| author | paulson | 
| Tue, 03 Jan 2006 15:43:54 +0100 | |
| changeset 18556 | dc39832e9280 | 
| parent 15981 | 38db39971a5a | 
| child 20930 | 7ab9fa7d658f | 
| permissions | -rw-r--r-- | 
| 3188 | 1 | |
| 2 | % $Id$ | |
| 3 | ||
| 7882 | 4 | \chapter{The Isabelle system environment}
 | 
| 3188 | 5 | |
| 7882 | 6 | This manual describes Isabelle together with related tools and user interfaces | 
| 13047 | 7 | as seen from an outside (system oriented) view. See also the | 
| 8 | \emph{Isabelle/Isar Reference Manual}~\cite{isabelle-isar-ref} and the
 | |
| 9 | \emph{Isabelle Reference Manual}~\cite{isabelle-ref} for the actual Isabelle
 | |
| 10 | commands and related functions. | |
| 3188 | 11 | |
| 12464 | 12 | \medskip The Isabelle system environment emerges from a few general concepts. | 
| 3188 | 13 | \begin{itemize}
 | 
| 12464 | 14 | \item The \emph{Isabelle settings mechanism} provides environment variables to
 | 
| 15 | all Isabelle programs (including tools and user interfaces). | |
| 16 | \item The \emph{Isabelle tools wrapper} (\ttindex{isatool}) provides a generic
 | |
| 17 | startup platform for Isabelle related utilities. Thus tools automatically | |
| 18 | benefit from the settings mechanism. | |
| 19 | \item The raw \emph{Isabelle process} (\ttindex{isabelle} or
 | |
| 20 |   \texttt{isabelle-process}) runs logic sessions either interactively or in
 | |
| 21 | batch mode. In particular, this view abstracts over the invocation of the | |
| 22 |   actual {\ML} system to be used.
 | |
| 23 | \item The \emph{Isabelle interface wrapper} (\ttindex{Isabelle} or
 | |
| 24 |   \texttt{isabelle-interface}) provides some abstraction over the actual user
 | |
| 25 | interface to be used. The de-facto standard interface for Isabelle is | |
| 26 |   Proof~General \cite{proofgeneral}.
 | |
| 3188 | 27 | \end{itemize}
 | 
| 28 | ||
| 13047 | 29 | \medskip The beginning user would probably just run the default user interface | 
| 12464 | 30 | (by invoking the capital \texttt{Isabelle}).  This assumes that the system has
 | 
| 31 | already been installed, of course. In case you have to do this yourself, see | |
| 32 | the \ttindex{INSTALL} file in the top-level directory of the distribution of
 | |
| 33 | how to proceed; binary packages for various system components are available as | |
| 34 | well. | |
| 3188 | 35 | |
| 36 | ||
| 37 | \section{Isabelle settings} \label{sec:settings}
 | |
| 38 | ||
| 39 | The Isabelle system heavily depends on the \emph{settings
 | |
| 12464 | 40 |   mechanism}\indexbold{settings}.  Essentially, this is a statically scoped
 | 
| 7882 | 41 | collection of environment variables, such as \texttt{ISABELLE_HOME},
 | 
| 42 | \texttt{ML_SYSTEM}, \texttt{ML_HOME}.  These variables are \emph{not} intended
 | |
| 43 | to be set directly from the shell, though. Isabelle employs a somewhat more | |
| 44 | sophisticated scheme of \emph{settings files} --- one for site-wide defaults,
 | |
| 45 | another for additional user-specific modifications. With all configuration | |
| 46 | variables in at most two places, this scheme is more maintainable and | |
| 12464 | 47 | user-friendly than global shell environment variables. | 
| 3188 | 48 | |
| 7882 | 49 | In particular, we avoid the typical situation where prospective users of a | 
| 50 | software package are told to put several things into their shell startup | |
| 7883 | 51 | scripts, before being able to actually run the program. Isabelle requires none | 
| 52 | such administrative chores of its end-users --- the executables can be invoked | |
| 53 | straight away.\footnote{Occasionally, users would still want to put the
 | |
| 54 |   Isabelle \texttt{bin} directory into their shell's search path, but this is
 | |
| 55 | not required.} | |
| 3188 | 56 | |
| 57 | ||
| 13047 | 58 | \subsection{Building the environment}
 | 
| 3188 | 59 | |
| 7882 | 60 | Whenever any of the Isabelle executables is run, their settings environment is | 
| 12464 | 61 | put together as follows. | 
| 3188 | 62 | |
| 63 | \begin{enumerate}
 | |
| 7882 | 64 | \item The special variable \settdx{ISABELLE_HOME} is determined automatically
 | 
| 65 | from the location of the binary that has been run. | |
| 66 | ||
| 67 |   You should not try to set \texttt{ISABELLE_HOME} manually. Also note that
 | |
| 68 | the Isabelle executables either have to be run from their original location | |
| 7883 | 69 | in the distribution directory, or via the executable objects created by the | 
| 7882 | 70 |   \texttt{install} utility (see \S\ref{sec:tool-install}).  Just doing a plain
 | 
| 71 |   copy of the \texttt{bin} files will not work!
