eclair-lang
kaleidoscope
eclair-lang | kaleidoscope | |
---|---|---|
4 | 9 | |
192 | 1,017 | |
- | - | |
8.4 | 0.0 | |
4 months ago | about 4 years ago | |
Haskell | Haskell | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | MIT License |
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eclair-lang
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Should I abandon using haskell for my compiler?
/u/ltielen's Éclair language targets LLVM and is actively maintained, so I'd look at that implementation's LLVM setup.
- An experimental and minimal Datalog implementation that compiles down to LLVM
- [Hacktoberfest] Beginner-friendly Haskell contributions
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Efficient logic programming in Haskell?
For these reasons I've been building eclair, which is another high performance Datalog compiler written in Haskell, that compiles to LLVM, and is also based on Souffle. So far it is still in a fairly early stage, but I'm making progress. :)
kaleidoscope
- Implementing a JIT Compiled Language with Haskell and LLVM (2017)
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Should I abandon using haskell for my compiler?
Comparing the haskell and cpp implementations of the LLVM tutorial lead me to believe it might be faster to learn haskell and implement the compiler in haskell than to implement it in cpp.
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What would be your programming language of choice to implement a JIT compiler ?
I think for writing compilers Haskell deserves to make the list. It is really excellent at creating DSLs. https://www.stephendiehl.com/llvm/
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Proposal to Merge Pyston with Cpython
I'm no expert, but you might be interested in: https://llvm.org/docs/tutorial/
There's also a Haskell version if you'd prefer: https://www.stephendiehl.com/llvm/
Idk how to do this in python as I'm not really good with it, but in C, to make your compiler a JIT, you would `mmap` a region as writeable, write the machine code to it that you already know how to generate, `mprotect` it as PROT_EXEC instead of PROC_WRITE, cast the pointer to the region to a function pointer, and then call it. These functions may be available in the python sys package but I don't really know.
I've implemented a "JIT" that takes machine code as hex and does this. Warning: it's complete garbage with no error checking but is a good proof of concept. https://gist.github.com/martinjacobd/3ee56f3c7b7ce621034ec3e...
- Why does Rust have parameters on impl?
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Implementing a LLVM Micro C compiler in Haskell
This is amazing. I tried following Stephen Diehl's JIT compiler in LLVM tutorial[0] a few years ago but it was already outdated (the llvm-hs library changed quite a bit), and subsequent web searches didn't turn up much.
For those interested in tutorials like this, I'd also recommend a very literate Haskell compiler for the PCF language to C[1], which is essentially lambda calculus with some primitives.
[0] https://www.stephendiehl.com/llvm/
[1] https://github.com/jozefg/pcf/
- Resources for Amateur Compiler Writers
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Need some help with monad transformers
I'm currently working with llvm-hs-pure and am struggling to properly emit code for a module. I basically followed https://www.stephendiehl.com/llvm/#chapter-3-code-generation and have types like:
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Advanced books / tutorials about Haskell?
http://www.stephendiehl.com/llvm/ Implementing a JIT Compiled Language with Haskell and LLVM Nice tutorial. Requires knowledge of monads, applicatives, transformers. Deep enough and more or less 'real world'.
What are some alternatives?
souffle-haskell - Haskell bindings for the Souffle datalog language
hyper-haskell-server - The strongly hyped Haskell interpreter.
eclair-haskell - Haskell bindings for Eclair Datalog
dhall - Maintainable configuration files
guanxi - Relational programming in Haskell. Mostly developed on twitch.
unbound - Replib: generic programming & Unbound: generic treatment of binders
llvm-hs - Haskell bindings for LLVM
ajhc - A fork of jhc. And also a Haskell compiler.
streamly - High performance, concurrent functional programming abstractions
pcf - A small compiler for PCF
llvm-codegen - LLVM code generation in Haskell
egison - The Egison Programming Language