diff options
-rw-r--r-- | apps/ex2.mu | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | html/apps/ex2.mu.html | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | html/ex2.mu.png | bin | 12812 -> 100365 bytes | |||
-rw-r--r-- | html/mu-init.subx.html | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mu-init.subx | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | mu.md | 30 |
6 files changed, 17 insertions, 25 deletions
diff --git a/apps/ex2.mu b/apps/ex2.mu index 4ecfde9f..16f04d29 100644 --- a/apps/ex2.mu +++ b/apps/ex2.mu @@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ fn main -> _/ebx: int { } fn do-add a: int, b: int -> _/eax: int { - var result/ebx: int <- copy a + var result/ecx: int <- copy a result <- add b return result } diff --git a/html/apps/ex2.mu.html b/html/apps/ex2.mu.html index faa89af6..603e330f 100644 --- a/html/apps/ex2.mu.html +++ b/html/apps/ex2.mu.html @@ -71,7 +71,7 @@ if ('onhashchange' in window) { <span id="L13" class="LineNr">13 </span><span class="Delimiter">}</span> <span id="L14" class="LineNr">14 </span> <span id="L15" class="LineNr">15 </span><span class="PreProc">fn</span> <span class="muFunction"><a href='ex2.mu.html#L15'>do-add</a></span> a: int, b: int<span class="PreProc"> -> </span>_/<span class="Constant">eax</span>: int <span class="Delimiter">{</span> -<span id="L16" class="LineNr">16 </span> <span class="PreProc">var</span> result/<span class="Constant">ebx</span>: int <span class="SpecialChar"><-</span> copy a +<span id="L16" class="LineNr">16 </span> <span class="PreProc">var</span> result/<span class="Constant">ecx</span>: int <span class="SpecialChar"><-</span> copy a <span id="L17" class="LineNr">17 </span> result <span class="SpecialChar"><-</span> add b <span id="L18" class="LineNr">18 </span> <span class="PreProc">return</span> result <span id="L19" class="LineNr">19 </span><span class="Delimiter">}</span> diff --git a/html/ex2.mu.png b/html/ex2.mu.png index 4af277d4..9d846f4a 100644 --- a/html/ex2.mu.png +++ b/html/ex2.mu.png Binary files differdiff --git a/html/mu-init.subx.html b/html/mu-init.subx.html index dc0c5ec7..bc78932c 100644 --- a/html/mu-init.subx.html +++ b/html/mu-init.subx.html @@ -59,9 +59,9 @@ if ('onhashchange' in window) { <span id="L3" class="LineNr"> 3 </span><span class="subxComment"># See translate_mu for how this file is used.</span> <span id="L4" class="LineNr"> 4 </span><span class="subxComment">#</span> <span id="L5" class="LineNr"> 5 </span><span class="subxComment"># Mu programs start at a function called 'main' with this signature:</span> -<span id="L6" class="LineNr"> 6 </span><span class="subxComment"># fn main args: (addr array addr array byte) -> exit-status/ebx: int</span> +<span id="L6" class="LineNr"> 6 </span><span class="subxComment"># fn main args: (addr array addr array byte) -> _/ebx: int</span> <span id="L7" class="LineNr"> 7 </span><span class="subxComment"># If your program doesn't need commandline arguments you can drop it:</span> -<span id="L8" class="LineNr"> 8 </span><span class="subxComment"># fn main -> exit-status/ebx: int</span> +<span id="L8" class="LineNr"> 8 </span><span class="subxComment"># fn main -> _/ebx: int</span> <span id="L9" class="LineNr"> 9 </span><span class="subxComment">#</span> <span id="L10" class="LineNr">10 </span><span class="subxComment"># Notice that the output must be in ebx, so that the exit() syscall can pick</span> <span id="L11" class="LineNr">11 </span><span class="subxComment"># it up.