| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Get the 'edit' script working again with the 'EE' command in Vim.
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All it takes is to code-generate a simple function called 'run_tests' that
calls all functions starting with 'test_' one by one.
I've temporarily switched the factorial app to run as a test. But that's
temporary, because all the code to print '.' vs 'F' needs to get extracted
out into a helper.
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Neither jump nor call instructions support immediates. Drop that.
The only form of absolute addressing relies on rm32.
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Start of a new example program.
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More useful trace if we mess up args to a syscall and pass a non-pointer
where a pointer is expected.
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Running reset() doesn't seem necessary so far for the translate sub-command,
but it's likely to expose us to weird bugs.
Immediately, it requires toggling `Dump_trace` in different places to print
traces while translating vs while running.
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Bring Mu's trace harness in line with recent changes in SubX.
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Stale file since 4523.
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Attempt #3 at fixing CI.
In the process the feature gets a lot less half-baked.
Ridiculously misleading that we had `has_metadata()` was special-cased
to one specific transform. I suck.
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Really fix CI.
Also realized we don't need to worry about function pointers. They won't
be in /disp32 fields.
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Fix CI (`subx translate examples/ex6.subx examples/ex6`)
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Streamline the factorial function; we don't need to save a stack variable
into a register before operating on it. All instructions can take a stack
variable directly.
In the process we found two bugs:
a) Opcode f7 was not implemented correctly. It was internally consistent
but I'd never validated it against a natively running program. Turns out
it encodes multiple instructions, not just 'not'.
b) The way we look up imm32 operands was sometimes reading them before
disp8/disp32 operands.
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I'd been planning to add segment address computation after all labels were
computed, including labels in the data segment (which isn't built yet).
But now I realize that won't work, because labels in the data segment will
require segment start addresses. We need to deal in absolute addresses
rather than relative offsets as with the jump instructions that use code
labels.
Layer 34 is now broken by this change in a way that isn't obvious right
now: it is oblivious to imm32 and disp32 operand tags that are now going
to be present in the programs it sees. It's a lucky accident that everything
still works, because we're only using segment names right now for the very
first (code) segment in a program.
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Make segment names a separate transform.
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Turns out I had totally the wrong idea. The stack at the start of the program
doesn't contain 2 words, one for argc and a second for argv that must then
be dereferenced to get to its contents (each a pointer to a string). It
contains a word for argc, one for argv[0], another for argv[1], and so
on.
Many thanks to Jeremiah Orians and the #bootstrappable channel on freenode
for showing me https://github.com/oriansj/mescc-tools/blob/master/test/test5/exec_enable_amd64.M1
which set me straight. I could just pop the args like that example does,
but it seems slightly more elegant, given the current calling convention,
to assume the imaginary caller handles the popping.
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The new example ex9 doesn't yet work natively.
In the process I've emulated the kernel's role in providing args, implemented
a couple of instructions acting on 8-bit operands (useful for ASCII string
operations), and begun the start of the standard library (ascii_length
is the same as strlen).
At the level of SubX we're just only going to support ASCII.
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New levels should be added at the top of list of transforms rather than
bottom. See layer 29.
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I'm going to continue using them for now, but I'm fairly certain now
that they're just a temporary device to help rapidly-prototype ideas.
The reason: there's just too many ways to abuse low-level features, and
it ends up taking too much code to disallow things soon after you allow
them.
New plan: stop trying to write checks, just treat them as temporary
conventions for now. Goal is now to just get the core sequence of passes
nailed down. Then we'll start reimplementing them from the ground up.
First implication of this new plan: ripping out most existing checks.
I'm still going to eventually build type checks. But no degenerate
checks for code just being too low-level.
(This decision is the outcome of a few days of noodling over Forth and
https://mastodon.social/@akkartik/100549913519614800.)
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Don't use trace infrastructure if you're just going to immediately exit.
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