README ------ This compiler is a big long chain of modules that transform L5 code into x86_64 assembly. Here is a breakdown of the modules and changes from L5: * The parser. The parser was mainly brought in from lab 4, and mainly just a straight-forward extension of the L4 parser to have increments, decrements, conditionals, and hex constants. * AST utilities were updated to use the new temp typing system. * Temporaries now are the only source of sizing information until we hit the stage at which point instructions are generated. At that point, instructions get sizing info, too, but really, that's about it. * The typechecker was mostly unchanged. * The translator was changed to use the new sizing system. Of interest, the 'safe' alloc routine and the 'safe' dereference routines have been moved into the IR stage, as opposed to having custom instructions generated for them at the munch stage. This was done with the addition of the 'stmvar' IR function, which is equivalent to the GCC C extension: ({ stm; stm; ... expr }) in that it evaluates the statements first, then returns the evaluation of the expression. * The munch modules were updated to remove a lot of their suck and make them correct again. Specifically, they were updated to use the new typing system and perform type inference of sorts (i.e. adding a quadword base pointer and a long offset yields a quad, etc.). This is far superior to the previous sizing method, in which we gave some loose (and disgusting) annotations of size and left the final sizing decisions to the stringifier (O.o). * The liveness analyzer was mainly unchanged. * The grapher was fully unchanged. Nice. * The color orderer was optimized a bit. * The coloring module was fully unchanged. Nice. * The solidifier was similarly ripped out and hit by the diqing beam, sent on a flight to Diqing airport, which is in Diqing which is in the Diqing province in China, and subsequently it was diqed. It is now much happier. * The peepholer has been moved into the optimization framework. * An optimization framework was added, allowing optimizers to be individually turned off from the command line with approximately no work on our part. I'm particularly proud of the simplicity with which it allows one to write optimizations; see optimize/feckful.sml. They need only be hooked in one place (in particular, in a list at the top of top.sml). Individual optimizations will be discussed in the paper to be handed in tomorrow. * The stringifier is of no interest to you, for it does real things that interact with the real world, and that is not of interest to people who write in ML. We believe that it is fully functional. We generate correct code whenever we are supposed to, and we pass every test that we can lay our hands on (including all of the regression suite). There are a number of optimizations that we wish to do, especially various interprocedural ones, but we ran out of time.