Example implementation of Arm's Architecture Specification Language (ASL).
The ASL interpreter is a collection of resources to help you to understand and make use of Arm's architecture specifications. It consists of lexer, parser, typechecker and interpreter for the ASL language and an interactive interface for evaluating ASL statements and expressions.
There is a blog post describing how to use ASLi with Arm's v8.6-A ISA specification.
To build and run the ASL interpreter, you will need:
- OCaml version 4.09 or later
- OPAM OCaml version 2.0.5 (other versions may work)
- The following OPAM packages
- ocaml - OCaml compiler
- odoc - OCaml documentation generator (optional)
- dune - OCaml build system
- menhir - parser generator tool
- ott.0.29 - tool for defining language grammars and semantics (this version or later required)
- linenoise - OCaml line editing library
- pprint - OCaml pretty-printing library
- z3.4.7.1 - OCaml bindings for the Z3 SMT solver (exactly this version is required)
- zarith - OCaml multiprecision arithmetic library
The software is provided under the BSD-3-Clause licence. Contributions to this project are accepted under the same licence.
This software includes code from one other open source projects
-
The CIL project defines a useful visitor class for traversing C ASTs. The file
visitor.ml
is a modified copy of this class that generalizes the type to work with an arbitrary AST.CIL is distributed under a BSD-3-Clause licence.
This interpreter consists of a single directory organized as follows
- Metadata, documentation, etc:
LICENCE
- Software licenceREADME.md
- This fileMakefile
- build system file
- Source code consisting of
- Lexer
libASL/lexer.mll
- ASL lexer (ocamllex file)libASL/lexersupport.ml
- indentation-based parsing support
- Grammar and Parser
libASL/asl.ott
- used to generate the ASL parser and abstract syntax tree (OTT file)libASL/asl_visitor.ml
- code to traverse abstract syntax treelibASL/asl_utils.ml
- code to transform abstract syntax tree
- Typechecker
libASL/tcheck.ml
- typechecker
- Interpreter
libASL/primops.ml
- implementation of ASL builtin types and operationslibASL/value.ml
- interpreter support codelibASL/eval.ml
- evaluator for ASL language
- ASL standard library
libASL/prelude.asl
- builtin types and functions
- Programs
bin/asli.ml
- interactive ASL toolbin/testlexer.ml
- test program that converts ASL code to list of tokens
- Misc
libASL/utils.ml
- utility code
- Lexer
- Code copied from other open source projects
libASL/visitor.ml
Platform specific instructions:
MacOS:
brew install opam
brew install gmp mpir
Ubuntu:
sudo apt-get install opam
Platform independent instructions:
opam install ocaml.4.09.0
opam install dune
opam install menhir
opam install ott
opam install linenoise
opam install pprint
opam install z3.4.7.1
opam install zarith
# the following are optional and only needed if modifying asli code
opam install odoc
opam install ocamlformat
# On OSX, you may need to use this command to install zarith
env CFLAGS="-I$HOME/homebrew/include/" LDFLAGS="-L$HOME/homebrew/lib/" opam install zarith
eval `opam config env`
You also need to execute this command
MacOS: export DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH=`opam config var z3:lib`
Linux: export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=`opam config var z3:lib`
To build the ASL lexer and ASL interpreter, execute this command.
make install
If you get a lot of linker errors involving Z3, double-check that you installed the right version.
This displays a list of tokens in an ASL file including the indent and dedent tokens used to support indentation-based parsing.
$ dune exec bin/testlexer.exe prelude.asl
This reads ASL files specified on the command line and provides an interactive environment for executing ASL statements and expressions.
$ asli
_____ _ _ ___________________________________
/\ / ____|| | (_) ASL interpreter
/ \ | (___ | | _ Copyright Arm Limited (c) 2017-2019
/ /\ \ \___ \ | | | |
/ ____ \ ____) || |____ | | Version 0.1.1 alpha
/_/ \_\|_____/ |______||_| ___________________________________
Type :? for help
ASLi> 1+1
2
ASLi> ZeroExtend('11', 32)
'00000000000000000000000000000011'
ASLi> bits(32) x = ZeroExtend('11', 32);
ASLi> x
'00000000000000000000000000000011'
ASLi> :quit
You can download Arm's v8-A architecture specification at https://developer.arm.com/architectures/cpu-architecture/a-profile/exploration-tools. Historically, these are updated every 6 months with the latest "8.x" release released in December. You can download tools to unpack Arm's specification from https://github.com/alastairreid/mra_tools.
Clone the MRA tools release and follow the instructions to unpack Arm's specification. In the following, I will assume that this is in directory "../mra_tools".
# follow the instructions in ../mra_tools/README.md for downloading the Arm specs
make -C ../mra_tools clean
make -C ../mra_tools
make install
asli prelude.asl ../mra_tools/arch/regs.asl ../mra_tools/types.asl ../mra_tools/arch/arch.asl ../mra_tools/arch/arch_instrs.asl ../mra_tools/arch/arch_decode.asl ../mra_tools/support/aes.asl ../mra_tools/support/barriers.asl ../mra_tools/support/debug.asl ../mra_tools/support/feature.asl ../mra_tools/support/hints.asl ../mra_tools/support/interrupts.asl ../mra_tools/support/memory.asl ../mra_tools/support/stubs.asl ../mra_tools/support/fetchdecode.asl
After loading the v8.6-A architecture spec, you can configure the implementation defined behaviour, load an ELF file and run the program as follows.
:project tests/test.prj
:quit
The test program prints the line "Test" so you should see output like this
ASLi> :project tests/test.prj
Loading ELF file tests/test_O2.elf.
Entry point = 0x400168
Test
Program exited by writing ^D to TUBE
Exception taken
Enjoy!