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- Subject: Re: Turing-incomplete Lua?
- From: Eero Pajarre <epajarre@...>
- Date: Wed, 01 Dec 2004 10:43:00 +0200
Jeff Koftinoff wrote:
But if you made the mini-lua grammar simple enough you could guarantee
that there would be no possibility of infinite loops. A timeout is
problematic in many ways! Please don't do things like that.
If you just restrict the grammar so that all loops have a fixed repeat
count (non-variable) and no recursive function definitions are allowed
then you don't need a sandbox and you don't need problematic
halt-sensing and you can be guaranteed that the config file will never
halt your process. I believe a system like this would be very very useful.
Would it really be useful?
I would still be possible to do loops which are not infinite,
but which would take 100000000000000000000000 years to complete.
In computer science sense these are of course completely different,
but in practice do you really care?
Eero
btw, Because Lua uses by default floating point values,
doesn't that mean that sufficiently large loop boundary
would cause an infinite loop as the loop increment gets
smaller than the "epsilon" of the loop variable.