| author | Christian Urban <christian.urban@kcl.ac.uk> | 
| Sat, 04 Dec 2021 00:49:34 +0000 | |
| changeset 860 | abf63cd5e11b | 
| parent 858 | 67e4eae871a9 | 
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| permissions | -rw-r--r-- | 
| 630 | 1 | % !TEX program = xelatex | 
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changeset | 2 | \documentclass{article}
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changeset | 3 | \usepackage{../style}
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| 820 | 4 | \usepackage{../graphics}
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changeset | 5 | \usepackage{../langs}
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changeset | 7 | \begin{document}
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| 836 | 9 | \section*{Coursework 5}
 | 
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| 722 | 11 | |
| 12 | ||
| 836 | 13 | \noindent This coursework is worth 25\% and is due on \cwFIVE{} at
 | 
| 820 | 14 | 18:00. You are asked to implement a compiler targeting the LLVM-IR. | 
| 15 | Be careful that this CW needs some material about the LLVM-IR | |
| 16 | that has not been shown in the lectures and your own experiments | |
| 17 | might be required. You can find information about the LLVM-IR at | |
| 18 | ||
| 19 | \begin{itemize}
 | |
| 20 | \item \url{https://bit.ly/3rheZYr}
 | |
| 21 | \item \url{https://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html}  
 | |
| 22 | \end{itemize}  
 | |
| 23 | ||
| 24 | \noindent | |
| 25 | You can do the implementation of your compiler in any programming | |
| 748 | 26 | language you like, but you need to submit the source code with which | 
| 820 | 27 | you generated the LLVM-IR files, otherwise a mark of 0\% will be | 
| 853 | 28 | awarded. You are asked to submit the code of your compiler, but also | 
| 858 | 29 | the generated \texttt{.ll} files. No PDF is needed for this
 | 
| 30 | coursework. You should use the lexer and parser from the previous | |
| 31 | courseworks, but you need to make some modifications to them for the | |
| 32 | `typed' version of the Fun-language. I will award up to 5\% if a lexer | |
| 33 | and a parser are correctly implemented. At the end, please package | |
| 34 | everything(!) in a zip-file that creates a directory with the name | |
| 853 | 35 | |
| 36 | \begin{center}
 | |
| 37 | \texttt{YournameYourFamilyname}
 | |
| 38 | \end{center}
 | |
| 39 | ||
| 40 | \noindent | |
| 855 | 41 | on my end. You will be marked according to the input files | 
| 42 | ||
| 43 | \begin{itemize}
 | |
| 857 | 44 | \item\href{https://talisker.nms.kcl.ac.uk/cgi-bin/repos.cgi/afl-material/raw-file/tip/cwtests/cw05/sqr.fun}{sqr.fun}  
 | 
| 45 | \item\href{https://talisker.nms.kcl.ac.uk/cgi-bin/repos.cgi/afl-material/raw-file/tip/cwtests/cw05/fact.fun}{fact.fun}
 | |
| 46 | \item\href{https://talisker.nms.kcl.ac.uk/cgi-bin/repos.cgi/afl-material/raw-file/tip/cwtests/cw05/mand.fun}{mand.fun}
 | |
| 47 | \item\href{https://talisker.nms.kcl.ac.uk/cgi-bin/repos.cgi/afl-material/raw-file/tip/cwtests/cw05/mand2.fun}{mand2.fun}
 | |
| 48 | \item\href{https://talisker.nms.kcl.ac.uk/cgi-bin/repos.cgi/afl-material/raw-file/tip/cwtests/cw05/hanoi.fun}{hanoi.fun}    
 | |
| 855 | 49 | \end{itemize}  
 | 
| 50 | ||
| 51 | \noindent | |
| 52 | which are uploaded to KEATS. | |
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| 750 | 54 | \subsection*{Disclaimer\alert}
 | 
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| 750 | 56 | It should be understood that the work you submit represents your own | 
| 57 | effort. You have not copied from anyone else. An exception is the | |
| 58 | Scala code I showed during the lectures or uploaded to KEATS, which | |
| 751 | 59 | you can both use. You can also use your own code from the CW~1 -- | 
| 60 | CW~4. | |
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| 820 | 63 | \subsection*{Task}
 | 
| 64 | ||
| 858 | 65 | The goal is to lex and parse 5 Fun-programs, including the | 
| 853 | 66 | Mandelbrot program shown in Figure~\ref{mand}, and generate
 | 
| 67 | corresponding code for the LLVM-IR. Unfortunately the calculations for | |
| 68 | the Mandelbrot Set require floating point arithmetic and therefore we | |
| 69 | cannot be as simple-minded about types as we have been so far | |
| 70 | (remember the LLVM-IR is a fully-typed language and needs to know the | |
| 71 | exact types of each expression). The idea is to deal appropriately | |
| 72 | with three types, namely \texttt{Int}, \texttt{Double} and
 | |
| 73 | \texttt{Void} (they are represented in the LLVM-IR as \texttt{i32},
 | |
| 74 | \texttt{double} and \texttt{void}). You need to extend the lexer and
 | |
| 75 | parser accordingly in order to deal with type annotations. The | |
| 76 | Fun-language includes global constants, such as | |
| 820 | 77 | |
| 78 | \begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
 | |
| 79 | val Ymin: Double = -1.3; | |
| 80 | val Maxiters: Int = 1000; | |
| 81 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 82 | ||
| 83 | \noindent | |
