The original name is just too much of a mouthful.
2.7 KiB
Tooling to generate interpreters
Documentation for the instruction definitions in Python/bytecodes.c
("the DSL") is here.
What's currently here:
analyzer.py
: code for convertingAST
generated byParser
to more high-level structure for easier interactionlexer.py
: lexer for C, originally written by Mark Shannonplexer.py
: OO interface on top of lexer.py; main class:PLexer
parsing.py
: Parser for instruction definition DSL; main class:Parser
parser.py
helper for interactions withparsing.py
tierN_generator.py
: a couple of driver scripts to readPython/bytecodes.c
and writePython/generated_cases.c.h
(and several other files)optimizer_generator.py
: readsPython/bytecodes.c
andPython/optimizer_bytecodes.c
and writesPython/optimizer_cases.c.h
stack.py
: code to handle generalized stack effectscwriter.py
: code which understands tokens and how to format C code; main class:CWriter
generators_common.py
: helpers for generatorsopcode_id_generator.py
: generate a list of opcodes and write them toInclude/opcode_ids.h
opcode_metadata_generator.py
: reads the instruction definitions and write the metadata toInclude/internal/pycore_opcode_metadata.h
py_metadata_generator.py
: reads the instruction definitions and write the metadata toLib/_opcode_metadata.py
target_generator.py
: generate targets for computed goto dispatch and write them toPython/opcode_targets.h
uop_id_generator.py
: generate a list of uop IDs and write them toInclude/internal/pycore_uop_ids.h
uop_metadata_generator.py
: reads the instruction definitions and write the metadata toInclude/internal/pycore_uop_metadata.h
Note that there is some dummy C code at the top and bottom of
Python/bytecodes.c
to fool text editors like VS Code into believing this is valid C code.
A bit about the parser
The parser class uses a pretty standard recursive descent scheme,
but with unlimited backtracking.
The PLexer
class tokenizes the entire input before parsing starts.
We do not run the C preprocessor.
Each parsing method returns either an AST node (a Node
instance)
or None
, or raises SyntaxError
(showing the error in the C source).
Most parsing methods are decorated with @contextual
, which automatically
resets the tokenizer input position when None
is returned.
Parsing methods may also raise SyntaxError
, which is irrecoverable.
When a parsing method returns None
, it is possible that after backtracking
a different parsing method returns a valid AST.
Neither the lexer nor the parsers are complete or fully correct.
Most known issues are tersely indicated by # TODO:
comments.
We plan to fix issues as they become relevant.