 | |
| 72 | ||
| 73 | \item The file \texttt{\$ISABELLE_HOME/etc/settings} ist run as a shell script
 | |
| 74 | with the auto-export option for variables enabled. | |
| 75 | ||
| 13047 | 76 | This file holds a rather long list of shell variable assigments, thus | 
| 77 | providing the site-wide default settings. The Isabelle distribution already | |
| 78 | contains a global settings file with sensible defaults for most variables. | |
| 79 | When installing the system, only a few of these may have to be adapted | |
| 80 |   (probably \texttt{ML_SYSTEM} etc.).
 | |
| 7849 | 81 | |
| 82 | \item The file \texttt{\$ISABELLE_HOME_USER/etc/settings} (if it exists) is
 | |
| 7882 | 83 | run in the same way as the site default settings. Note that the variable | 
| 7849 | 84 |   \texttt{ISABELLE_HOME_USER} has already been set before --- usually to
 | 
| 85 |   \texttt{\~\relax/isabelle}.
 | |
| 7882 | 86 | |
| 87 | Thus individual users may override the site-wide defaults. See also file | |
| 88 |   \texttt{etc/user-settings.sample} in the distribution.  Typically, a user
 | |
| 89 | settings file would contain only a few lines, just the assigments that are | |
| 90 |   really changed.  One should definitely \emph{not} start with a full copy the
 | |
| 91 |   basic \texttt{\$ISABELLE_HOME/etc/settings}. This could cause very annoying
 | |
| 92 | maintainance problems later, when the Isabelle installation is updated or | |
| 93 | changed otherwise. | |
| 3188 | 94 | |
| 95 | \end{enumerate}
 | |
| 96 | ||
| 7882 | 97 | Note that settings files are actually full GNU bash scripts. So one may use | 
| 7883 | 98 | complex shell commands, such as \texttt{if} or \texttt{case} statements to set
 | 
| 99 | variables depending on the system architecture or other environment variables. | |
| 100 | Such advanced features should be added only with great care, though. In | |
| 101 | particular, external environment references should be kept at a minimum. | |
| 3188 | 102 | |
| 3217 | 103 | \medskip A few variables are somewhat special: | 
| 3188 | 104 | \begin{itemize}
 | 
| 12464 | 105 | \item \settdx{ISABELLE} and \settdx{ISATOOL} are set automatically to the
 | 
| 106 |   absolute path names of the \texttt{isabelle-process} and \texttt{isatool}
 | |
| 107 | executables, respectively. | |
| 6414 | 108 | |
| 12464 | 109 | \item \settdx{ISABELLE_OUTPUT} will have the {\ML} system identifier
 | 
| 110 |   (according to \texttt{ML_IDENTIFIER}) automatically appended to its value.
 | |
| 3188 | 111 | \end{itemize}
 | 
| 112 | ||
| 12464 | 113 | \medskip The Isabelle settings scheme is conceptually simple, but not | 
| 114 | completely trivial. For debugging purposes, the resulting environment may be | |
| 115 | inspected with the \texttt{getenv} utility, see \S\ref{sec:tool-getenv}.
