mirror of
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157 lines
5.5 KiB
Text
157 lines
5.5 KiB
Text
This is my work in progress Quake C compiler. There are very few _good_ QC
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compilers out there on the internet that can be used in the opensource
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community. There are a lot of mediocre compilers, but no one wants those.
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This is the solution for that, for once a proper Quake C compiler that is
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capable of doing proper optimization. The design so far of this compiler
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is basic, because it doesn't actually compile code yet.
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gmqcc.h
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This is the common header with all definitions, structures, and
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constants for everything.
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error.c
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This is the error subsystem, this handles the output of good detailed
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error messages (not currently, but will), with colors and such.
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lex.c
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This is the lexer, a very small basic step-seek lexer that can be easily
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changed to add new tokens, very retargetable.
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main.c
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This is the core compiler entry, handles switches (will) to toggle on
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and off certian compiler features.
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parse.c
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This is the parser which goes over all tokens and generates a parse tree
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and check for syntax correctness.
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typedef.c
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This is the typedef system, this is a seperate file because it's a lot more
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complicated than it sounds. This handles all typedefs, and even recrusive
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typedefs.
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util.c
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These are utilities for the compiler, some things in here include a
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allocator used for debugging, and some string functions.
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assembler.c
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This implements support for assembling Quake assembler (which doesn't
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actually exist untill now: documentation of the Quake assembler is below.
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This also implements (will) inline assembly for the C compiler.
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README
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This is the file you're currently reading
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Makefile
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The makefile, when sources are added you should add them to the SRC=
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line otherwise the build will not pick it up. Trivial stuff, small
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easy to manage makefile, no need to complicate it.
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Some targets:
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#make gmqcc
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Builds gmqcc, creating a gmqcc binary file in the current
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directory as the makefile.
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#make clean
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Cleans the build files left behind by a previous build
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////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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///////////////////// Quake Assembler Documentation ////////////////////
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////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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Quake assembler is quite simple: it's just an annotated version of the binary
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produced by any existing QuakeC compiler, but made cleaner to use, (so that
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the location of various globals or strings are not required to be known).
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Constants:
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Using one of the following valid constant typenames, you can declare
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a constant {FLOAT,VECTOR,FUNCTION,FIELD,ENTITY}, all typenames are
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proceeded by a colon, and the name (white space doesn't matter).
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Examples:
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FLOAT: foo 1
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VECTOR: bar 1 2 1
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STRING: hello "hello world"
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Comments:
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Commenting assembly requires the use of either # or ; on the line
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that you'd like to be ignored by the assembler. You can only comment
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blank lines, and not lines assembly already exists on.
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Examples:
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; this is allowed
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# as is this
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FLOAT: foo 1 ; this is not allowed
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FLOAT: bar 2 # neither is this
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Functions:
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Creating functions is the same as declaring a constant, simply use
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FUNCTION followed by a colon, and the name (white space doesn't matter)
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and start the statements for that function on the line after it
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Examples:
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FLOAT: foo 1
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FLOAT: bar 2
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FUNCTION: test1
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ADD foo, bar, OFS_RETURN
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RETURN
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FUNCTION: test2
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CALL0 test1
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DONE
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Internal:
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The Quake engine provides some internal functions such as print, to
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access these you first must declare them and their names. To do this
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you create a FUNCTION as you currently do. Adding a $ followed by the
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number of the engine builtin (negated).
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Examples:
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FUNCTION: print $4
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FUNCTION: error $3
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Misc:
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There are some rules as to what your identifiers can be for functions
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and constants. All indentifiers mustn't begin with a numeric digit,
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identifiers cannot include spaces, or tabs; they cannot contain symbols,
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and they cannot exceed 32768 characters. Identifiers cannot be all
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capitalized either, as all capatilized identifiers are reserved by the
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assembler.
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Numeric constants cannot contain special notation such as `1-e10`, all
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numeric constants have to be numeric, they can contain decmial points
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and signs (+, -) however.
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Constants cannot be assigned values of other constants, their value must
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be fully expressed inspot of the declartion.
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No two identifiers can be the same name, this applies for variables allocated
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inside a function scope (despite it being considered local).
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There exists one other keyword that is considered sugar, and that
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is AUTHOR, this keyword will allow you to speciy the AUTHOR(S) of
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the assembly being assembled. The string represented for each usage
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of AUTHOR is wrote to the end of the string table. Simaler to the
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usage of constants and functions the AUTHOR keyword must be proceeded
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by a colon.
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Examples:
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AUTHOR: "Dale Weiler"
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AUTHOR: "John Doe"
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Colons exist for the sole reason of not having to use spaces after
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keyword usage (however spaces are allowed). To understand the
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following examples below are equivlent.
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Example 1:
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FLOAT:foo 1
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Example 2:
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FLOAT: foo 1
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Example 3:
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FLOAT: foo 2
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variable amounts of whitespace is allowed anywhere (as it should be).
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think of `:` as a delimiter (which is what it's used for during assembly).
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////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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/////////////////////// Quake C Documentation //////////////////////////
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////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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TODO ....
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