| 858 | 84 | where you can assume that they are `normal' identifiers, just | 
| 820 | 85 | starting with a capital letter---all other identifiers should have | 
| 86 | lower-case letters. Function definitions can take arguments of | |
| 87 | type \texttt{Int} or \texttt{Double}, and need to specify a return
 | |
| 88 | type, which can be \texttt{Void}, for example
 | |
| 89 | ||
| 90 | \begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]
 | |
| 91 | def foo(n: Int, x: Double) : Double = ... | |
| 853 | 92 | def id(n: Int) : Int = ... | 
| 820 | 93 | def bar() : Void = ... | 
| 94 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 95 | ||
| 96 | \noindent | |
| 97 | The idea is to record all typing information that is given | |
| 853 | 98 | in the Fun-program, but then delay any further typing inference to | 
| 820 | 99 | after the CPS-translation. That means the parser should | 
| 100 | generate ASTs given by the Scala dataypes: | |
| 101 | ||
| 102 | \begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none,language=Scala]
 | |
| 103 | abstract class Exp | |
| 104 | abstract class BExp | |
| 105 | abstract class Decl | |
| 106 | ||
| 107 | case class Def(name: String, args: List[(String, String)], | |
| 108 | ty: String, body: Exp) extends Decl | |
| 109 | case class Main(e: Exp) extends Decl | |
| 110 | case class Const(name: String, v: Int) extends Decl | |
| 111 | case class FConst(name: String, x: Float) extends Decl | |
| 112 | ||
| 113 | case class Call(name: String, args: List[Exp]) extends Exp | |
| 114 | case class If(a: BExp, e1: Exp, e2: Exp) extends Exp | |
| 115 | case class Var(s: String) extends Exp | |
| 853 | 116 | case class Num(i: Int) extends Exp // integer numbers | 
| 117 | case class FNum(i: Float) extends Exp // floating numbers | |
| 857 | 118 | case class ChConst(c: Int) extends Exp // char constants | 
| 820 | 119 | case class Aop(o: String, a1: Exp, a2: Exp) extends Exp | 
| 120 | case class Sequence(e1: Exp, e2: Exp) extends Exp | |
| 121 | case class Bop(o: String, a1: Exp, a2: Exp) extends BExp | |
| 122 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 123 | ||
| 124 | \noindent | |
| 125 | This datatype distinguishes whether the global constant is an integer | |
| 126 | constant or floating constant. Also a function definition needs to | |
| 127 | record the return type of the function, namely the argument | |
| 128 | \texttt{ty} in \texttt{Def}, and the arguments consist of an pairs of
 | |
| 129 | identifier names and types (\texttt{Int} or \texttt{Double}). The hard
 | |
| 130 | part of the CW is to design the K-intermediate language and infer all | |
| 131 | necessary types in order to generate LLVM-IR code. You can check | |
| 132 | your LLVM-IR code by running it with the interpreter \texttt{lli}.
 | |
| 133 | ||
| 134 | \begin{figure}[t]
 | |
| 857 | 135 | \lstinputlisting[language=Scala]{../cwtests/cw05/mand.fun}
 | 
| 820 | 136 | \caption{The Mandelbrot program in the `typed' Fun-language.\label{mand}}
 | 
| 137 | \end{figure}
 | |
| 138 | ||
| 139 | \begin{figure}[t]
 | |
| 857 | 140 | \includegraphics[scale=0.35]{../solution/cw5/out.png}
 | 
| 820 | 141 | \caption{Ascii output of the Mandelbrot program.\label{mand}}
 | 
| 142 | \end{figure}
 | |
| 143 | ||
| 853 | 144 | Also note that the second version of the Mandelbrot program and also | 
| 858 | 145 | the Tower of Hanoi program use character constants, like \texttt{'a'},
 | 
| 853 | 146 | \texttt{'1'}, \texttt{'$\backslash$n'} and so on. When they are tokenised,
 | 
| 147 | such characters should be interpreted as the corresponding ASCII code (an | |
| 148 | integer), such that we can use them in calculations like \texttt{'a' + 10}
 | |
| 149 | where the result should be 107. As usual, the character \texttt{'$\backslash$n'} is the
 | |
| 150 | ASCII code 10. | |
| 151 | ||
| 152 | ||
| 820 | 153 | \subsection*{LLVM-IR}
 | 
| 154 | ||
| 155 | There are some subtleties in the LLVM-IR you need to be aware of: | |
| 156 | ||
| 157 | \begin{itemize}
 | |
| 158 | \item \textbf{Global constants}: While global constants such as
 | |
| 159 | ||
| 160 | \begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]  
 | |
| 161 | val Max : Int = 10; | |
| 162 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
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| 820 | 164 | \noindent | 
| 165 | can be easily defined in the LLVM-IR as follows | |
| 166 | ||
| 167 | \begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]  
 | |
| 168 | @Max = global i32 10 | |
| 169 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 170 | ||
| 171 | \noindent | |
| 172 | they cannot easily be referenced. If you want to use | |
| 173 | this constant then you need to generate code such as | |
| 174 | ||
| 175 | \begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]  
 | |
| 176 | %tmp_22 = load i32, i32* @Max | |
| 177 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 178 | ||
| 179 | \noindent | |
| 180 | first, which treats \texttt{@Max} as an Integer-pointer (type
 | |
| 181 | \texttt{i32*}) that needs to be loaded into a local variable,
 | |
| 182 | here \texttt{\%tmp\_22}.