</span> diff --git a/mu-init.subx b/mu-init.subx index f20d08d0..feab920f 100644 --- a/mu-init.subx +++ b/mu-init.subx @@ -3,9 +3,9 @@ # See translate_mu for how this file is used. # # Mu programs start at a function called 'main' with this signature: -# fn main args: (addr array addr array byte) -> exit-status/ebx: int +# fn main args: (addr array addr array byte) -> _/ebx: int # If your program doesn't need commandline arguments you can drop it: -# fn main -> exit-status/ebx: int +# fn main -> _/ebx: int # # Notice that the output must be in ebx, so that the exit() syscall can pick # it up. diff --git a/mu.md b/mu.md index a2581f9e..2479eba6 100644 --- a/mu.md +++ b/mu.md @@ -12,25 +12,17 @@ short, the former increments a value in memory, while the latter increments a value in a register. Most languages start from some syntax and do what it takes to implement it. -Mu, however, is designed as a safe[1] way to program in [a regular subset of +Mu, however, is designed as a safe way to program in [a regular subset of 32-bit x86 machine code](subx.md), _satisficing_ rather than optimizing for a clean syntax. To keep the mapping to machine code lightweight, Mu exclusively uses statements. Most statements map to a single instruction of machine code. -[1] While it's designed to be memory-safe, and already performs many safety -checks, the Mu compiler is still a work in progress and can currently corrupt -memory just like C can. I estimate that it'll currently point out 90% of the -mistakes you make. - Since the x86 instruction set restricts how many memory locations an instruction can use, Mu makes registers explicit as well. Variables must be explicitly mapped to specific registers; otherwise they live in memory. While you have to -do your own register allocation, Mu will helpfully point out[2] when you get it +do your own register allocation, Mu will helpfully point out when you get it wrong. -[2] Again, there are some known issues here at the moment. I estimate that -it'll currently catch 95% of register allocation errors. - Statements consist of 3 parts: the operation, optional _inouts_ and optional _outputs_. Outputs come before the operation name and `<-`. @@ -67,9 +59,9 @@ fn _name_ _inout_ ... -> _output_ ... { Each function has a header line, and some number of statements, each on a separate line. Headers describe inouts and outputs. Inouts can't be registers, -and outputs _must_ be registers. In the above example, the outputs of both -`do-add` and `main` have type `int` and are available in register `ebx` at the -end of the respective calls. +and outputs _must_ be registers. Outputs can't take names. In the above +example, the outputs of both `do-add` and `main` have type `int` and are +available in register `ebx` at the end of the respective calls. The above program also demonstrates a function call (to the function `do-add`). Function calls look the same as primitive statements: they can return (multiple) @@ -78,7 +70,7 @@ there's one more constraint: output registers must match the function header. For example: ``` -fn f -> x/eax: int { +fn f -> _/eax: int { ... } fn g { @@ -97,8 +89,8 @@ process). It can also optionally accept an array of strings as input (from the shell command-line). To be precise, `main` must have one of the following two signatures: -- `fn main -> x/ebx: int` -- `fn main args: (addr array (addr array byte)) -> x/ebx: int` +- `fn main -> _/ebx: int` +- `fn main args: (addr array (addr array byte)) -> _/ebx: int` (The names of the inout and output are flexible.) @@ -150,9 +142,9 @@ var name/reg: type <- ... Variables on the stack are never initialized. (They're always implicitly zeroed out.) Variables in registers are always initialized. -Register variables can go in 6 integer registers: `eax`, `ebx`, `ecx`, `edx`, -`esi` and `edi`. Floating-point values can go in 8 other registers: `xmm0`, -`xmm1`, `xmm2`, `xmm3`, `xmm4`, `xmm5`, `xmm6` and `xmm7`. +Register variables can go in 6 integer registers (`eax`, `ebx`, `ecx`, `edx`, +`esi`, `edi`) or 8 floating-point registers (`xmm0`, `xmm1`, `xmm2`, `xmm3`, +`xmm4`, `xmm5`, `xmm6`, `xmm7`). Defining a variable in a register either clobbers the previous variable (if it was defined in the same block) or shadows it temporarily (if it was defined in |