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chibicc-riscv

This is a fork of rui314/chibicc ported to RISC-V assembly. The commit history of this project is almost the same as the original project, only the codegen part has been ported to RISC-V.

The original README:

chibicc: A Small C Compiler

(The old master has moved to historical/old branch. This is a new one uploaded in September 2020.)

chibicc is yet another small C compiler that implements most C11 features. Even though it still probably falls into the "toy compilers" category just like other small compilers do, chibicc can compile several real-world programs, including Git, SQLite, libpng and chibicc itself, without making modifications to the compiled programs. Generated executables of these programs pass their corresponding test suites. So, chibicc actually supports a wide variety of C11 features and is able to compile hundreds of thousands of lines of real-world C code correctly.

chibicc is developed as the reference implementation for a book I'm currently writing about the C compiler and the low-level programming. The book covers the vast topic with an incremental approach; in the first chapter, readers will implement a "compiler" that accepts just a single number as a "language", which will then gain one feature at a time in each section of the book until the language that the compiler accepts matches what the C11 spec specifies. I took this incremental approach from the paper by Abdulaziz Ghuloum.

Each commit of this project corresponds to a section of the book. For this purpose, not only the final state of the project but each commit was carefully written with readability in mind. Readers should be able to learn how a C language feature can be implemented just by reading one or a few commits of this project. For example, this is how while, [], ?:, and thread-local variable are implemented. If you have plenty of spare time, it might be fun to read it from the first commit.

If you like this project, please consider purchasing a copy of the book when it becomes available! 😀 I publish the source code here to give people early access to it, because I was planing to do that anyway with a permissive open-source license after publishing the book. If I don't charge for the source code, it doesn't make much sense to me to keep it private. I hope to publish the book in 2021. You can sign up here to receive a notification when a free chapter is available online or the book is published.

I pronounce chibicc as chee bee cee cee. "chibi" means "mini" or "small" in Japanese. "cc" stands for C compiler.

Status

chibicc supports almost all mandatory features and most optional features of C11 as well as a few GCC language extensions.

Features that are often missing in a small compiler but supported by chibicc include (but not limited to):

chibicc does not support complex numbers, K&R-style function prototypes and GCC-style inline assembly. Digraphs and trigraphs are intentionally left out.

chibicc outputs a simple but nice error message when it finds an error in source code.

There's no optimization pass. chibicc emits terrible code which is probably twice or more slower than GCC's output. I have a plan to add an optimization pass once the frontend is done.

I'm using Ubuntu 20.04 for x86-64 as a development platform. I made a few small changes so that chibicc works on Ubuntu 18.04, Fedora 32 and Gentoo 2.6, but portability is not my goal at this moment. It may or may not work on systems other than Ubuntu 20.04.

Internals

chibicc consists of the following stages:

Contributing

When I find a bug in this compiler, I go back to the original commit that introduced the bug and rewrite the commit history as if there were no such bug from the beginning. This is an unusual way of fixing bugs, but as a part of a book, it is important to keep every commit bug-free.

Thus, I do not take pull requests in this repo. You can send me a pull request if you find a bug, but it is very likely that I will read your patch and then apply that to my previous commits by rewriting history. I'll credit your name somewhere, but your changes will be rewritten by me before submitted to this repository.

Also, please assume that I will occasionally force-push my local repository to this public one to rewrite history. If you clone this project and make local commits on top of it, your changes will have to be rebased by hand when I force-push new commits.

Design principles

chibicc's core value is its simplicity and the reability of its source code. To achieve this goal, I was careful not to be too clever when writing code. Let me explain what that means.

Oftentimes, as you get used to the code base, you are tempted to improve the code using more abstractions and clever tricks. But that kind of improvements don't always improve readability for first-time readers and can actually hurts it. I tried to avoid the pitfall as much as possible. I wrote this code not for me but for first-time readers.

If you take a look at the source code, you'll find a couple of dumb-looking pieces of code. These are written intentionally that way (but at some places I might be actually missing something, though). Here is a few notable examples:

About the Author

I'm Rui Ueyama. I'm the creator of 8cc, which is a hobby C compiler, and also the original creator of the current version of LLVM lld linker, which is a production-quality linker used by various operating systems and large-scale build systems.

References

[1] https://www.drdobbs.com/cpp/increasing-compiler-speed-by-over-75/240158941

DMD does memory allocation in a bit of a sneaky way. Since compilers are short-lived programs, and speed is of the essence, DMD just mallocs away, and never frees.