testable interfaces for the operating system. Currently manual tests
are hard to automate because a file you assumed might vanish, the network
might go down, etc. To make manual tests reproducible it suffices to
improve the 15 or so OS syscalls through which a computer talks to the
outside world. We have to allow programs to transparently write to a fake
screen, read from a fake disk/network, etc. In Mu, printing to screen
explicitly takes a screen object, so it can be called on the real screen,
or on a fake screen inside tests, so that we can then check the expected
state of the screen at the end of a test. Here's a test for a little
text-mode chessboard program in Mu (delimiting the edge of the 'screen'
with dots):
We're building up similarly *dependency-injected* interfaces to the
keyboard, mouse, touch screen, disk, network, etc.
1. Support for testing side-effects like performance, deadlock-freedom,
race-freeness, memory usage, etc. Mu's *white-box tests* can check not just
the results of a function call, but also the presence or absence of
specific events in the log of its progress. For example, here's a test that
our string-comparison function doesn't scan individual characters unless it
has to:
Another example: if a sort function logs each swap, a performance test can
ensure that the number of swaps doesn't quadruple when the size of the
input doubles.
Besides expanding the scope of tests, this ability also allows more radical refactoring without needing to modify tests. All Mu's tests call a top-level function rather than individual sub-systems directly. As a result the way the subsystems are invoked can be radically changed (interface changes, making synchronous functions asynchronous, etc.). As long as the new versions emit the same implementation-independent events in the logs, the tests will continue to pass. ([More information.](http://akkartik.name/post/tracing-tests)) 1. Organizing code and tests in layers of functionality, so that outsiders can build simple and successively more complex versions of a project, gradually enabling more peripheral features. Think of it as a cleaned-up `git log` for the project. ([More information.](http://akkartik.name/post/wart-layers)) Since I don't understand how Linux and other modern platforms work, Mu is built on an idealized VM while I learn. Eventually the plan is to transplant what I learn back to Linux. To minimize my workload, Mu doesn't have a high-level language yet. Instead, I've been programming directly in the VM's idealized assembly language. I expected this to be painful, but it's had some surprising benefits. First, programs as lists of instructions seem to be easier for non-programmers to comprehend than programs as trees of expressions. Second, I've found that Literate Programming using layers makes assembly much more ergonomic. Third, labels for gotos turn out to be great waypoints to insert code at from future layers; when I tried to divide C programs into layers, I sometimes had to split statements in two so I could insert code between them. Labels also seem a promising representation for providing advanced mechanisms like continuations and lisp-like macros. High level languages today seem to provide three kinds of benefits: expressiveness (e.g. nested expressions, classes), safety (e.g. type checking) and automation (e.g. garbage collection). An idealized assembly language gives up some expressiveness, but doesn't seem to affect the other benefits. *Taking Mu for a spin* Mu is currently implemented in C++ and requires a unix-like environment. It's been tested on Ubuntu and Mac OS X, on x86, x86\_64 and ARMv7 with recent versions of gcc and clang. Since it uses no recent language features and has no exotic dependencies, it should work with most reasonable versions, compilers or processors. Running Mu will always recompile it if necessary: ```shell $ cd mu $ ./mu ``` As a simple example, here's a program with some arithmetic: As I said before, Mu functions are lists of instructions, one to a line. Each instruction operates on some *ingredients* and returns some *products*. ``` [products] <- instruction [ingredients] ``` Result and ingredient *reagents* have to be variables. But you can have any number of them. In particular you can have any number of products. For example, you can perform integer division as follows: ``` quotient:number, remainder:number <- divide-with-remainder 11, 3 ``` Each reagent consists of a name and its type, separated by a colon. You only have to specify the type the first time you mention a name, but you can be more explicit if you choose. Types can be multiple words and even arbitrary trees, like: ```nim x:array:number:3 # x is an array of 3 numbers y:list:number # y is a list of numbers # ':' is just syntactic sugar {z: (map (address array character) (list number))} # map from string to list of numbers ``` Try out the program now: ```shell $ ./mu example1.mu $ ``` Not much to see yet, since it doesn't print anything. To print the result, try adding the instruction `$print a` to the function. --- Here's a second example, of a function that can take ingredients: Functions can specify headers showing their expected ingredients and products, separated by `->` (unlike the `<-` in calls). Since Mu is a low-level VM language, it provides extra control at the cost of verbosity. Using `local-scope`, you have explicit control over stack frames to isolate your functions in a type-safe manner. You can also create more sophisticated setups like closures. One consequence of this extra control: you have to explicitly `load-ingredients` after you set up the stack. An alternative syntax is what the above example is converted to internally: The header gets dropped after checking types at call-sites, and after replacing `load-ingredients` with explicit instructions to load each ingredient separately, and to explicitly return products to the caller. After this translation functions are once again just lists of instructions. This alternative syntax isn't just an implementation detail. I've actually found it easier to teach functions to non-programmers by starting with this syntax, so that they can visualize a pipe from caller to callee, and see the names of variables get translated one by one through the pipe. --- A third example, this time illustrating conditionals: In spite of how it looks, this is still just a list of instructions and labels. Internally, the instructions `break` and `loop` get converted to `jump` instructions to after the enclosing `}` or `{`, respectively. Try out the factorial program now: ```shell $ ./mu factorial.mu result: 120 # factorial of 5 ``` You can also run its unit tests: ```shell $ ./mu test factorial.mu ``` Here's what one of the tests inside `factorial.mu` looks like: Every test conceptually spins up a really lightweight virtual machine, so you can do things like check the value of specific locations in memory. You can also print to screen