bfc-rs
customasm
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bfc-rs | customasm | |
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1 | 10 | |
4 | 678 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 7.8 | |
about 3 years ago | 3 months ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
bfc-rs
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What's everyone working on this week (1/2021)?
Finished BFC-RS, an optimizing Brainfuck compiler I've already made a post about here. There's still more stuff that could be done, but I've decided to call it a day since I'm not going to have the time to develop it anytime soon. Contributions are welcome, though.
customasm
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I was making adder circuits in games 8 years ago in an attempt to build a computer. I finally worked my way up and built a working computer!
also if you start writing programs for your own CPUs, use something like CustomASM so you don't have to write in machine code.
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Vending Machine - FPGA
either way if you plan on doing more CPUs and similar in the future i highly recommend CustomASM.
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My 8-bit cpu running at full speed
The source code was in Python. I was able to debug it using Arduino-based adapter and (by using some "magic") translate into machine code binary. Since then I've switched to CustomAsm for code compilation and have other means to debug (emulator and debugger tool).
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Today I finished the RAM module for my 16-bit breadboard computer!
anyways, it might be a good idea to throw the entire project on Github once it's done. stuff like schematics, BOM, details about the function of the CPU, maybe an Assembler (CustomASM is pretty good), also maybe a simulator version in something like Digital or Logisim so that people can look at it, write programs, or rebuild it with different parts and such
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I was wanting an assembler I can use with my breadboard CPU, but the only one that allowed custom ISAs is Windows only. So, I created my own assembler with Python for custom ISAs, and included a configuration file for the original instruction set of Ben Easter's SAP-1. Still a bit rough, but usable.
I used https://github.com/hlorenzi/customasm along with info from https://www.reddit.com/r/beneater/comments/cori8t/custom_asm_compiler_definition/
What are some alternatives?
bespokeasm - An assembler that works with custom instruction sets.
logisim-evolution - Digital logic designer and simulator
lam - :rocket: a lightweight, universal actor-model vm for writing scalable and reliable applications that run natively and on WebAssembly
Digital - A digital logic designer and circuit simulator.
riscv-asm - risc-v assembly language
rustwasmc - Tool for building Rust functions for Node.js. Combine the performance of Rust, safety and portability of WebAssembly, and ease of use of JavaScript.
java-2-times-faster-than-c - An inquiry into nondogmatic software development. An experiment showing double performance of the code running on JVM comparing to equivalent native C code.
8-bit-CPU - Homebrew 8-bit CPU
wavm - Wait, another virtual machine ?
bmos - Operating system that brings native support for running bm programs
bfloader - 🧠Brainfuck IDE and interpreter in 512 bytes. (boot sector)
rust-aluvm - Rust implementation of AluVM (RISC functional machine)