 | |
| 3188 | 116 | |
| 117 | ||
| 118 | \subsection{Common variables}
 | |
| 119 | ||
| 7882 | 120 | This is a reference of common Isabelle settings variables. Note that the list | 
| 121 | is somewhat open-ended. Third-party utilities or interfaces may add their own | |
| 122 | selection. Variables that are special in some sense are marked with *. | |
| 3217 | 123 | |
| 124 | \begin{description}
 | |
| 7882 | 125 | \item[\settdx{ISABELLE_HOME}*] is the location of the top-level Isabelle
 | 
| 126 | distribution directory. This is automatically determined from the Isabelle | |
| 12464 | 127 | executable that has been invoked. Do not attempt to set | 
| 128 |   \texttt{ISABELLE_HOME} yourself from the shell.
 | |
| 7882 | 129 | |
| 3217 | 130 | \item[\settdx{ISABELLE_HOME_USER}] is the user-specific counterpart of
 | 
| 7882 | 131 |   \texttt{ISABELLE_HOME}. The default value is \texttt{\~\relax/isabelle},
 | 
| 132 | under rare circumstances this may be changed in the global setting file. | |
| 133 |   Typically, the \texttt{ISABELLE_HOME_USER} directory mimics
 | |
| 134 |   \texttt{ISABELLE_HOME} to some extend. In particular, site-wide defaults may
 | |
| 135 |   be overridden by a private \texttt{etc/settings}.
 | |
| 136 | ||
| 137 | \item[\settdx{ISABELLE}*, \settdx{ISATOOL}*] are automatically set to the full
 | |
| 12464 | 138 |   path names of the \texttt{isabelle-process} and \texttt{isatool}
 | 
| 139 | executables, respectively. Thus other tools and scripts need not assume | |
| 140 |   that the Isabelle \texttt{bin} directory is on the current search path of
 | |
| 141 | the shell. | |
| 6412 | 142 | |
| 143 | \item[\settdx{ML_SYSTEM}, \settdx{ML_HOME}, \settdx{ML_OPTIONS},
 | |
| 6414 | 144 |   \settdx{ML_PLATFORM}, \settdx{ML_IDENTIFIER}*] specify the underlying {\ML}
 | 
| 7882 | 145 | system to be used for Isabelle. There is only a fixed set of admissable | 
| 146 |   \texttt{ML_SYSTEM} names (see the \texttt{etc/settings} file of the
 | |
| 147 | distribution). | |
| 148 | ||
| 149 |   The actual compiler binary will be run from the directory \texttt{ML_HOME},
 | |
| 150 |   with \texttt{ML_OPTIONS} as first arguments on the command line.  The
 | |
| 151 |   optional \texttt{ML_PLATFORM} may specify the binary format of ML heap
 | |
| 152 | images, which is useful for cross-platform installations. The value of | |
| 153 |   \texttt{ML_IDENTIFIER} is automatically obtained by composing the
 | |
| 154 |   \texttt{ML_SYSTEM} and \texttt{ML_PLATFORM} values.
 | |
| 6414 | 155 | |
| 9790 | 156 | \item[\settdx{ISABELLE_PATH}] is a list of directories (separated by colons)
 | 
| 157 | where Isabelle logic images may reside. When looking up heaps files, the | |
| 158 |   value of \texttt{ML_IDENTIFIER} is appended to each component internally.
 | |
| 7882 | 159 | |
| 160 | \item[\settdx{ISABELLE_OUTPUT}*] is a directory where output heap files should
 | |
| 161 |   be stored by default. The \texttt{ML_SYSTEM} identifier is appended here,
 | |
| 162 | too. | |
| 163 | ||
| 164 | \item[\settdx{ISABELLE_BROWSER_INFO}] is the directory where theory browser
 | |
| 165 | information (HTML text, graph data, and printable documents) is stored (see | |
| 166 |   also \S\ref{sec:info}).  The default value is
 | |
| 4555 | 167 |   \texttt{\$ISABELLE_HOME_USER/browser_info}.
 | 
| 7882 | 168 | |
| 169 | \item[\settdx{ISABELLE_LOGIC}] specifies the default logic to load if none is
 | |
| 170 |   given explicitely by the user.  The default value is \texttt{HOL}.
