Version 2.2.0
This project is the current reference implementation of Mu, the micro virtual machine designed by The Micro Virtual Machine Project.
Version 2.2.0 implements the current Mu Specification.
For the impatient:
- Install JDK 8. If you use Mac, download from Oracle.
- If you use Mac, install Homebrew.
- Install Scala 2.11. If you use Mac and Homebrew,
brew install scala
. - Install sbt 0.13. If you use Mac and Homebrew,
brew install sbt
. - Install Scala IDE 4.x (Eclipse with pre-installed plugins for Scala).
- Clone this repository:
git clone git@gitlab.anu.edu.au:mu/mu-impl-ref2.git
If you do not have SSH access to the ANU GitLab repositories, use the HTTPS URL:
git clone https://gitlab.anu.edu.au/mu/mu-impl-ref2.git
- In the directory
mu-impl-ref2
, do the following:
sbt update genSrc eclipse
- Open Scala IDE and import the generated project as "existing project into workspace".
Detailed guide:
The reference implementation is developed and tested with Java VM 8. You need a JRE to build the Scala/Java part, and a JDK to build the C binding.
You also need Scala 2.11 and sbt 0.13. It is recommended to install them using the package manager of your operating system or distribution (such as apt-get, yum, pacman, etc. for GNU/Linux distributions and Homebrew for Mac OS X) if such packages are available.
For Ubuntu users: Ubuntu 15.10 does not provide sbt in its repository. Please download sbt from the official sbt web site, or follow the official sbt installing guide for Linux. If you experience any "certificate" problems, this page provides a solution.
Then after cloning this repository, you can simply invoke sbt compile
to
compile this project. Or you can do it step by step:
-
To download all dependencies from the Maven central repository, invoke
sbt update
. -
To generate the Mu IR parser from the Antlr grammar, invoke
sbt genSrc
. The generated sources will be in thetarget/scala-2.11/src_managed
directory. -
To compile, invoke
sbt compile
. This will also generate the Mu IR parser using Antlr.
To generate an Eclipse project, install the sbt-eclipse
plugin and invoke sbt eclipse
.
Make sure you generate the parser (sbt genSrc
) before creating the Eclipse
project, so that the generated sources will be on the Eclipse build path.
IntelliJ IDEA has plugins for Scala and SBT. Make sure you don't commit .idea
or generated project files into the repository.
The C binding is in the cbinding
directory. Just run make
inside cbinding
.
The Python binding is in the pythonbinding
directory. It depends on the C
binding, so make sure you make the C binding first. The Python binding does not
need to be built.
See the README.md
files in cbinding
and pythonbinding
for more details.
There is a sample factorial program (generously provided by @johnjiabinzhang) in
the src/test
directory. To run the program with all dependencies on the
classpath, you need to run it with sbt. Invoke sbt
to enter the interactive
shell. Then type:
set fork := true
test:runMain junks.FactorialFromRPython
or directly from the command line:
sbt 'set fork:=true' 'test:runMain junks.FactorialFromRPython'
fork := true
tells sbt to run the program in a different process than the one
running sbt itself.
This reference implementation aims to be easy to work with, but does not have high performance. It may be used by client writers to evaluate the Mu micro VM, and may also be used by Mu micro VM implementers as a reference to compare with.
The micro VM is implemented as an interpreter written in Scala. The main class
is uvm.refimpl.MicroVM
, which implements the MuVM
struct specified by the
client API, but is
more Scala-like. The client interacts with the micro VM via uvm.refimpl.MuCtx
instances created by the MicroVM
instance, which corresponds to the MuCtx
struct in the spec. uvm.refimpl.MuValue
and its subclasses implement the
MuValue
handles, but has a real Scala type hierarchy and does extra type
checking when converting, which is not required by the spec.
The client can also be written in C, Python or other languages that can interface with C.
It uses green threads to execute multiple Mu threads and uses a round-robin scheduler: the interpreter iterates over all active threads, executes one instruction for each active thread, then repeat this process. However, the whole Scala-based program itself is not thread safe. Do not run multiple JVM or native threads. This means, you can still experiment with concurrent Mu programs, but there are some corner cases that do not work in this refimpl. For example:
-
Waiting for other Mu threads in the trap handler. The trap handler is executed by the same thread executing the Mu IR. During trap handler, no Mu program is executed. So if you want to use watchpoints to wait for certain Mu thread to come to a certain rendezvous point (a common optimisation trick), you should either wait within Mu IR (not in trap handlers) or try the high-performance Mu implementation which is still being written.
-
Synchronising with concurrent native programs via pointers, atomic memory access and futex. This is the realistic way for Mu to synchronise with native programs or foreign languages, but this refimpl implements atomic memory access as not-atomic (since it uses green thread) and implements futex in Scala (since it has its own scheduler).
The MicroVM instance will not start executing unless its execute()
method is
called. This method is specific to this implementation, and is not defined in
the specification. This also means the client cannot run concurrently with the
MicroVM, i.e. once started, the client can only intervene in the execution in
trap handlers. So a common use pattern is:
val microVM = new MicroVM()
val uir = myCompiler.compile(sourceCode)
val ctx = microVM.newContext()
ctx.loadBundle(uir)
microVM.setTrapHandler(theTrapHandler) // Set the trap handler so the client
// can talk with the VM when trapped.
val stack = ctx.newStack(theMainFunction)
val thread = ctx.newThread(stack, Seq(params, to, the, main, function))
microVM.execute() // The current JVM thread will run on behalf of the MicroVM.
// This blocks until all Mu threads stop.
// However, MicroVM will call theTrapHandler.
Only the text-based IR and HAIL are implemented. The binary-based IR and HAIL script do not have high priority at this point, because our current focus is to implement a correct Mu VM and the text-based IR is easier for debugging. IR parsing is also not yet known as the bottleneck.
This reference implementation has an exact tracing garbage collector with a mark-region small object space and a mark-sweep large object space.
-
Many undefined behaviours in the specification will raise
UvmRuntimeException
, such as division by zero, going below the last frame of a stack, accessing a NULL reference, etc. But this behaviour is not guaranteed. -
int<n>
for n = 1 to 64 are implemented.vec<T n>
is implemented for all T that are int, float or double, and all n >= 1. However, only 8, 16, 32, 64-bit integers, float, double,vec<int<32> 4>
,vec<float 4>
andvec<double 2>
can be loaded or stored from the memory. -
The tagged reference type
tagref64
is fully implemented. -
Out-of-memory errors will terminate the VM rather than letting the Mu IR handle such failures via the exception clauses.
This reference implementation assumes it is running on x86-64 on either Linux or OSX. It implements the AMD64 Unix Native Interface of the specification. It can call native functions from Mu IR and let native programs call back to Mu IR.
It does not support throwing Mu exceptions into native programs, or handing C++-based exceptions.
This project is created by Kunshan Wang, Yi Lin, Steve Blackburn, Antony Hosking, Michael Norrish.
This project is released under the CC-BY-SA license. See LICENSE
.
Kunshan Wang kunshan.wang@anu.edu.au