Hermes[1][2]
is a language for distributed programming[3]
that was developed at IBM's Thomas J. Watson Research Center from 1986 through 1992,
with an open-source compiler and run-time system.[4]
Hermes' primary features included:[5]
Language support of processes and interprocess communication.
Compile-time verification that operations use initialized data.
Representation-independent data aggregates called tables.
It used typestate analysis to check variables transitions errors, to rule out some semantically non meaningful transitions from one state to another (i.e. starting from a value, some sequences of operations on a variable are nonsensical), of which reading an uninitialized variable is a special case. In this role of compile-time checking of data initialization is similar to definite assignment analysis performed by Java, Cyclone and C#.
Hermes and its predecessor, NIL (Network Implementation Language), were the earliest programming languages supporting this form of initialization checking.[6]
Typestate was actually used more extensively, to generate compiler-inserted "delete" operations.
References
^Strom, Robert E.; Bacon, David F; Goldberg, Arthur P.; Lowry, Andy; Yellin, Daniel M.; Yemini, Shaula (1991). Hermes - A Language for Distributed Computing. Englewood Cliffs, NJ, USA: Prentice-Hall. ISBN 978-0-13-389537-7.
^Lowry, Andy (1992). "The Hermes language in outline form". ACM SIGPLAN Notices. 27 (8): 51–70. doi:10.1145/142137.142148. ISSN 0362-1340.
^Strom, R.E. (1990). "Hermes: an integrated language and system for distributed programming". IEEE Workshop on Experimental Distributed Systems. pp. 75–82. doi:10.1109/EDS.1990.138054.
^Bacon, David F.; Lowry, Andy (1990). A Portable Run-time System for the Hermes Distributed Programming Language. USENIX Summer Technical Conference. Anaheim, California, USA: Usenix Association. pp. 39–50.
^Korfhage, Willard; Goldberg, Arthur P. (1995). "Hermes language experiences"(PDF). Software: Practice and Experience. 25 (4): 389–402. CiteSeerX . doi:10.1002/spe.4380250404. ISSN 0038-0644. Archived from the original(PDF) on 2005-05-26. Retrieved 2009-08-27.
^Strom, Robert E. (1983). "Mechanisms for compile-time enforcement of security". Proceedings of the 10th ACM SIGACT-SIGPLAN symposium on Principles of programming languages - POPL '83. pp. 276–284. doi:10.1145/567067.567093. ISBN 978-0897910903.