and check that the screen contains what you expect at the end of a test. For example, you've seen earlier how `chessboard.mu` checks the initial position of a game of chess (delimiting the edges of the screen with dots): Similarly you can fake the keyboard to pretend someone typed something: ``` assume-keyboard [a2-a4] ``` As we add a file system, graphics, audio, network support and so on, we'll augment scenarios with corresponding abilities to use them inside tests. --- You can append arbitrary properties to reagents besides types and spaces. Just separate them with slashes. ```nim x:array:number:3/uninitialized y:string/tainted:yes z:list:number/assign-once:true/assigned:false ``` Most properties are meaningless to Mu, and it'll silently skip them when running, but they are fodder for *meta-programs* to check or modify your programs, a task other languages typically hide from their programmers. For example, where other programmers are restricted to the checks their type system permits and forces them to use, you'll learn to create new checks that make sense for your specific program. If it makes sense to perform different checks in different parts of your program, you'll be able to do that. You can imagine each reagent as a table, rows separated by slashes, columns within a row separated by colons. So the last example above would become something like this: ``` z : list : integer / assign-once : true / assigned : false ``` --- An alternative way to define factorial is by inserting labels and later inserting code at them. (You'll find this version in `tangle.mu`.) By convention we use the prefix '+' to indicate function-local label names you can jump to, and surround in '<>' global label names for inserting code at. --- Another example, this time with concurrency. ```shell $ ./mu fork.mu ``` Notice that it repeatedly prints either '34' or '35' at random. Hit ctrl-c to stop. Yet another example forks two 'routines' that communicate over a channel: ```shell $ ./mu channel.mu produce: 0 produce: 1 produce: 2 produce: 3 consume: 0 consume: 1 consume: 2 produce: 4 consume: 3 consume: 4 # The exact order above might shift over time, but you'll never see a number # consumed before it's produced. ``` Channels are the unit of synchronization in Mu. Blocking on channels are the only way tasks can sleep waiting for results. The plan is to do all I/O over channels that wait for data to return. Routines are expected to communicate purely by message passing, though nothing stops them from sharing memory since all routines share a common address space. However, idiomatic Mu will make it hard to accidentally read or clobber random memory locations. Bounds checking is baked deeply into the semantics, and pointer arithmetic will be mostly forbidden (except inside the memory allocator and a few other places). --- If you're still reading, here are some more things to check out: a) Look at the [chessboard program](http://akkartik.github.io/mu/html/chessboard.mu.html) for a more complex example where I write tests showing blocking reads from the keyboard and what gets printed to the screen -- things we don't typically associate with automated tests. b) Try skimming the [colorized source code](http://akkartik.github.io/mu). I'd like it to eventually be possible to get a pretty good sense for how things work just by skimming the files in order, skimming the top of each file and ignoring details lower down. Tell me how successful my efforts are. c) Try running the tests: ```shell $ ./mu test ``` You might also want to peek in the `.traces` directory, which automatically includes logs for each test showing you just how it ran on my machine. If Mu eventually gets complex enough that you have trouble running examples, these logs might help figure out if my system is somehow different from yours or if I've just been insufficiently diligent and my documentation is out of date. d) Try out the programming environment: ```shell $ ./mu test edit # takes about 30s; shouldn't show any failures $ ./mu edit ``` Screenshot: You write functions on the left and try them out in *sandboxes* on the right. Hit F4 to rerun all sandboxes with the latest version of the code. More details: http://akkartik.name/post/mu. Beware, it won't save your edits by default. But if you create a sub-directory called `lesson/` under `mu/` it will. If you turn that directory into a git repo with `git init`, it will also back up each version you try out. Once you have a sandbox you can click on its result to mark it as expected: Later if the result changes it'll be flagged in red to draw your attention to it. Thus, manually tested sandboxes become reproducible automated tests. Another feature: Clicking on the code in a sandbox expands its trace for you to browse. To add to the trace, use `stash`. For example: ```nim stash [first ingredient is ], x ``` Invaluable for understanding complex control flow without cluttering up the screen. The next major milestone on Mu's roadmap is dependency-injected interfaces for the network and file system. **Credits** Mu builds on many ideas that have come before, especially: - [Peter Naur](http://alistair.cockburn.us/ASD+book+extract%3A+%22Naur,+Ehn,+Musashi%22) for articulating the paramount problem of programming: communicating a codebase to others; - [Christopher Alexander](http://www.amazon.com/Notes-Synthesis-Form-Harvard-Paperbacks/dp/0674627512) and [Richard Gabriel](http://dreamsongs.net/Files/PatternsOfSoftware.pdf) for the intellectual tools for reasoning about the higher order design of a codebase; - Unix and C for showing us how to co-evolve language and OS, and for teaching the (much maligned, misunderstood and underestimated) value of concise *implementation* in addition to a clean interface; - Donald Knuth's [literate programming](http://www.literateprogramming.com/knuthweb.pdf) for liberating "code for humans to read" from the tyranny of compiler order; - [David Parnas](http://www.cs.umd.edu/class/spring2003/cmsc838p/Design/criteria.pdf) and others for highlighting the value of separating concerns and stepwise refinement; - [Lisp](http://www.paulgraham.com/rootsoflisp.html) for showing the power of dynamic languages, late binding and providing the right primitives *a la carte*, especially lisp macros; - The folklore of debugging by print and the trace facility in many lisp systems; - Automated tests for showing the value of developing programs inside an elaborate harness; - [Python doctest](http://docs.python.org/2/library/doctest.html) for exemplifying interactive documentation that doubles as tests; - [ReStructuredText](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ReStructuredText) and [its antecedents](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Setext) for showing that markup can be clean; - BDD for challenging us all to write tests at a higher level; - JavaScript and CSS for demonstrating the power of a DOM for complex structured documents.