 | |
| 183 | ||
| 184 | \item \textbf{Void-Functions}: While integer and double functions
 | |
| 185 | can easily be called and their results can be allocated to a | |
| 186 | temporary variable: | |
| 187 | ||
| 188 |   \begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]  
 | |
| 189 | %tmp_23 = call i32 @sqr (i32 %n) | |
| 190 |   \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 191 | ||
| 192 | void-functions cannot be allocated to a variable. They need to be | |
| 193 | called just as | |
| 194 | ||
| 195 |   \begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none]  
 | |
| 196 | call void @print_int (i32 %tmp_23) | |
| 197 | \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 198 | ||
| 199 | \item \textbf{Floating-Point Operations}: While integer operations
 | |
| 200 | are specified in the LLVM-IR as | |
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| 820 | 202 |   \begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none,language=Scala]
 | 
| 203 |   def compile_op(op: String) = op match {
 | |
| 204 | case "+" => "add i32 " | |
| 205 | case "*" => "mul i32 " | |
| 206 | case "-" => "sub i32 " | |
| 207 | case "==" => "icmp eq i32 " | |
| 853 | 208 | case "!=" => "icmp ne i32 " | 
| 820 | 209 | case "<=" => "icmp sle i32 " // signed less or equal | 
| 210 | case "<" => "icmp slt i32 " // signed less than | |
| 211 |   }\end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 212 | ||
| 213 | the corresponding operations on doubles are | |
| 214 | ||
| 215 |   \begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none,language=Scala]
 | |
| 216 |   def compile_dop(op: String) = op match {
 | |
| 217 | case "+" => "fadd double " | |
| 218 | case "*" => "fmul double " | |
| 219 | case "-" => "fsub double " | |
| 220 | case "==" => "fcmp oeq double " | |
| 853 | 221 | case "!=" => "fcmp one double " | 
| 820 | 222 | case "<=" => "fcmp ole double " | 
| 223 | case "<" => "fcmp olt double " | |
| 224 |   }\end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 225 | ||
| 226 | \item \textbf{Typing}: In order to leave the CPS-translations
 | |
| 227 | as is, it makes sense to defer the full type-inference to the | |
| 228 | K-intermediate-language. For this it is good to define | |
| 229 |   the \texttt{KVar} constructor as
 | |
| 230 | ||
| 231 | \begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none,language=Scala]  
 | |
| 232 | case class KVar(s: String, ty: Ty = "UNDEF") extends KVal\end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 233 | ||
| 234 |   where first a default type, for example \texttt{UNDEF}, is
 | |
| 235 | given. Then you need to define two typing functions | |
| 236 | ||
| 237 |   \begin{lstlisting}[numbers=none,language=Scala]  
 | |
| 238 | def typ_val(v: KVal, ts: TyEnv) = ??? | |
| 239 | def typ_exp(a: KExp, ts: TyEnv) = ??? | |
| 240 |   \end{lstlisting}
 | |
| 241 | ||
| 242 | Both functions require a typing-environment that updates | |
| 243 | the information about what type each variable, operation | |
| 244 | and so on receives. Once the types are inferred, the | |
| 245 | LLVM-IR code can be generated. Since we are dealing only | |
| 246 | with simple first-order functions, nothing on the scale | |
| 247 | as the `Hindley-Milner' typing-algorithm is needed. I suggest | |
| 248 | to just look at what data is avaliable and generate all | |
| 836 | 249 | missing information by ``simple means''\ldots rather than | 
| 250 | looking at the literature which solves the problem | |
| 251 | with much heavier machinery. | |
| 820 | 252 | |
| 253 | \item \textbf{Build-In Functions}: The `prelude' comes
 | |
| 254 |   with several build-in functions: \texttt{new\_line()},
 | |
| 853 | 255 |   \texttt{skip}, \texttt{print\_int(n)}, \texttt{print\_space()},
 | 
| 256 |   \texttt{print\_star()} and \texttt{print\_char(n)}. You can find the `prelude' for
 | |
| 821 | 257 |   example in the file \texttt{sqr.ll}.
 | 
| 820 | 258 | \end{itemize}  
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changeset | 260 | \end{document}
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changeset | 262 | %%% Local Variables: | 
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changeset | 263 | %%% mode: latex | 
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changeset | 264 | %%% TeX-master: t | 
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changeset | 265 | %%% End: |