Abstract

The interpretative approach to compilation allows compiling programs by partially evaluating an interpreter w.r.t. a source program. This approach, though very attractive in principle, has not been widely applied in practice mainly because of the difficulty in finding a partial evaluation strategy which always obtain “quality” compiled programs. In spite of this, in recent work we have performed a proof of concept of that, at least for some examples, this approach can be applied to decompile Java bytecode into Prolog. This allows applying existing advanced tools for analysis of logic programs in order to verify Java bytecode. However, successful partial evaluation of an interpreter for (a realistic subset of) Java bytecode is a rather challenging problem. The aim of this work is to improve the performance of the decompilation process above in two respects. First, we would like to obtain quality decompiled programs, i.e., simple and small. We refer to this as the effectiveness of the decompilation. Second, we would like the decompilation process to be as efficient as possible, both in terms of time and memory usage, in order to scale up in practice. We refer to this as the efficiency of the decompilation. With this aim, we propose several techniques for improving the partial evaluation strategy. We argue that our experimental results show that we are able to improve significantly the efficiency and effectiveness of the decompilation process.

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