Beyond some valid reasons not to use a new tool such as support of legacy code, no in-house SPARKAda knowledge base, why hasn't SPARKAda caught on? It seems like a very sound tool for many projects requiring high reliability, so I don't understand why its not so common. I would be more comfortable knowing that the avionics software that powers my flight was developed using a programming language that lends itself to verifiability techniques as suppose to being written in the C language.
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It doesn't really offer a lot to mainstream development projects. IMO these would be the main reasons:
EDIT: See this Stackoverflow post for a discussion about safety-critical software. |
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I just saw the slashdot post about the new open source project using SPARK Ada. It's a chicken and the egg phenomenon really because a language has to be have a big project that champions it (usually in the open source community) before it can become big. But of course a language must be sufficiently widespread for a big open source project to utilize it. So now that there are some high profile open source projects coming out in SPARK it may become a more popular language. Case and point: think about how big Ruby was before Rails, and how big it got after Rails. |
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Also, another important reason that wasn't yet really mentioned: it is just since pretty recently that a SPARK/Ada implementation is easily (freely) available, to quote wikipedia:
In other words, you can now actually download a GPL version of SPARK/Ada:
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Using SPARK-Ada on a project requires, like most critical systems development, dedication to a mindset, a methodology, and a tool. Unfortunately, the latter is the only facet that a typical industry team has in spades. ("We are a Java house.") Consequently, it isn't about development teams not choosing to use SPARK-Ada, it is about teams simply being unable to use SPARK-Ada. If you are performing critical systems development, you have only a few choices when it comes to professionally supported industrial-grade tools. Praxis is second-to-none in this regard. |
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