Abstract

Programmers naturally expect that compilers and other code generation tools produce executable code that behaves as prescribed by source programs. However, compilers are complex programs that perform many subtle transformations. Bugs in compilers do happen and can lead to silently producing incorrect executable code from a correct source program. This is a significant concern in the context of high-assurance software that has been verified (at the source level) using formal methods (static analysis, model checking, program proof, etc): any bug in the compiler can potentially invalidate the guarantees so painfully established by the use of formal methods.

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