 | |
| 171 | ||
| 172 | \item[\settdx{ISABELLE_USEDIR_OPTIONS}] is implicitly prefixed to the command
 | |
| 173 |   line of any \texttt{isatool usedir} invocation (see also
 | |
| 174 |   \S\ref{sec:tool-usedir}). This typically contains compilation options for
 | |
| 175 |   object-logics --- \texttt{usedir} is the basic utility for managing logic
 | |
| 176 |   sessions (cf.\ the \texttt{IsaMakefile}s in the distribution).
 | |
| 7849 | 177 | |
| 178 | \item[\settdx{ISABELLE_LATEX}, \settdx{ISABELLE_PDFLATEX},
 | |
| 179 |   \settdx{ISABELLE_BIBTEX}, \settdx{ISABELLE_DVIPS}] refer to {\LaTeX} related
 | |
| 180 |   tools for Isabelle document preparation (see also \S\ref{sec:tool-latex}).
 | |
| 7882 | 181 | |
| 182 | \item[\settdx{ISABELLE_TOOLS}] is a colon separated list of directories that
 | |
| 183 |   are scanned by \texttt{isatool} for external utility programs (see also
 | |
| 184 |   \S\ref{sec:isatool}).
 | |
| 185 | ||
| 186 | \item[\settdx{ISABELLE_DOCS}] is a colon separated list of directories with
 | |
| 187 | documentation files. | |
| 188 | ||
| 15685 | 189 | \item[\settdx{ISABELLE_DOC_FORMAT}] specifies the preferred document format,
 | 
| 190 |   typically \texttt{dvi} or \texttt{pdf}.
 | |
| 191 | ||
| 7882 | 192 | \item[\settdx{DVI_VIEWER}] specifies the command to be used for displaying
 | 
| 193 |   \texttt{dvi} files.
 | |
| 194 | ||
| 15685 | 195 | \item[\settdx{PDF_VIEWER}] specifies the command to be used for displaying
 | 
| 196 |   \texttt{pdf} files.
 | |
| 197 | ||
| 14933 | 198 | \item[\settdx{PRINT_COMMAND}] specifies the standard printer spool command,
 | 
| 15685 | 199 |   which is expected to accept \texttt{ps} files.
 | 
| 14933 | 200 | |
| 12464 | 201 | \item[\settdx{ISABELLE_TMP_PREFIX}*] is the prefix from which any running
 | 
| 7882 | 202 |   \texttt{isabelle} process derives an individual directory for temporary
 | 
| 203 |   files.  The default is somewhere in \texttt{/tmp}.
 | |
| 204 | ||
| 205 | \item[\settdx{ISABELLE_INTERFACE}] is an identifier that specifies the actual
 | |
| 12464 | 206 |   user interface that the capital \texttt{Isabelle} or
 | 
| 207 |   \texttt{isabelle-interface} should invoke.  See \S\ref{sec:interface} for
 | |
| 208 | more details. | |
| 3217 | 209 | |
| 210 | \end{description}
 | |
| 3188 | 211 | |
| 212 | ||
| 12464 | 213 | \section{The Isabelle tools wrapper} \label{sec:isatool}
 | 
| 214 | ||
| 215 | All Isabelle related utilities are called via a common wrapper --- | |
| 216 | \ttindex{isatool}:
 | |
| 217 | \begin{ttbox}
 | |
| 218 | Usage: isatool TOOL [ARGS ...] | |
| 219 | ||
| 220 | Start Isabelle utility program TOOL with ARGS. Pass "-?" to TOOL | |
| 221 | for more specific help. | |
| 222 | ||
| 223 | Available tools are: | |
| 224 | ||
| 225 | browser - Isabelle graph browser | |
| 226 | \dots | |
| 227 | \end{ttbox}
 | |
| 228 | In principle, Isabelle tools are ordinary executable scripts that are run | |
| 229 | within the Isabelle settings environment, see \S\ref{sec:settings}.  The set
 | |
| 230 | of available tools is collected by \texttt{isatool} from the directories
 | |
| 231 | listed in the \texttt{ISABELLE_TOOLS} setting.  Do not try to call the scripts
 | |
| 232 | directly from the shell. Neither should you add the tool directories to your | |
| 233 | shell's search path! | |
| 234 | ||
| 235 | ||
| 236 | \subsubsection*{Examples}
 | |
| 3188 | 237 | |
| 12464 | 238 | Show the list of available documentation of the current Isabelle installation | 
| 239 | like this: | |
| 240 | \begin{ttbox}
 | |
| 241 | isatool doc | |
| 242 | \end{ttbox}
