117 lines
4.2 KiB
Plaintext
117 lines
4.2 KiB
Plaintext
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%p
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Now that i
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%em have
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had time to write some more code (250 commits last month), here is
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the good news:
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%h2#sending-is-done Sending is done
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%p
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A dynamic language like ruby really has at it’s heart the dynamic method resolution. Without
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that we’d be writing C++. Not much can be done in ruby without looking up methods.
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%p
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Yet all this time i have been running circles around this mother of a problem, because
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(after all) it is a BIG one. It must be the one single most important reason why dynamic
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languages are interpreted and not compiled.
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%h2#a-brief-recap A brief recap
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%p
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Last year already i started on a rewrite. After hitting this exact same wall for the fourth
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time. I put in some more Layers, the way a good programmer fixes any daunting problem.
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%p
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The
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%a{:href => "https://github.com/ruby-x/rubyx"} Readme
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has quite a good summary on the new layers,
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and off course i’ll update the architecture soon. But in case you didn’t click, here is the
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very very short summary:
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%ul
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%li
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%p
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Vool is a Virtual Object Oriented Language. Virtual in that is has no own syntax. But
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it has semantics, and those are substantially simpler than ruby. Vool is Ruby without
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the fluff.
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%li
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%p
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Mom, the Minimal Object Machine layer is the first machine layer. Mom has no concept of memory
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yet, only objects. Data is transferred directly from object
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to object with one of Mom’s main instructions, the SlotLoad.
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%li
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%p
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Risc layer here abstracts the Arm in a minimal and independent way. It does not model
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any real RISC cpu instruction set, but rather implements what is needed for rubyx.
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%li
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%p
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There is a minimal
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%em Arm
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translator that transforms Risc instructions to Arm instructions.
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Arm instructions assemble themselves into binary code. A minimal
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%em Elf
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implementation is
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able to create executable binaries from the assembled code and Parfait objects.
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%li
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%p
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Parfait: Generating code (by descending above layers) is only half the story in an oo system.
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The other half is classes, types, constant objects and a minimal run-time. This is
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what is Parfait is.
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%h2#compiling-and-building Compiling and building
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%p
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After having finished all this layering work, i was back to square
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= succeed ":" do
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%em resolve
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%p
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But off course when i got there i started thinking that the resolve method (in ruby)
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would need resolve itself. And after briefly considering cheating (hardcoding type
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information into this
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%em one
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method), i opted to write the code in Risc. Basically assembler.
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%p
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And it was horrible. It worked, but it was completely unreadable. So then i wrote a dsl for
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generating risc instructions, using a combination of method_missing, instance_eval and
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operator overloading. The result is quite readable code, a mixture between assembler and
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a mathematical notation, where one can just freely name registers and move data around
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with
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%em []
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and
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= succeed "." do
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%em «
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%p
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By then resolving worked, but it was still a method. Since it was already in risc, i basically
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inlined the code by creating a new Mom instruction and moving the code to it’s
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= succeed "." do
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%em to_risc
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%p
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A small bug in calling the resulting method was fixed, and
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= succeed "," do
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%em voila
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%h2#the-proof The proof
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%p
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Previous, static, Hello Worlds looked like this:
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\> “Hello world”.putstring
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%p
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Off course we can know the type that putstring applies to and so this does not
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involve any method resolution at runtime, only at compile time.
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%p
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Todays step is thus:
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\> a = “Hello World”
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%blockquote
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%p a.putstring
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%p
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This does involve a run-time lookup of the
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%em putstring
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method. It being a method on String,
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it is indeed found and called.(1) Hurray.
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%p
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And maths works too:
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\> a = 150
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%blockquote
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%p a.div10
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%p
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Does indeed result in 15. Even with the
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%em new
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integers. Part of the rewrite was to upgrade
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integers to first class objects.
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%p
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PS(1): I know with more analysis the compiler
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%em could
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now that
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%em a
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is a String (or Integer),
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but just now it doesn’t. Take my word for it or even better, read the code.
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