A Concurrent Smalltalk Compiler for the Message-Driven Processor

Item

Title
en_US A Concurrent Smalltalk Compiler for the Message-Driven Processor
Creator
en_US Horwat, Waldemar
Date
2004-10-20T20:11:48Z
Date Available
2004-10-20T20:11:48Z
Date Issued
en_US 1988-05-01
Identifier
en_US AITR-1080
Abstract
en_US This thesis describes Optimist, an optimizing compiler for the Concurrent Smalltalk language developed by the Concurrent VLSI Architecture Group. Optimist compiles Concurrent Smalltalk to the assembly language of the Message-Driven Processor (MDP). The compiler includes numerous optimization techniques such as dead code elimination, dataflow analysis, constant folding, move elimination, concurrency analysis, duplicate code merging, tail forwarding, use of register variables, as well as various MDP-specific optimizations in the code generator. The MDP presents some unique challenges and opportunities for compilation. Due to the MDP's small memory size, it is critical that the size of the generated code be as small as possible. The MDP is an inherently concurrent processor with efficient mechanisms for sending and receiving messages; the compiler takes advantage of these mechanisms. The MDP's tagged architecture allows very efficient support of object-oriented languages such as Concurrent Smalltalk. The initial goals for the MDP were to have the MDP execute about twenty instructions per method and contain 4096 words of memory. This compiler shows that these goals are too optimistic -- most methods are longer, both in terms of code size and running time. Thus, the memory size of the MDP should be increased.
Extent
10993682 bytes
8556278 bytes
Format
application/postscript
application/pdf
Language
en_US
Relation
en_US AITR-1080