 | |
| 243 | ||
| 244 | View a certain document as follows: | |
| 245 | \begin{ttbox}
 | |
| 246 | isatool doc isar-ref | |
| 247 | \end{ttbox}
 | |
| 248 | ||
| 249 | Create an Isabelle session derived from HOL (see also \S\ref{sec:tool-mkdir}
 | |
| 250 | and \S\ref{sec:tool-make}):
 | |
| 251 | \begin{ttbox}
 | |
| 252 | isatool mkdir HOL Test && isatool make | |
| 253 | \end{ttbox}
 | |
| 254 | Note that \texttt{isatool mkdir} is usually only invoked once; existing
 | |
| 255 | sessions (including document output etc.) are then updated by \texttt{isatool
 | |
| 256 | make} alone. | |
| 257 | ||
| 258 | ||
| 259 | \section{The raw Isabelle process}
 | |
| 260 | ||
| 261 | The \ttindex{isabelle} (or \ttindex{isabelle-process}) executable runs
 | |
| 262 | bare-bones Isabelle logic sessions --- either interactively or in batch mode. | |
| 263 | It provides an abstraction over the underlying {\ML} system, and over the
 | |
| 264 | actual heap file locations. Its usage is: | |
| 3188 | 265 | \begin{ttbox}
 | 
| 266 | Usage: isabelle [OPTIONS] [INPUT] [OUTPUT] | |
| 267 | ||
| 268 | Options are: | |
| 10108 | 269 | -C tell ML system to copy output image | 
| 5814 | 270 | -I startup Isar interaction mode | 
| 9983 | 271 | -P startup Proof General interaction mode | 
| 8362 
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changeset | 272 | -c tell ML system to compress output image | 
| 3188 | 273 | -e MLTEXT pass MLTEXT to the ML session | 
| 10900 | 274 | -f pass 'Session.finish();' to the ML session | 
| 3188 | 275 | -m MODE add print mode for output | 
| 276 | -q non-interactive session | |
| 277 | -r open heap file read-only | |
| 4540 | 278 | -u pass 'use"ROOT.ML";' to the ML session | 
| 279 | -w reset write permissions on OUTPUT | |
| 3188 | 280 | |
| 281 | INPUT (default "\$ISABELLE_LOGIC") and OUTPUT specify in/out heaps. | |
| 7883 | 282 | These are either names to be searched in the Isabelle path, or | 
| 283 | actual file names (containing at least one /). | |
| 3188 | 284 | If INPUT is "RAW_ML_SYSTEM", just start the bare bones ML system. | 
| 285 | \end{ttbox}
 | |
| 286 | Input files without path specifications are looked up in the | |
| 7849 | 287 | \texttt{ISABELLE_PATH} setting, which may consist of multiple components
 | 
| 9790 | 288 | separated by colons --- these are tried in the given order with the value of | 
| 289 | \texttt{ML_IDENTIFIER} appended internally.  In a similar way, base names are
 | |
| 290 | relative to the directory specified by \texttt{ISABELLE_OUTPUT}.  In any case,
 | |
| 291 | actual file locations may also be given by including at least one slash | |
| 292 | (\texttt{/}) in the name (hint: use \texttt{./} to refer to the current
 | |
| 7849 | 293 | directory). | 
| 3188 | 294 | |
| 295 | ||
| 296 | \subsection*{Options}
 | |
| 297 | ||
| 3217 | 298 | If the input heap file does not have write permission bits set, or the | 
| 7882 | 299 | \texttt{-r} option is given explicitely, then the session started will be
 | 
| 12464 | 300 | read-only.  That is, the {\ML} world cannot be committed back into the image
 | 
| 301 | file. Otherwise, a writable session enables commits into either the input | |
| 13047 | 302 | file, or into another output heap file (if that is given as the second | 
| 303 | argument on the command line). | |
| 3217 | 304 | |
| 7882 | 305 | The read-write state of sessions is determined at startup only, it cannot be | 
| 306 | changed intermediately. Also note that heap images may require considerable | |
| 12464 | 307 | amounts of disk space (approximately 20--40~MB). Users are responsible for | 
