retroforth/literate/Nga.md
crc 651e4e8a5e update (c) year in literate files
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2019-01-03 14:13:05 +00:00

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Nga

Overview

Nga is a minimalistic virtual machine emulating a dual stack computer with a simple instruction set.

This is the specification and reference implementation of Nga. All code provided is in the C language.

Quick Overview of the VM Model

Memory is a single, linear addressing space of signed integer values. Each location is called a cell. Addressing starts at zero and counts up.

The VM does not expose any registers via the instruction set. This implementation makes use of an instruction pointer or IP, data stack pointer or SP, and address stack pointer or RP.

Nga provides two LIFO stacks. The primary one is for data and the secondary one is used to hold return addresses for subroutine calls. Stack depths may vary depending on the underlying hardware and application needs.

Instructions each take one cell. The LIT instruction requires a value in the following cell; it will push this value to the stack when executed.

Instruction processing: the IP is incremented and the opcode at the current address is invoked. This process then repeats. Execution ends if the END instruction is run or end of memory is reached.

Endian: the image files are stored in little endian format.

I/O is not specified, but Nga does provide for adding this in a modular manner, using three instructions to enumerate, query, and interact with any devices provided.

Nga derives from my earlier work on Ngaro. The following block lists the people who helped work on the C implementation.

/* Nga ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
   Copyright (c) 2008 - 2019, Charles Childers
   Copyright (c) 2009 - 2010, Luke Parrish
   Copyright (c) 2010,        Marc Simpson
   Copyright (c) 2010,        Jay Skeer
   Copyright (c) 2011,        Kenneth Keating
   ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ */

Boilerplate

Since the code is in C, we have to include some headers.

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdint.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <string.h>

Nga uses a call table for dispatching instruction handlers. I define a type for this here, before starting the actual code.

typedef void (*Handler)(void);

Configuration

To make it easier to adapt Nga to a specific target, we keep some important constants grouped together at the start of the file.

These defaults are targeted towards a 32-bit model, with several megabytes of RAM.

For smaller targets, drop the IMAGE_SIZE considerably as that's the biggest pool of memory needed. Alternately, for use on machines with plenty of RAM, consider increasing these and reaping the benefits of a much larger memory and stack space.

#define CELL         int32_t
#define IMAGE_SIZE   524288 * 16
#define ADDRESSES    2048
#define STACK_DEPTH  512
#define NUM_DEVICES  0

Numbering The Instructions

For this implementation an enum is used to name each of the instructions. For reference, here are the instructions and their corresponding values (in decimal):

0  nop      7  jump      14  gt        21  and      28  io query
1  lit <v>  8  call      15  fetch     22  or       29  io interact
2  dup      9  ccall     16  store     23  xor
3  drop    10  return    17  add       24  shift
4  swap    11  eq        18  sub       25  zret
5  push    12  neq       19  mul       26  end
6  pop     13  lt        20  divmod    27  io enumerate
enum vm_opcode {
  VM_NOP,  VM_LIT,    VM_DUP,   VM_DROP,    VM_SWAP,   VM_PUSH,  VM_POP,
  VM_JUMP, VM_CALL,   VM_CCALL, VM_RETURN,  VM_EQ,     VM_NEQ,   VM_LT,
  VM_GT,   VM_FETCH,  VM_STORE, VM_ADD,     VM_SUB,    VM_MUL,   VM_DIVMOD,
  VM_AND,  VM_OR,     VM_XOR,   VM_SHIFT,   VM_ZRET,   VM_END,   VM_IO_ENUM,
  VM_IO_QUERY,        VM_IO_INTERACT
};
#define NUM_OPS VM_IO_INTERACT + 1

VM State

The VM state is held in a few global variables. (It'd be better to use a struct here, as Ngaro does, but this makes everything else a bit less readable.)

Some things to note:

The data stack (data), address stack (address), and memory (memory) are simple linear arrays.

There are stack pointers (sp for data and rp for address), and an instruction pointer (ip). These are not exposed via the instruction set.

