porffor 0.2.0-eaee2da → 0.2.0-ef043de

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Files changed (52) hide show
  1. package/LICENSE +20 -20
  2. package/README.md +159 -88
  3. package/asur/README.md +2 -0
  4. package/asur/index.js +1262 -0
  5. package/byg/index.js +237 -0
  6. package/compiler/2c.js +317 -72
  7. package/compiler/{sections.js → assemble.js} +63 -15
  8. package/compiler/builtins/annexb_string.js +72 -0
  9. package/compiler/builtins/annexb_string.ts +19 -0
  10. package/compiler/builtins/array.ts +145 -0
  11. package/compiler/builtins/base64.ts +151 -0
  12. package/compiler/builtins/crypto.ts +120 -0
  13. package/compiler/builtins/date.ts +1370 -0
  14. package/compiler/builtins/escape.ts +141 -0
  15. package/compiler/builtins/int.ts +147 -0
  16. package/compiler/builtins/number.ts +527 -0
  17. package/compiler/builtins/porffor.d.ts +42 -0
  18. package/compiler/builtins/string.ts +1055 -0
  19. package/compiler/builtins/tostring.ts +45 -0
  20. package/compiler/builtins.js +470 -269
  21. package/compiler/{codeGen.js → codegen.js} +999 -378
  22. package/compiler/embedding.js +22 -22
  23. package/compiler/encoding.js +108 -10
  24. package/compiler/generated_builtins.js +1262 -0
  25. package/compiler/index.js +36 -34
  26. package/compiler/log.js +6 -3
  27. package/compiler/opt.js +51 -36
  28. package/compiler/parse.js +35 -27
  29. package/compiler/precompile.js +123 -0
  30. package/compiler/prefs.js +26 -0
  31. package/compiler/prototype.js +13 -28
  32. package/compiler/types.js +37 -0
  33. package/compiler/wasmSpec.js +28 -8
  34. package/compiler/wrap.js +54 -46
  35. package/fib.js +7 -0
  36. package/package.json +9 -5
  37. package/porf +4 -0
  38. package/rhemyn/compile.js +5 -3
  39. package/rhemyn/parse.js +323 -320
  40. package/rhemyn/test/parse.js +58 -58
  41. package/runner/compare.js +34 -34
  42. package/runner/debug.js +122 -0
  43. package/runner/index.js +62 -10
  44. package/runner/profiler.js +102 -0
  45. package/runner/repl.js +40 -7
  46. package/runner/sizes.js +37 -37
  47. package/compiler/builtins/base64.js +0 -92
  48. package/runner/info.js +0 -89
  49. package/runner/profile.js +0 -46
  50. package/runner/results.json +0 -1
  51. package/runner/transform.js +0 -15
  52. package/util/enum.js +0 -20
package/LICENSE CHANGED
@@ -1,21 +1,21 @@
1
- MIT License
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-
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- Copyright (c) 2023 CanadaHonk
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-
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- Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
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- of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
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- in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
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- to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
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- copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
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- furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
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-
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- The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all
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- copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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-
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- THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
16
- IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
17
- FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
18
- AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
19
- LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
20
- OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
1
+ MIT License
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+
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+ Copyright (c) 2023 CanadaHonk
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+
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+ Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
6
+ of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
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+ in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
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+ to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
9
+ copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
10
+ furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
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+
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+ The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all
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+ copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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+
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+ THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
16
+ IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
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+ FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
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+ AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
19
+ LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
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+ OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
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21
  SOFTWARE.
package/README.md CHANGED
@@ -10,6 +10,86 @@ Porffor is a very unique JS engine, due many wildly different approaches. It is
10
10
 
11
11
  Porffor is primarily built from scratch, the only thing that is not is the parser (using [Acorn](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn)). Binaryen/etc is not used, we make final wasm binaries ourself. You could imagine it as compiling a language which is a sub (some things unsupported) and super (new/custom apis) set of javascript. Not based on any particular spec version, focusing on function/working over spec compliance.
12
12
 
