Hello, For a course project, I am required to write a compiler for some language of my choice, and this compiler has to be implemented in a functional language. I have chosen create a *JIT* compiler for C source, and to implement my compiler in OCaml using LLVM for the back-end. I have experience using LLVM in C++ (I wrote a MATLAB JIT compiler not long ago), however, I am a bit puzzled as to how to go about some things, and would appreciate some pointers: 1. When writing my MATLAB JIT in C++, I created bindings to native C++ functions to serve as my runtime library. This hardly seems practical in OCaml. I would ideally want to write my runtime library in C (this will contain functions such as malloc, free, puts, strlen, etc.), and link it with the code I compile somehow. Is there any way for LLVM to link with code in pre-compiled C object files? Please note that this is for a JIT compiler, I need to be able to do this at run-time, I will not be generating an executable file. 2. One thing I don't know how to go about is memory allocation. As I just said, this will be a C *JIT* compiler. This means that my running compiled code will have to co-exist with OCaml. How do I go about implementing malloc in this context? Does LLVM provide some memory allocation implementation that will work with a JIT? 3. Do the OCaml LLVM bindings even allow using LLVM in JIT mode? And of course, if anyone has experience writing a JIT using LLVM, or using the OCaml LLVM bindings, any advice you may have will be greatly appreciated. -- View this message in context: http://old.nabble.com/C-Compiler-written-in-OCaml%2C-Pointers-Wanted-tp27714082p27714082.html Sent from the LLVM - Dev mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
Reid Kleckner
2010-Feb-24 03:56 UTC
[LLVMdev] C Compiler written in OCaml, Pointers Wanted
On Tue, Feb 23, 2010 at 10:37 PM, Nyx <mcheva at cs.mcgill.ca> wrote:> > Hello, > > For a course project, I am required to write a compiler for some language of > my choice, and this compiler has to be implemented in a functional language. > I have chosen create a *JIT* compiler for C source, and to implement my > compiler in OCaml using LLVM for the back-end. I have experience using LLVM > in C++ (I wrote a MATLAB JIT compiler not long ago), however, I am a bit > puzzled as to how to go about some things, and would appreciate some > pointers: >Here: 0xdeadbeef 0x00007ffff7de9f2f Couldn't resist. :-D> 1. When writing my MATLAB JIT in C++, I created bindings to native C++ > functions to serve as my runtime library. This hardly seems practical in > OCaml. I would ideally want to write my runtime library in C (this will > contain functions such as malloc, free, puts, strlen, etc.), and link it > with the code I compile somehow. Is there any way for LLVM to link with code > in pre-compiled C object files? Please note that this is for a JIT compiler, > I need to be able to do this at run-time, I will not be generating an > executable file.Is writing the runtime part of the assignment? In any case, to get yourself up and running, if you have declarations of the runtime functions in your module with external linkage, the JIT will dlsym them if it can't find a definition for them in your module. So if you have malloc, strlen, etc. linked into your binary (which I'm guessing you would, since I'm sure LLVM links in libc), it should be able to call those.> 2. One thing I don't know how to go about is memory allocation. As I just > said, this will be a C *JIT* compiler. This means that my running compiled > code will have to co-exist with OCaml. How do I go about implementing malloc > in this context? Does LLVM provide some memory allocation implementation > that will work with a JIT?I would guess that since you can call LLVM from OCaml, you can use any memory allocation strategy that you might normally use in a C/C++ program. ie, mmap some address space and go nuts. :)> 3. Do the OCaml LLVM bindings even allow using LLVM in JIT mode?No idea. Reid
Jianzhou Zhao
2010-Feb-24 03:58 UTC
[LLVMdev] C Compiler written in OCaml, Pointers Wanted
On Tue, Feb 23, 2010 at 10:37 PM, Nyx <mcheva at cs.mcgill.ca> wrote:> > Hello, > > For a course project, I am required to write a compiler for some language of > my choice, and this compiler has to be implemented in a functional language. > I have chosen create a *JIT* compiler for C source, and to implement my > compiler in OCaml using LLVM for the back-end. I have experience using LLVM > in C++ (I wrote a MATLAB JIT compiler not long ago), however, I am a bit > puzzled as to how to go about some things, and would appreciate some > pointers: > > 1. When writing my MATLAB JIT in C++, I created bindings to native C++ > functions to serve as my runtime library. This hardly seems practical in > OCaml. I would ideally want to write my runtime library in C (this will > contain functions such as malloc, free, puts, strlen, etc.), and link it > with the code I compile somehow. Is there any way for LLVM to link with code > in pre-compiled C object files?I think so. You may need to modify LLVM's Makefile to do so. Here is how Makefile is configured. http://llvm.org/docs/MakefileGuide.html> Please note that this is for a JIT compiler, > I need to be able to do this at run-time, I will not be generating an > executable file. > > 2. One thing I don't know how to go about is memory allocation. As I just > said, this will be a C *JIT* compiler. This means that my running compiled > code will have to co-exist with OCaml. How do I go about implementing malloc > in this context? Does LLVM provide some memory allocation implementation > that will work with a JIT? > > 3. Do the OCaml LLVM bindings even allow using LLVM in JIT mode?I think LLVM OCaml bindings do not support JIT too much. All the exposed C++ interfaces, which are possibly relative to JIT, are /bindings/ocaml/executionengine/llvm_executionengine.ml. But you could be able to expose more JIT interfaces into OCaml.