CELL sp, rp, ip;
CELL data[STACK_DEPTH];
CELL address[ADDRESSES];
CELL memory[IMAGE_SIZE + 1];

For I/O devices, create the dispatch tables.

Handler IO_deviceHandlers[NUM_DEVICES + 1];
Handler IO_queryHandlers[NUM_DEVICES + 1];

A Little More Boilerplate

Here we have a few bits of shorthand that'll be handled by the C preprocessor. These are used for readability purposes.

#define TOS  data[sp]
#define NOS  data[sp-1]
#define TORS address[rp]

Loading an Image File

A standard image file is a raw memory dump of signed integer values. (The size of these is determined by the value of CELL; Nga defaults to 32-bit)

What we do here is:

  • attempt to open the file
  • use fseek() and ftell() to find the length of the file.
  • divide the length by the size of a cell to determine the number of cells
  • read the cells into memory (image)
  • return the size of the data read (in bytes)
CELL ngaLoadImage(char *imageFile) {
  FILE *fp;
  CELL imageSize;
  long fileLen;

  if ((fp = fopen(imageFile, "rb")) != NULL) {
    /* Determine length (in cells) */
    fseek(fp, 0, SEEK_END);
    fileLen = ftell(fp) / sizeof(CELL);
    rewind(fp);

    /* Read the file into memory */
    imageSize = fread(&memory, sizeof(CELL), fileLen, fp);
    fclose(fp);
  }
  else {
    printf("Unable to find the ngaImage!\n");
    exit(1);
  }
  return imageSize;
}

Preparations

This function initializes all of the variables and fills the arrays with known values. Memory is filled with VM_NOP instructions; the others are populated with zeros.

void ngaPrepare() {
  ip = sp = rp = 0;

  for (ip = 0; ip < IMAGE_SIZE; ip++)
    memory[ip] = VM_NOP;

  for (ip = 0; ip < STACK_DEPTH; ip++)
    data[ip] = 0;

  for (ip = 0; ip < ADDRESSES; ip++)
    address[ip] = 0;
}

The Instructions

I've chosen to implement each instruction as a separate function. This keeps them shorter, and lets me simplify the instruction processor later on.

The NOP instruction does nothing.

void inst_nop() {
}

LIT is a special case: it's followed by a value to push to the stack. This needs to increment the sp and ip and push the value at the incremented ip to the stack.

void inst_lit() {
  sp++;
  ip++;
  TOS = memory[ip];
}

DUP duplicates the top item on the stack.

void inst_dup() {
  sp++;
  data[sp] = NOS;
}

DROP removes the top item from the stack.

void inst_drop() {
  data[sp] = 0;
   if (--sp < 0)
     ip = IMAGE_SIZE;
}

SWAP switches the top and second items on the stack.

void inst_swap() {
  CELL a;
  a = TOS;
  TOS = NOS;
  NOS = a;
}

PUSH moves the top value from the data stack to the address stack.

void inst_push() {
  rp++;
  TORS = TOS;
  inst_drop();
}

POP moves the top item on the address stack to the data stack.

void inst_pop() {
  sp++;
  TOS = TORS;
  rp--;
}

JUMP moves execution to the address on the top of the stack.

void inst_jump() {
  ip = TOS - 1;
  inst_drop();
}

CALL calls a subroutine at the address on the top of the stack.

void inst_call() {
  rp++;
  TORS = ip;
  ip = TOS - 1;
  inst_drop();
}

CCALL is a conditional call. It takes two values: a flag and a pointer for an address to jump to if the flag is true.

A false flag is zero. Any other value is true.

