Utility code, test suites, etc. for the compiler course.
This code will be described in the Appendix of the book.
The runtime.c
file needs to be compiled and linked with the assembly
code that your compiler produces. To compile runtime.c
, do the
following
gcc -c -g -std=c99 runtime.c
This will produce a file named runtime.o
. The -g flag is to tell the
compiler to produce debug information that you may need to use
the gdb (or lldb) debugger.
Next, suppose your compiler has translated the Racket program in file
foo.rkt
into the x86 assembly program in file foo.s
(The .s filename
extension is the standard one for assembly programs.) To produce
an executable program, you can then do
gcc -g runtime.o foo.s
which will produce the executable program named a.out.
There is an example "compiler" in the file compiler.rkt
. That
file defines two passes that translate R_0 programs to R_0 programs
and tests them using the interp-tests
function from utilities.rkt
. It
tests the passes on the three example programs in the tests
subdirectory. You may find it amusing (I did!) to insert bugs in the
compiler and see the errors reported. Note that interp-tests
does not
test the final output assembly code; you need to use compiler-tests
for that purpose. The usage of compiler-tests
is quite similar to
interp-tests
.