This repository contains the source code for the SPARK project. SPARK is a software development technology specifically designed for engineering high-reliability applications. It consists of a programming language, a verification toolset and a design method which, taken together, ensure that ultra-low defect software can be deployed in application domains where high-reliability must be assured and where safety and security are key requirements.
This repository provides visibility on the development process. The main line
of development is in line with the development version of GNAT, which is not
directly visible to the public (although patches are regularly transferred to
the FSF repository at svn://gcc.gnu.org/svn/gcc/trunk/gcc/ada
), and it will
probably be impossible to build the master branch of the software with any
other compiler. However, buildable branches are provided corresponding to
public compiler releases or the head of the FSF repository, see the section on
Building SPARK below.
SPARK is commercially supported by AdaCore and Capgemini, you can visit the AdaCore website for more information.
You can download a "gnatprove" package from this github
project. Extracting
the package and adding the bin
directory to your PATH is enough. You can get
the GNAT compiler from the same link, and there is a different
project for GNATStudio, the
IDE.
You can obtain SPARK via Alire. To do
this, follow the installation instructions of Alire, then you can add the
gnatprove
dependency to an alire project using
alr with gnatprove
Alire will download gnatprove if necessary.
There is an older community version of the tools, packaged with GNAT and GNATStudio. You can download it from AdaCore's website.
SPARK is led by AdaCore and co-developed by AdaCore, Capgemini and Inria. The SPARK team at AdaCore is responsible for the technology roadmap, taking into account the needs of all stakeholders: sales and marketing, customers, other development teams, community.
The team is organized around a set of roles for QA, integration, certification, language evolution, etc. with two roles managing interactions:
The Team Coordinator:
The Team Technical Authority:
Currently these roles are exercised by Claire Dross (Team Coordinator) and Johannes Kanig (Team Technical Authority).
News about SPARK project are shared primarily on AdaCore's blog. Discussions about SPARK occur on a public mailing-list.
You can find the definition of the SPARK language in the SPARK Reference Manual, and instructions on how to use the tool, together with a tutorial, in the SPARK User's Guide.
In order to build SPARK, you need to first install the following dependencies (and we recommend using the OPAM package manager for these):
SPARK sources are tied to the sources of GNAT compiler frontend. For this reason, you should use a compiler built from sources with a date matching the sources of SPARK. There are two options.
To build SPARK with GNAT Community compiler, you need to use the corresponding branch of this repository. For example, to build with GNAT Community 2020, use the branch gpl-2020, as follows:
git checkout gpl-2020
SPARK repository uses submodules to keep in sync with corresponding versions of Why3, Alt-Ergo, CVC4 and Z3, which generally track the main repositories for these tools with minor modifications for the integration with SPARK. To retrieve the corresponding branch of these submodules, do:
git submodule init
git submodule update
Then follow the instructions in the Makefile.
To build SPARK with GNAT version from FSF, you need to use the corresponding branch of this repository which follows the latest changes pushed at FSF, as follows:
git checkout fsf
To retrieve the most recent version of the submodules for Why3, Alt-Ergo, CVC4 and Z3, which matches the latest changes for SPARK pushed at FSF, do:
git submodule init
git submodule update
Then follow the instructions in the Makefile.