Example:

:t
  lit 100
  return
:f
  lit 200
  return
:main
  lit 1
  lit 2
  eq
  lit t
  ccall
  li f
  call
end
void inst_ccall() {
  CELL a, b;
  a = TOS; inst_drop();  /* False */
  b = TOS; inst_drop();  /* Flag  */
  if (b != 0) {
    rp++;
    TORS = ip;
    ip = a - 1;
  }
}

RETURN ends a subroutine and returns flow to the instruction following the last CALL or CCALL.

void inst_return() {
  ip = TORS;
  rp--;
}

EQ compares two values for equality and returns a flag.

void inst_eq() {
  NOS = (NOS == TOS) ? -1 : 0;
  inst_drop();
}

NEQ compares two values for inequality and returns a flag.

void inst_neq() {
  NOS = (NOS != TOS) ? -1 : 0;
  inst_drop();
}

LT compares two values for less than and returns a flag.

void inst_lt() {
  NOS = (NOS < TOS) ? -1 : 0;
  inst_drop();
}

GT compares two values for greater than and returns a flag.

void inst_gt() {
  NOS = (NOS > TOS) ? -1 : 0;
  inst_drop();
}

FETCH takes an address and returns the value stored there.

This doubles as a means of introspection into the VM state. Negative addresses correspond to VM queries:

Address Returns
-1 Data stack depth
-2 Address stack depth
-3 Maximum Image Size

An implementation may use negative values below -100 for implementation specific inquiries.

void inst_fetch() {
  switch (TOS) {
    case -1: TOS = sp - 1; break;
    case -2: TOS = rp; break;
    case -3: TOS = IMAGE_SIZE; break;
    default: TOS = memory[TOS]; break;
  }
}

STORE stores a value into an address.

void inst_store() {
  memory[TOS] = NOS;
  inst_drop();
  inst_drop();
}

ADD adds two numbers together.

void inst_add() {
  NOS += TOS;
  inst_drop();
}

SUB subtracts two numbers.

void inst_sub() {
  NOS -= TOS;
  inst_drop();
}

MUL multiplies two numbers.

void inst_mul() {
  NOS *= TOS;
  inst_drop();
}

DIVMOD divides and returns the quotient and remainder.

void inst_divmod() {
  CELL a, b;
  a = TOS;
  b = NOS;
  TOS = b / a;
  NOS = b % a;
}

AND performs a bitwise AND operation.

+----------------+
| Before | After |
| ------ | ----- |
| -1     | -1    |
| -1     |       |
+----------------+

+----------------+
| Before | After |
| ------ | ----- |
|  0     |  0    |
| -1     |       |
+----------------+

+----------------+
| Before | After |
| ------ | ----- |
| -1     |  0    |
|  0     |       |
+----------------+
void inst_and() {
  NOS = TOS & NOS;
  inst_drop();
}

OR performs a bitwise OR operation.

+----------------+
| Before | After |
| ------ | ----- |
| -1     | -1    |
| -1     |       |
+----------------+

+----------------+
| Before | After |
| ------ | ----- |
| -1     | -1    |
|  0     |       |
+----------------+

+----------------+
| Before | After |
| ------ | ----- |
|  0     | -1    |
| -1     |       |
+----------------+

+----------------+
| Before | After |
| ------ | ----- |
|  0     |  0    |
|  0     |       |
+----------------+
void inst_or() {
  NOS = TOS | NOS;
  inst_drop();
}

XOR performs a bitwise XOR operation.

+----------------+
| Before | After |
| ------ | ----- |
| -1     |  0    |
| -1     |       |
+----------------+

+----------------+
| Before | After |
| ------ | ----- |
|  0     | -1    |
| -1     |       |
+----------------+

+----------------+
| Before | After |
| ------ | ----- |
| -1     | -1    |
|  0     |       |
+----------------+

+----------------+
| Before | After |
| ------ | ----- |
|  0     |  0    |
|  0     |       |
+----------------+
void inst_xor() {
  NOS = TOS ^ NOS;
  inst_drop();
}

SHIFT performs a bitwise arithmetic SHIFT operation.

