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Aryadev Chavali 7a1129d80f VM registers are now a dynamic array
Stack based machines generally need "variable space".  This may be
quite via a symbol-to-word association a list, a hashmap, or some
other system.  Here I decide to go for the simplest: extending the
register system to a dynamic/infinite number of them.  This means, in
practice, that we may use a theoretically infinite number of indexed
words, hwords and bytes to act as variable space.  This means that the
onus is on those who are targeting this virtual machine to create
their own association system to create syntactic variables: all the
machinery is technically installed within the VM, without the veneer
that causes extra cruft.
2023-11-01 17:49:33 +00:00
2023-11-01 15:22:47 +00:00
2023-11-01 17:49:33 +00:00
2023-10-15 01:25:24 +01:00
2023-10-15 01:25:24 +01:00

Oreo's Virtual Machine (OVM)

A stack based virtual machine in C11. Deals primarily in bytes, doesn't make assertions about typing and is very simple to target.

Instructions to target

You need to link with the object files for base.c, darr.c and inst.c to be able to properly target the OVM. The basic idea is to create instructions via inst_t then using the inst(s)_write_* API to generate bytecode (and write to a file).

Then to execute the program, the virtual machine interpreter ovm.out is used.

For clarity, one may build lib (make lib) then use the resulting object files to link and create bytecode for the virtual machine.

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