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Retrofitting effect handlers onto OCaml

KC Sivaramakrishnan, Stephen Dolan, Leo White, Tom Kelly, Sadiq Jaffer, Anil Madhavapeddy

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Abstract

Effect handlers have been gathering momentum as a mechanism for modular programming with user-defined effects. Effect handlers allow for non-local control flow mechanisms such as generators, async/await, lightweight threads and coroutines to be composably expressed. We present a design and evaluate a full-fledged efficient implementation of effect handlers for OCaml, an industrial-strength multi-paradigm programming language. Our implementation strives to maintain the backwards compatibility and performance profile of existing OCaml code. Retrofitting effect handlers onto OCaml is challenging since OCaml does not currently have any non-local control flow mechanisms other than exceptions. Our implementation of effect handlers for OCaml: (i) imposes a mean 1% overhead on a comprehensive macro benchmark suite that does not use effect handlers; (ii) remains compatible with program analysis tools that inspect the stack; and (iii) is efficient for new code that makes use of effect handlers.

Topics & Concepts

RetrofittingComputer scienceModular designControl flowProgramming languageSuiteCode (set theory)Overhead (engineering)DebuggingSoftware engineeringBenchmark (surveying)Source codeExtensibilityControl (management)MacroData flow diagramTroubleshootingUpgradeOperating systemStatic analysisEmbedded systemSecurity and Verification in ComputingAdvanced Malware Detection TechniquesLogic, programming, and type systems
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