This takes two values:

xy

And returns a single one:

z

If y is positive, this shifts right. If negative, it shifts left.

void inst_shift() {
  CELL y = TOS;
  CELL x = NOS;
  if (TOS < 0)
    NOS = NOS << (TOS * -1);
  else {
    if (x < 0 && y > 0)
      NOS = x >> y | ~(~0U >> y);
    else
      NOS = x >> y;
  }
  inst_drop();
}

ZRET returns from a subroutine if the top item on the stack is zero. If not, it acts like a NOP instead.

void inst_zret() {
  if (TOS == 0) {
    inst_drop();
    ip = TORS;
    rp--;
  }
}

END tells Nga that execution should end.

void inst_end() {
  ip = IMAGE_SIZE;
}

I/O ENUMERATE pushes a value to the stack indicating the number of provided devices.

void inst_ie() {
  sp++;
  TOS = NUM_DEVICES;
}

I/O QUERY takes a value and returns two. The top stack item is an identifer for the type of device attached. The second indicates a device specific version number.

void inst_iq() {
  CELL Device = TOS;
  inst_drop();
  IO_queryHandlers[Device]();
}

I/O INTERACT takes a value indicating the desired device and performs an action with the device.

void inst_ii() {
  CELL Device = TOS;
  inst_drop();
  IO_deviceHandlers[Device]();
}

Instruction Handler

In the past I handled the instructions via a big switch. With Nga, I changed this to use a jump table. This is significantly more concise and makes maintenance easier overall.

So first up, the jump table itself. Just a list of pointers to the instruction implementations, in the proper order.

Handler instructions[NUM_OPS] = {
  inst_nop, inst_lit, inst_dup, inst_drop, inst_swap, inst_push, inst_pop,
  inst_jump, inst_call, inst_ccall, inst_return, inst_eq, inst_neq, inst_lt,
  inst_gt, inst_fetch, inst_store, inst_add, inst_sub, inst_mul, inst_divmod,
  inst_and, inst_or, inst_xor, inst_shift, inst_zret, inst_end, inst_ie,
  inst_iq, inst_ii
};

And now ngaProcessOpcode() which calls the functions in the jump table.

void ngaProcessOpcode(CELL opcode) {
  instructions[opcode]();
}

Nga also allows (optionally) support for packing multiple instructions per cell. This has benefits on memory constained targets as four instructions can be packed into each cell, reducing memory usage significantly.

Consider:

lit 100
lit 200
add

In a standard image this will be five cells. One for each instruction and one for each data item. With packed instructions it would be three cells: one for each four instructions (we only have three here, so the unused one is a simple NOP) and one for each data item.

This implementation provides two functions for handling these. The first takes a packed instruction and validates each instruction as being valid. The second will process each of the stored opcodes.

Note for those using this: packing should stop when instructions that modify the IP for flow control are used. These are:

  • JUMP
  • CCALL
  • CALL
  • RET
  • ZRET

Nga will not stop processing code, but execution flow errors may arise if the packing tool does not take these into account.

int ngaValidatePackedOpcodes(CELL opcode) {
  CELL raw = opcode;
  CELL current;
  int valid = -1;
  int i;
  for (i = 0; i < 4; i++) {
    current = raw & 0xFF;
    if (!(current >= 0 && current <= 29))
      valid = 0;
    raw = raw >> 8;
  }
  return valid;
}

void ngaProcessPackedOpcodes(CELL opcode) {
  CELL raw = opcode;
  int i;
  for (i = 0; i < 4; i++) {
    ngaProcessOpcode(raw & 0xFF);
    raw = raw >> 8;
  }
}

Nga is intended to be used as a part of a larger environment adding host-specific I/O and functionality. For testing purposes, it is possible to run non-interactive images by building defining STANDALONE when compiling this source. A sample main() is included below showing how to use this.

#ifdef STANDALONE
int main(int argc, char **argv) {
  ngaPrepare();
  if (argc == 2)
      ngaLoadImage(argv[1]);
  else
      ngaLoadImage("ngaImage");

  CELL opcode, i;

  ip = 0;
  while (ip < IMAGE_SIZE) {
    opcode = memory[ip];
    if (ngaValidatePackedOpcodes(opcode) != 0) {
      ngaProcessPackedOpcodes(opcode);
    } else if (opcode >= 0 && opcode < 27) {
      ngaProcessOpcode(opcode);
    } else {
      printf("Invalid instruction!\n");
      printf("At %d, opcode %d\n", ip, opcode);
      exit(1);
    }
    ip++;
  }

  for (i = 1; i <= sp; i++)
    printf("%d ", data[i]);
  printf("\n");
  exit(0);
}
#endif