All Projects → Fedjmike → Mini C

Fedjmike / Mini C

Dr Strangehack, or: how to write a self-hosting C compiler in 10 hours

Programming Languages

c
50402 projects - #5 most used programming language
assembly
5116 projects

Projects that are alternatives of or similar to Mini C

Fcc
Fedjmike's C Compiler
Stars: ✭ 101 (-72.85%)
Mutual labels:  compiler, parser, x86, code-generation
Xdpw
XD Pascal: A small embeddable self-hosting Pascal compiler for Windows. Supports Go-style methods and interfaces
Stars: ✭ 199 (-46.51%)
Mutual labels:  compiler, parser, x86
Ratel Core
High performance JavaScript to JavaScript compiler with a Rust core
Stars: ✭ 367 (-1.34%)
Mutual labels:  compiler, parser
Asmjit
Machine code generation for C++
Stars: ✭ 2,874 (+672.58%)
Mutual labels:  compiler, x86
Graphit
GraphIt - A High-Performance Domain Specific Language for Graph Analytics
Stars: ✭ 254 (-31.72%)
Mutual labels:  compiler, code-generation
Lioness
The Lioness Programming Language
Stars: ✭ 155 (-58.33%)
Mutual labels:  compiler, parser
Snapdragon
snapdragon is an extremely pluggable, powerful and easy-to-use parser-renderer factory.
Stars: ✭ 180 (-51.61%)
Mutual labels:  compiler, parser
Saltwater
A C compiler written in Rust, with a focus on good error messages.
Stars: ✭ 219 (-41.13%)
Mutual labels:  compiler, parser
Rascal
The implementation of the Rascal meta-programming language (including interpreter, type checker, parser generator, compiler and JVM based run-time system)
Stars: ✭ 284 (-23.66%)
Mutual labels:  compiler, code-generation
Lbforth
Self-hosting metacompiled Forth, bootstrapping from a few lines of C; targets Linux, Windows, ARM, RISC-V, 68000, PDP-11, asm.js.
Stars: ✭ 293 (-21.24%)
Mutual labels:  compiler, x86
Javaparser
Java 1-15 Parser and Abstract Syntax Tree for Java, including preview features to Java 13
Stars: ✭ 3,972 (+967.74%)
Mutual labels:  parser, code-generation
Forge
A lightweight, elegant scripting language with built-in Rust-FFI.
Stars: ✭ 153 (-58.87%)
Mutual labels:  compiler, parser
Swc
swc is a super-fast compiler written in rust; producing widely-supported javascript from modern standards and typescript.
Stars: ✭ 18,627 (+4907.26%)
Mutual labels:  compiler, parser
Cub
The Cub Programming Language
Stars: ✭ 198 (-46.77%)
Mutual labels:  compiler, parser
Glsl
GLSL parser for Rust
Stars: ✭ 145 (-61.02%)
Mutual labels:  compiler, parser
Prance
Resolving Swagger/OpenAPI 2.0 and 3.0 Parser
Stars: ✭ 133 (-64.25%)
Mutual labels:  compiler, parser
Kgt
BNF wrangling and railroad diagrams
Stars: ✭ 312 (-16.13%)
Mutual labels:  compiler, parser
Phplrt
PHP Language Recognition Tool
Stars: ✭ 127 (-65.86%)
Mutual labels:  compiler, parser
Md
A markdown parser and compiler. Built for speed.
Stars: ✭ 128 (-65.59%)
Mutual labels:  compiler, parser
Pyverilog
Python-based Hardware Design Processing Toolkit for Verilog HDL
Stars: ✭ 267 (-28.23%)
Mutual labels:  compiler, parser

mini-c

I set myself a challenge: write a self-hosting C compiler in 10 hours. This is the result, plus lots of cleanup (check "releases" for the 10 hour version).

Implementation:

  • Generates 32-bit x86 assembly, which is then assembled and linked by GCC.
  • It is all implemented in a single pass. Code generation is mixed with parsing. This requires some creativity.
  • The parser peeks at the next token to decide whether to generate an lvalue.

Language:

  • Local and global variables, parameters.
  • Functions, if, while, do``while, return.
  • =, ?: (ternary), ||, &&, ==, !=, <, >=, +, -, *, ++, -- (post-ops), !, - (unary), [], ()
  • Integer, character, true and false literals. String literals, with automatic concatenation.
  • The language it implements is typeless. Everything is a 4 byte signed integer.
  • Pointer indexing works in increments of 4 bytes, pointer arithmetic is byte-by-byte.

The general philosophy was: only include a feature if it reduces the total code size. This is taken to its extreme in the insane branch.

Building and running it

git clone http://github.com/Fedjmike/mini-c
cd mini-c
make selftest

This will first produce cc by compiling mini-c with GCC. Then it makes ccself by compiling mini-c with cc. Finally it makes test/triangular using ccself, and checks the result. You should get something like this:

$ make selftest
gcc -std=c11 -Werror -Wall cc.c -o cc
cc cc.c
gcc -m32 a.s -o ccself
ccself tests/triangular.c
gcc -m32 a.s -o triangular; triangular 5; [ $? -eq 15 ]

If you are on Windows, you will need to checkout the windows branch. On 64 bit Linux, you may need to sudo apt-get install gcc-multilib to be able to compile and run the 32 bit code.

Related

Another microscopic C compiler is c4 by rswier. He implemented more C, but I'd say mine is simpler :). Also, c4 generates code for its own VM, whereas mine has the significant difficulty of working with x86 assembly and cdecl.

I wrote another, much more advanced C compiler. Check it out. It too is self-hosting, but with a much more complete feature set, and even some experimental additions like lambdas.

License

Copyright (c) 2015 Sam Nipps

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

Note that the project description data, including the texts, logos, images, and/or trademarks, for each open source project belongs to its rightful owner. If you wish to add or remove any projects, please contact us at [email protected].