mes/HACKING

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-*-mode:org-*-
2016-10-10 22:24:44 +01:00
* Fully source-based bootstrapping
** R6RS-like scheme interpreter
This first part is prototyped in C by the mes.c core and Scheme
bootstrap code in module/. Of course, while mes.c is pretty small it
cannot serve as a fully source-based solution.
The initial idea was to have the minimal core support LISP-1.5 (or
something very close to that as a tribute to John McCarthy) and extend
eval/apply from LISP-1.5 source with define, define-macro etc. and
metamorphose into R6RS. It seemed to work but performance of the
LISP-intepreted RRS was so bad (~1000x slower than initial LISP-1.5)
that this track was abandoned after the initial ANNOUNCE.
The route changed, trying to strike a balance between core size and
performance: still writing as much as possible in Scheme but having a
mescc compiler that takes not more than some seconds to run.
Now that portable R6RS syntax-case runs and mes.c has grown to
~1200LOC with another ~300LOC of optional C code, some effort must
probably be directed into making that smaller.
** Move mes.c into hex?
One idea is to use OrianJ's amazing self-hosting [[https://github.com/oriansj/stage0][stage0]] hex assembler
and minimal bootstrap binaries and rewrite the mes.c core to directly
bootstrap into Scheme.
** Rewrite mes.c and generate hex?
Another idea (thanks Rutger!) is to rewrite the mes.c core in a
C/Assembly variant and thave mescc produce the simple, annotated
bootstrap binary.
* Bugs
** Core is too fat
mes.c is ~1500 lines (~10,000LOC Assembly) which seems much too big to
start translating it to assembly/hex.
** Actually do something useful, build: [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiny_C_Compiler][Tiny C Compiler]]
* OLD: Booting from LISP-1.5 into Mes
Mes started out experimenting with booting from a hex-coded minimal
LISP-1.5 (prototype in mes.c), into an almost-RRS Scheme.
When EOF is read, the LISP-1.5 machine calls loop2 from loop2.mes,
which reads the rest of stdin and takes over control. The functions
readenv, eval and apply-env in mes.mes introduced define, define-macro
quasiquote and macro expansion.
While this works, it's amazingly slow. We implemented a full reader
in mes.c, which makes running mes:apply-env mes:eval somewhat
bearable, still over 1000x slower than running mes.c.
Bootstrapping has been removed and mes.c implements enough of RRS to
run a macro-based define-syntax and syntax-rules.
loop.mes and mes.mes are unused and lagging behind. Probably it's not
worth considering this route without a VM. GNU Epsilon is taking the
more usual VM-route to provide multiple personas. While that sounds
neat, Lisp/Scheme, bootstrapping and trusted binaries are probably not
in scope as there is no mention of such things; only ML is mentioned
while Guile is used for bootstrapping.
* Assorted ideas and info
** C parser/compiler
*** [[https://savannah.gnu.org/projects/nyacc][nyacc]]
*** PEG: [[http://piumarta.com/software/peg/][parse C using PEG]]
*** [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiny_C_Compiler][Tiny C Compiler]]
*** [[http://www.t3x.org/subc/index.html][Sub C]]
*** [[https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/comp.lang.lisp/VPuX0VsjTTE][C intepreter in LISP/Scheme/Python]]
** C assembler/linker
*** [[http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Assembly-HOWTO/linux.html][Assembly HOWTO]]
*** System call clue bat
Basically, you issue an int 0x80, with the __NR_syscallname number
(from asm/unistd.h) in eax, and parameters (up to six) in ebx, ecx,
edx, esi, edi, ebp respectively.
*** ELF
7f 45 4c 46
*** [[http://www.muppetlabs.com/~breadbox/software/tiny/][Small ELF programs]]
*** [[http://www.cirosantilli.com/elf-hello-world/][Elf hello world]]
** RNRS
*** [[http://www.scheme-reports.org/][Scheme Reports]]
*** [[ftp://publications.ai.mit.edu/ai-publications/pdf/AIM-349.pdf][Scheme - Report on Scheme]]
*** [[ftp://publications.ai.mit.edu/ai-publications/pdf/AIM-452.pdf][RRS - Revised Report on Scheme]]