| 308 | themselves to dispose their heap files when they are no longer needed. | |
| 3188 | 309 | |
| 7882 | 310 | \medskip The \texttt{-w} option makes the output heap file read-only after
 | 
| 311 | terminating. Thus subsequent invocations cause the logic image to be | |
| 312 | read-only automatically. | |
| 4540 | 313 | |
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changeset | 314 | \medskip The \texttt{-c} option tells the underlying ML system to compress the
 | 
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changeset | 315 | output heap (fully transparently). On Poly/ML for example, the image is | 
| 12464 | 316 | garbage collected and all stored values are maximally shared, resulting in up | 
| 317 | to 50\% less disk space consumption. | |
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changeset | 318 | |
| 10108 | 319 | \medskip The \texttt{-C} option tells the ML system to produce a completely
 | 
| 320 | self-contained output image, probably including a copy of the ML runtime | |
| 321 | system itself. | |
| 322 | ||
| 7882 | 323 | \medskip Using the \texttt{-e} option, arbitrary {\ML} code may be passed to
 | 
| 324 | the Isabelle session from the command line. Multiple \texttt{-e}'s are
 | |
| 325 | evaluated in the given order. Strange things may happen when errorneous {\ML}
 | |
| 326 | code is provided. Also make sure that the {\ML} commands are terminated
 | |
| 327 | properly by semicolon. | |
| 3188 | 328 | |
| 10900 | 329 | \medskip The \texttt{-u} option is a shortcut for \texttt{-e} passing
 | 
| 330 | ``\texttt{use"ROOT.ML";}'' to the {\ML} session.  The \texttt{-f} option
 | |
| 331 | passes ``\texttt{Session.finish();}'', which is intended mainly for
 | |
| 332 | administrative purposes. | |
| 4540 | 333 | |
| 7882 | 334 | \medskip The \texttt{-m} option adds identifiers of print modes to be made
 | 
| 335 | active for this session. Typically, this is used by some user interface, e.g.\ | |
| 12464 | 336 | to enable output of proper mathematical symbols. | 
| 3217 | 337 | |
| 7882 | 338 | \medskip Isabelle normally enters an interactive top-level loop (after | 
| 339 | processing the \texttt{-e} texts). The \texttt{-q} option inhibits
 | |
| 340 | interaction, thus providing a pure batch mode facility. | |
| 5814 | 341 | |
| 342 | \medskip The \texttt{-I} option makes Isabelle enter Isar interaction mode on
 | |
| 9983 | 343 | startup, instead of the primitive {\ML} top-level.  The \texttt{-P} option
 | 
| 344 | configures the top-level loop for interaction with the Proof~General user | |
| 13047 | 345 | interface; do not enable this in plain TTY sessions. | 
| 3188 | 346 | |
| 347 | ||
| 348 | \subsection*{Examples}
 | |
| 349 | ||
| 3217 | 350 | Run an interactive session of the default object-logic (as specified | 
| 351 | by the \texttt{ISABELLE_LOGIC} setting) like this:
 | |
| 3188 | 352 | \begin{ttbox}
 | 
| 353 | isabelle | |
| 354 | \end{ttbox}
 | |
| 3217 | 355 | Usually \texttt{ISABELLE_LOGIC} refers to one of the standard logic
 | 
| 356 | images, which are read-only by default. A writable session --- based | |
| 357 | on \texttt{FOL}, but output to \texttt{Foo} (in the directory
 | |
| 358 | specified by the \texttt{ISABELLE_OUTPUT} setting) --- may be invoked
 | |
| 359 | as follows: | |
| 3188 | 360 | \begin{ttbox}
 | 
| 361 | isabelle FOL Foo | |
| 362 | \end{ttbox}
 | |
| 12464 | 363 | Ending this session normally (e.g.\ by typing control-D) dumps the whole {\ML}
 | 
| 364 | system state into \texttt{Foo}. Be prepared for several tens of megabytes.
