An Emacs with a JIT compiler for Emacs Lisp based on libjit. It improves the performance of lisp/raytracer.el by about 25%.
Work in progress. Latent bugs and emacs will not build with full JIT'ing enabled yet.
Provides a new function 'jit-compile' that takes a function symbol or a lambda expression as an argument that will jit compile the function.
To enable complete JIT'ing of all Emacs Lisp bytecode (here be dragons), uncomment the 'jit_hotspot_compile' lines in src/eval.c.
- Build and install libjit from git:
git clone git://git.savannah.gnu.org/libjit.git ...
- Build emacs as usual:
./configure ... && make && make install
I did this work back in 2012, so this is an old emacs version and does not easily port forward. It is publshed as an example showing how to create a JIT compiler for Emacs Lisp using a technicque i call 'compiling down the spine'.
The compiler removes the overhead of the jump table used to dispatch the byte code operations by encapsulating bytecode functionality into individual functions and converting the bytecode into a linear array of function calls, precomputing and moving the dispatch overhead a level of abstration down into the processor rather than in software.
A byte compiled function that is jit-compiled has it's code vector replaced with a new one containing a single bytecode instruction Bjitcall followed by the JIT compiled code vector.
The JIT is currently 'working' when used on individual functions with M-x jit-compile, enough to run the raytracer in lisp/raytracer.el. If the 'hotspot' (WIP) compiler is enabled by default (see src/eval.c at jit_hotspot_bytecode) emacs will not build fully, so there are still lurking bugs in the implementation that need to be squashed.
The 'hotspot' compiler is anything but; it simply compiles the bytecode on first run for every evaluated piece of code and is a placeholder for a potential real hotspot compiler in the future.
src/bytecode-jit.c: the JIT compiler, included by bytecode.c
src/bytecode.c: minor modifications, original code sources for most of bytecode-jit.c
src/eval.c: where the call to the 'hotspot' compiler has been placed, search for jit_hotspot_compile to enable it and watch the emacs build fail during bytecode compilation.
lisp/raytracer.el: a raytracer in Emacs Lisp used to benchmark the JIT compiler raytracer.sh
lisp/emacs-lisp/byte-comp.el
configure.ac: check for libjit
-- Burton Samograd burton.samograd@gmail.com 2016