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collapseos/forth/notes.txt

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Collapse OS' Forth implementation notes
*** EXECUTION MODEL
After having read a line through readln, we want to interpret it. As a general
rule, we go like this:
1. read single word from line
2. Can we find the word in dict?
3. If yes, execute that word, goto 1
4. Is it a number?
5. If yes, push that number to PS, goto 1
6. Error: undefined word.
*** EXECUTING A WORD
At it's core, executing a word is pushing the wordref on PS and calling EXECUTE.
Then, we let the word do its things. Some words are special, but most of them
are of the compiledWord type, and that's their execution that we describe here.
First of all, at all time during execution, the Interpreter Pointer (IP) points
to the wordref we're executing next.
When we execute a compiledWord, the first thing we do is push IP to the Return
Stack (RS). Therefore, RS' top of stack will contain a wordref to execute next,
after we EXIT.
At the end of every compiledWord is an EXIT. This pops RS, sets IP to it, and
continues.
*** Stack management
The Parameter stack (PS) is maintained by SP and the Return stack (RS) is
maintained by IX. This allows us to generally use push and pop freely because PS
is the most frequently used. However, this causes a problem with routine calls:
because in Forth, the stack isn't balanced within each call, our return offset,
when placed by a CALL, messes everything up. This is one of the reasons why we
need stack management routines below. IX always points to RS' Top Of Stack (TOS)
This return stack contain "Interpreter pointers", that is a pointer to the
address of a word, as seen in a compiled list of words.
*** Dictionary
A dictionary entry has this structure:
- Xb name. Arbitrary long number of character (but can't be bigger than
input buffer, of course). not null-terminated
- 2b prev offset
- 1b size + IMMEDIATE flag
- 2b code pointer
- Parameter field (PF)
The prev offset is the number of bytes between the prev field and the previous
word's code pointer.
The size + flag indicate the size of the name field, with the 7th bit being the
IMMEDIATE flag.
The code pointer point to "word routines". These routines expect to be called
with IY pointing to the PF. They themselves are expected to end by jumping to
the address at (IP). They will usually do so with "jp next".
That's for "regular" words (words that are part of the dict chain). There are
also "special words", for example NUMBER, LIT, FBR, that have a slightly
different structure. They're also a pointer to an executable, but as for the
other fields, the only one they have is the "flags" field.
*** System variables
There are some core variables in the core system that are referred to directly
by their address in memory throughout the code. The place where they live is
configurable by the RAMSTART constant in conf.fs, but their relative offset is
not. In fact, they're mostlly referred to directly as their numerical offset
along with a comment indicating what this offset refers to.
This system is a bit fragile because every time we change those offsets, we
have to be careful to adjust all system variables offsets, but thankfully,
there aren't many system variables. Here's a list of them:
RAMSTART INITIAL_SP
+02 CURRENT
+04 HERE
+06 IP
+08 FLAGS
+0a PARSEPTR
+0c CINPTR
+0e WORDBUF
+2e SYSVNXT
2020-04-03 14:21:53 +11:00
+4e INTJUMP
+51 SYSTEM SCRATCHPAD
+60 RAMEND
INITIAL_SP holds the initial Stack Pointer value so that we know where to reset
it on ABORT
CURRENT points to the last dict entry.
HERE points to current write offset.
IP is the Interpreter Pointer
FLAGS holds global flags. Only used for prompt output control for now.
PARSEPTR holds routine address called on (parse)
CINPTR holds routine address called on C<
WORDBUF is the buffer used by WORD
SYSVNXT is the buffer+tracker used by (sysv)
2020-04-03 14:21:53 +11:00
INTJUMP All RST offsets (well, not *all* at this moment, I still have to free
those slots...) in boot binaries are made to jump to this address. If you use
one of those slots for an interrupt, write a jump to the appropriate offset in
that RAM location.
SYSTEM SCRATCHPAD is reserved for temporary system storage or can be reserved
by low-level drivers. These are the current usages of this space throughout the
project:
* 0x51-0x53: (c<) pointer during in-memory initialization (see below)
* 0x53-0x5b: ACIA buffer pointers in RC2014 recipes.
*** Initialization sequence
On boot, we jump to the "main" routine in boot.fs which does very few things.
It sets up the SP register, CURRENT and HERE to LATEST (saved in stable ABI),
then look for the BOOT word and calls it.
In a normal system, BOOT is in icore and does a few things:
1. Find "(parse)" and set "(parse*)" to it.
2. Find "(c<)" a set CINPTR to it (what C< calls).
3. Write LATEST in SYSTEM SCRATCHPAD ( see below )
4. Find "INIT". If found, execute. Otherwise, execute "INTERPRET"
On a bare system (only boot+icore), this sequence will result in "(parse)"
reading only decimals and (c<) reading characters from memory starting from
CURRENT (this is why we put CURRENT in SYSTEM SCRATCHPAD, it tracks current
pos ).
This means that you can put initialization code in source form right into your
binary, right after your last compiled dict entry and it's going to be executed
as such until you set a new (c<).
Note that there is no EMIT in a bare system. You have to take care of supplying
one before your load core.fs and its higher levels.
Also note that this initialization code is fighting for space with HERE: New
entries to the dict will overwrite that code! Also, because we're barebone, we
can't have comments. This leads to peculiar code in this area. If you see weird
whitespace usage, it's probably because not using those whitespace would result
in dict entry creation overwriting the code before it has the chance to be
interpreted.