 | |
| 3188 | 365 | |
| 3217 | 366 | The \texttt{Foo} session may be continued later (still in writable
 | 
| 3262 | 367 | state) by: | 
| 3188 | 368 | \begin{ttbox}
 | 
| 369 | isabelle Foo | |
| 370 | \end{ttbox}
 | |
| 3217 | 371 | A read-only \texttt{Foo} session may be started by:
 | 
| 372 | \begin{ttbox}
 | |
| 373 | isabelle -r Foo | |
| 374 | \end{ttbox}
 | |
| 3188 | 375 | |
| 7849 | 376 | \medskip Note that manual session management like this does \emph{not} provide
 | 
| 377 | proper setup for theory presentation.  This would require the \texttt{usedir}
 | |
| 378 | utility, see \S\ref{sec:tool-usedir}.
 | |
| 379 | ||
| 380 | \bigskip The next example demonstrates batch execution of Isabelle. We print a | |
| 381 | certain theorem of \texttt{FOL}:
 | |
| 3188 | 382 | \begin{ttbox}
 | 
| 383 | isabelle -e "prth allE;" -q -r FOL | |
| 384 | \end{ttbox}
 | |
| 7882 | 385 | Note that the output text will be interspersed with additional junk messages | 
| 386 | by the {\ML} runtime environment.
 | |
| 3188 | 387 | |
| 3217 | 388 | |
| 12464 | 389 | \section{The Isabelle interface wrapper}\label{sec:interface}
 | 
| 3217 | 390 | |
| 7208 | 391 | Isabelle is a generic theorem prover, even w.r.t.\ its user interface. The | 
| 12464 | 392 | \ttindex{Isabelle} (or \ttindex{isabelle-interface}) executable provides a
 | 
| 13047 | 393 | uniform way for end-users to invoke a certain interface; which one to start is | 
| 15981 | 394 | determined by the \settdx{ISABELLE_INTERFACE} setting variable, which should
 | 
| 395 | give a full path specification to the actual executable. Also note that the | |
| 396 | \texttt{install} utility provides some options to install desktop environment
 | |
| 397 | icons (see \S\ref{sec:tool-install}).
 | |
| 11582 | 398 | |
| 15981 | 399 | Presently, the most prominent Isabelle interface is | 
| 400 | Proof~General~\cite{proofgeneral}\index{user interface!Proof General}.  There
 | |
| 401 | are separate versions for the raw ML top-level and the proper Isabelle/Isar | |
| 402 | interpreter loop. The Proof~General distribution includes separate interface | |
| 403 | wrapper scripts (in \texttt{ProofGeneral/isa} and \texttt{ProofGeneral/isar})
 | |
| 404 | for either of these. The canonical settings for Isabelle/Isar are as follows: | |
| 405 | \begin{ttbox}
 | |
| 11582 | 406 | ISABELLE_INTERFACE=\$ISABELLE_HOME/contrib/ProofGeneral/isar/interface | 
| 407 | PROOFGENERAL_OPTIONS="" | |
| 15981 | 408 | \end{ttbox}
 | 
| 409 | Thus \texttt{Isabelle} would automatically invoke Emacs with proper setup of
 | |
| 410 | the Proof~General Lisp packages. There are some options available, such as | |
| 411 | \texttt{-l} for passing the logic image to be used by default, or \texttt{-m}
 | |
| 412 | to tune the standard print mode.  The \texttt{-I} option allows to switch
 | |
| 413 | between the Isar and ML view, independently of the interface script being | |
| 414 | used. | |
| 11582 | 415 | |
| 15981 | 416 | \medskip Note that the world may be also seen the other way round: Emacs may | 
| 417 | be started first (with proper setup of Proof~General mode), and | |
| 418 | \texttt{isabelle} run from within.  This requires further Emacs Lisp
 | |
| 419 | configuration, see the Proof~General documentation \cite{proofgeneral} for
 | |
| 420 | more information. | |
| 5364 | 421 | |
| 6412 | 422 | %%% Local Variables: | 
| 5364 | 423 | %%% mode: latex | 
| 424 | %%% TeX-master: "system" | |
| 6412 | 425 | %%% End: |