Skip to content
/ lbf Public

The BF language, as a JIT compiler using Lightning

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

pete/lbf

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

Jul 12, 2017
a161d8b · Jul 12, 2017

History

10 Commits
Nov 1, 2009
Nov 1, 2009
Nov 1, 2009
Nov 1, 2009
Nov 1, 2009
Nov 1, 2009
Jul 12, 2017
Nov 1, 2009
Nov 1, 2009
Nov 1, 2009
Nov 1, 2009
Nov 1, 2009
Nov 1, 2009
Nov 1, 2009
Nov 1, 2009
Nov 1, 2009
Nov 1, 2009
Nov 1, 2009

Repository files navigation

= LightningBF

It's an implementation of the language whose name is not to be mentioned
in polite company.  You know the one.  There's a nice article about it
here:  http://esoteric.voxelperfect.net/wiki/BF , which provides a few
trivial sample snippets, and links to more code, including decidedly
non-trivial programs.

A few small examples that were used to test the implementation are in
the bf/ subdirectory.

= For the already-initiated
If you already know all you need to know about that language, then the
summary on the open-to-interpretation parts are as follows:
	* The pointer doesn't wrap, so you can segfault if you aren't
	  careful.
	* You get 640 * 2^10 cells.  640k ought to be enough for
	  anybody.
	* EOF on read() is a zero byte.
	* Characters that are not one of the 8 BF commands are ignored.
And then you can skip the rest, unless you're one of the uninitiated.

= A simple description of the language
You get an array of cells, all one byte in size, and all initialized to
zero.  You also get a pointer, and it starts at the first cell.

It has 8 commands, and that's all it does:

	+	Increments the current cell by 1.
	-	Decrements the current cell by 1.
	>	Move the pointer to the next cell.
	<	Move the pointer to the previous cell.
	[	If the current cell is 0, skip to the matching ].
	]	If the current cell is non-zero, jump to the matching [.
	,	Read a byte from stdin into the current cell.
	.	Print the byte in the current cell to stdout.

The 8 commands are roughly equivalent to the following C code:

	+	*ptr++;
	-	*ptr--;
	>	ptr++;
	<	ptr--;
	[	while(*ptr) {
	]	}
	,	*ptr = 0; read(0, ptr, 1);
	.	write(1, ptr, 1);

In fact, that's (roughly) how they're implemented.  And after all of
that, you have a fun, esoteric (but Turing-complete) language.

= Implementation
The basic process the compiler goes through is to read the input file,
one byte at a time, generate one batch of machine-language instructions
for each valid input character, and when it's done, execute the
generated machine code.

The reason LightningBF was implemented to begin with was so that I could
play around a little more with GNU Lightning.  The name isn't meant to
imply that the compiler is fast or generates fast code; it just uses
Lightning.

It's not very well documented, but should serve as a fairly simple
introduction to Lightning if you have a reference ready.  (Also, I found
the current version of lightning to be a little hard to locate, and 1.2
is a fairly old release (no x86-64!), so you may find this link helpful:
http://savannah.gnu.org/git/?group=lightning .)

In fact, the compiler is fairly trivial.  It's a fairly straightforward,
easy to read implementation of a JIT-compiler for the language, and
absolutely zero optimization is performed.  (Some low-hanging
optimization fruit:  strings of +s or -s could, instead of
load/inc-or-dec-by-1/store, be done with only one load, an increment or
a decrement by the number of +s or -s, and one store.)

= License
Public domain.  It's trivial code.  I wrote it to get a little more
familiar with Lightning.

A copy of Lightning is distributed along with this code.  Its license is
the LGPL, and a copy of the LGPL and the GPL is in the lightning
directory.

About

The BF language, as a JIT compiler using Lightning

Topics

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published