Commit graph

11 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
09f7df79bb apfl_debug_print_val: Use format writer abstraction 2022-06-05 22:06:33 +02:00
bb89b2ae49 Add constant string values 2022-04-23 22:15:10 +02:00
d1b2ba7a53 Use formatter for printing values 2022-04-22 23:13:01 +02:00
90a80152e1 Implement mark&sweep garbage collection and bytecode compilation
Instead of the previous refcount base garbage collection, we're now using
a basic tri-color mark&sweep collector. This is done to support cyclical
value relationships in the future (functions can form cycles, all values
implemented up to this point can not).

The collector maintains a set of roots and a set of objects (grouped into
blocks). The GC enabled objects are no longer allocated manually, but will
be allocated by the GC. The GC also wraps an allocator, this way the GC
knows, if we ran out of memory and will try to get out of this situation by
performing a full collection cycle.

The tri-color abstraction was chosen for two reasons:

- We don't have to maintain a list of objects that need to be marked, we
  can simply grab the next grey one.
- It should allow us to later implement incremental collection (right now
  we only do a stop-the-world collection).

This also switches to a bytecode based evaluation of the code: We no longer
directly evaluate the AST, but first compile it into a series of
instructions, that are evaluated in a separate step. This was done in
preparation for inplementing functions: We only need to turn a function
body into instructions instead of evaluating the node again with each call
of the function. Also, since an instruction list is implemented as a GC
object, this then removes manual memory management of the function body and
it's child nodes. Since the GC and the bytecode go hand in hand, this was
done in one (giant) commit.

As a downside, we've now lost the ability do do list matching on
assignments. I've already started to work on implementing this in the new
architecture, but left it out of this commit, as it's already quite a large
commit :)
2022-04-11 22:24:22 +02:00
d86c9375a4 Shorter name for internal enum apfl_value_type 2022-02-10 21:56:48 +01:00
dd314c5abb Shorter name for internal enum get_item_result 2022-02-10 21:56:30 +01:00
ebf3fc89ff Introduce allocator abstraction
We now no longer call malloc/free/... directly, but use an allocator object
that is passed around.

This was mainly done as a preparation for a garbage collector: The
collector will need to know, how much memory we're using, introducing the
collector abstraction will allow the GC to hook into the memory allocation
and observe the memory usage.

This has other potential applications:

- We could now be embedded into applications that can't use the libc
  allocator.
- There could be an allocator that limits the total amount of used memory,
  e.g. for sandboxing purposes.
- In our tests we could use this to simulate out of memory conditions
  (implement an allocator that fails at the n-th allocation, increase n by
  one and restart the test until there are no more faked OOM conditions).

The function signature of the allocator is basically exactly the same as
the one Lua uses.
2022-02-08 22:53:13 +01:00
ad80ff8f85 Remove dead code 2022-02-08 21:42:54 +01:00
21efc85dba Convert to Lua-style stack API
Only for evaluating expressions for now and right now the only exposed
operation is to debug print a value on the stack, this obviously needs to
be expanded.

I've done this for two reasons:

1. A Lua-style stack API is much nicer to work with than to manually manage
   refcounts.
2. We'll soon need a more sophisticated garbage collector (if you even want
   to count the refcounting as garbage collection). For this, the GC will
   need root objects to start tracing for live objects, the stack will be
   one of these roots.
2022-01-20 22:45:09 +01:00
649607ce50 Start work on evaluating expressions
Right now we're only evaluating bool/nil/number/string/list literals, but
it's a start :).
2022-01-02 17:22:22 +01:00
d094ed7bd5 Initial commit 2021-12-15 21:47:17 +01:00