> > And of course, if anyone has experience writing a JIT using LLVM, or using > the OCaml LLVM bindings, any advice you may have will be greatly > appreciated. > -- > View this message in context: http://old.nabble.com/C-Compiler-written-in-OCaml%2C-Pointers-Wanted-tp27714082p27714082.html > Sent from the LLVM - Dev mailing list archive at Nabble.com. > > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu > http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev >
Maxime Chevalier-Boisvert
2010-Feb-24 04:18 UTC
[LLVMdev] C Compiler written in OCaml, Pointers Wanted
>> Is writing the runtime part of the assignment? In any case, to getyourself up and running, if you have declarations of the runtime functions in your module with external linkage, the JIT will dlsym them if it can't find a definition for them in your module. So if you have malloc, strlen, etc. linked into your binary (which I'm guessing you would, since I'm sure LLVM links in libc), it should be able to call those. I don't think I have to write the runtime myself. Whether or not the binary links with libc would depend on whether OCaml does or not though. Can LLVM load pre-compiled object files for use with a JIT is what I really want to know. Although, if there was a way to force it to use a specific .so file to resolve symbols, that would be good also. >> I would guess that since you can call LLVM from OCaml, you can use any memory allocation strategy that you might normally use in a C/C++ program. ie, mmap some address space and go nuts. :) That kind of goes back to the previous point though... How do I resolve the mmap function? I'm guessing though, if I can actually resolve libc's malloc, that saves me the trouble of having to implement my own memory allocation scheme. - Max
On Wednesday 24 February 2010 03:37:35 Nyx wrote:> Hello, > > For a course project, I am required to write a compiler for some language > of my choice, and this compiler has to be implemented in a functional > language. I have chosen create a *JIT* compiler for C source, and to > implement my compiler in OCaml using LLVM for the back-end. I have > experience using LLVM in C++ (I wrote a MATLAB JIT compiler not long ago), > however, I am a bit puzzled as to how to go about some things, and would > appreciate some pointers:First up, my HLVM project should answer all of your questions: http://www.ffconsultancy.com/ocaml/hlvm/ Specifically, this is a JIT compiler written almost entirely in OCaml (2kLOC) that includes a self-generating run-time with multicore-capable garbage collector that operates using malloc and free directly.> 1. When writing my MATLAB JIT in C++, I created bindings to native C++ > functions to serve as my runtime library. This hardly seems practical in > OCaml.You would expose a C interface and bind OCaml to that with C stubs using OCaml's internal's C macros.> I would ideally want to write my runtime library in C (this will > contain functions such as malloc, free, puts, strlen, etc.),You'll probably find it easier just to invoke these directly from your generated code. In other words, your OCaml code will call LLVM to generate native code and then call LLVM's JIT to executate that native code and then your native code is on its own (no calling back to or via OCaml code).> and link it > with the code I compile somehow. Is there any way for LLVM to link with > code in pre-compiled C object files? Please note that this is for a JIT > compiler, I need to be able to do this at run-time, I will not be > generating an executable file.You can call libc stuff directly. Other stuff you probably want to dlload.> 2. One thing I don't know how to go about is memory allocation. As I just > said, this will be a C *JIT* compiler. This means that my running compiled > code will have to co-exist with OCaml. How do I go about implementing > malloc in this context? Does LLVM provide some memory allocation > implementation that will work with a JIT?No need. You just call malloc and free from your generated code.> 3. Do the OCaml LLVM bindings even allow using LLVM in JIT mode?Yes, of course. This is a core part of several LLVM-based projects written in OCaml.> And of course, if anyone has experience writing a JIT using LLVM, or using > the OCaml LLVM bindings, any advice you may have will be greatly > appreciated.I have been using LLVM from OCaml for well over a year. It works really well: LLVM is a great library and OCaml is an awesome language for compiler writing. In particular, you do *not* need to modify LLVM or OCaml at all. They both work perfectly in harmony out of the box. -- Dr Jon Harrop, Flying Frog Consultancy Ltd. http://www.ffconsultancy.com/?e
On Wednesday 24 February 2010 03:58:03 Jianzhou Zhao wrote:> I think LLVM OCaml bindings do not support JIT too much.Can you elaborate on this? Several major projects are using OCaml's LLVM bindings to execute non-trivial code via JIT. -- Dr Jon Harrop, Flying Frog Consultancy Ltd. http://www.ffconsultancy.com/?e
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