13
+ ## Usage
14
+ Expect nothing to work! Only very limited JS is currently supported. See files in `bench` for examples.
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+
16
+ ### Setup
17
+ **`npm install -g porffor`**. It's that easy (hopefully) :)
18
+
19
+ ### Trying a REPL
20
+ **`porf`**. Just run it with no script file argument.
21
+
22
+ ### Running a JS file
23
+ **`porf path/to/script.js`**
24
+
25
+ ### Compiling to Wasm
26
+ **`porf compile path/to/script.js out.wasm`**. Currently it does not use an import standard like WASI, so it is mostly unusable on its own.
27
+
28
+ ### Compiling to native binaries
29
+ > [!WARNING]
30
+ > Compiling to native binaries uses [2c](#2c), Porffor's own Wasm -> C compiler, which is experimental.
31
+
32
+ **`porf native path/to/script.js out(.exe)`**. You can specify the compiler with `-compiler=clang/zig/gcc`, and which opt level to use with `-cO=O3` (`Ofast` by default). Output binaries are also stripped by default.
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+
34
+ ### Compiling to C
35
+ > [!WARNING]
36
+ > Compiling to C uses [2c](#2c), Porffor's own Wasm -> C compiler, which is experimental.
37
+
38
+ **`porf c path/to/script.js (out.c)`**. When not including an output file, it will be printed to stdout instead.
39
+
40
+ ### Profiling a JS file
41
+ > [!WARNING]
42
+ > Very experimental WIP feature!
43
+
44
+ **`porf profile path/to/script.js`**
45
+
46
+ ### Debugging a JS file
47
+ > [!WARNING]
48
+ > Very experimental WIP feature!
49
+
50
+ **`porf debug path/to/script.js`**
51
+
52
+ ### Profiling the generated Wasm of a JS file
53
+ > [!WARNING]
54
+ > Very experimental WIP feature!
55
+
56
+ **`porf debug-wasm path/to/script.js`**
57
+
58
+
59
+ ### Options
60
+ - `-target=wasm|c|native` (default: `wasm`) to set target output (native compiles c output to binary, see args below)
61
+ - `-target=c|native` only:
62
+ - `-o=out.c|out.exe|out` to set file to output c or binary
63
+ - `-target=native` only:
64
+ - `-compiler=clang` to set compiler binary (path/name) to use to compile
65
+ - `-cO=O3` to set compiler opt argument
66
+ - `-parser=acorn|@babel/parser|meriyah|hermes-parser` (default: `acorn`) to set which parser to use
67
+ - `-parse-types` to enable parsing type annotations/typescript. if `-parser` is unset, changes default to `@babel/parser`. does not type check
68
+ - `-opt-types` to perform optimizations using type annotations as compiler hints. does not type check
69
+ - `-valtype=i32|i64|f64` (default: `f64`) to set valtype
70
+ - `-O0` to disable opt
71
+ - `-O1` (default) to enable basic opt (simplify insts, treeshake wasm imports)
72
+ - `-O2` to enable advanced opt (inlining). unstable
73
+ - `-O3` to enable advanceder opt (precompute const math). unstable
74
+ - `-no-run` to not run wasm output, just compile
75
+ - `-opt-log` to log some opts
76
+ - `-code-log` to log some codegen (you probably want `-funcs`)
77
+ - `-regex-log` to log some regex
78
+ - `-funcs` to log funcs
79
+ - `-ast-log` to log AST
80
+ - `-opt-funcs` to log funcs after opt
81
+ - `-sections` to log sections as hex
82
+ - `-opt-no-inline` to not inline any funcs
83
+ - `-tail-call` to enable tail calls (experimental + not widely implemented)
84
+ - `-compile-hints` to enable V8 compilation hints (experimental + doesn't seem to do much?)
85
+
86
+ ### Running in the repo
87
+ The repo comes with easy alias files for Unix and Windows, which you can use like so:
88
+ - Unix: `./porf path/to/script.js`
89
+ - Windows: `.\porf path/to/script.js`
90
+
91
+ Please note that further examples below will just use `./porf`, you need to use `.\porf` on Windows. You can also swap out `node` in the alias to use another runtime like Deno (`deno run -A`) or Bun (`bun ...`), or just use it yourself (eg `node runner/index.js ...`, `bun runner/index.js ...`). Node and Bun should work great, Deno support is WIP.
92
+
13
93
  ## Limitations
14
94
  - No full object support yet
15
95
  - Little built-ins/prototype
@@ -18,10 +98,15 @@ Porffor is primarily built from scratch, the only thing that is not is the parse
18
98
  - Literal callees only in calls (eg `print()` works, `a = print; a()` does not)
19
99
  - No `eval()` etc (since it is AOT)
20
100
 
21
- ## Rhemyn
101
+ ## Sub-engines
102
+
103
+ ### Asur
104
+ Asur is Porffor's own Wasm engine; it is an intentionally simple interpreter written in JS. It is very WIP. See [its readme](asur/README.md) for more details.
105
+
106
+ ### Rhemyn
22
107
  Rhemyn is Porffor's own regex engine; it compiles literal regex to Wasm bytecode AOT (remind you of anything?). It is quite basic and WIP. See [its readme](rhemyn/README.md) for more details.
23
108
 
24
- ## 2c
109
+ ### 2c
25
110
  2c is Porffor's own Wasm -> C compiler, using generated Wasm bytecode and internal info to generate specific and efficient/fast C code. Little boilerplate/preluded code or required external files, just for CLI binaries (not like wasm2c very much).
26
111
 
27
112
  ## Supported
@@ -86,20 +171,29 @@ These include some early (stage 1/0) and/or dead (last commit years ago) proposa
86
171
  - `for...of` (arrays and strings)
87
172
  - Array member setting (`arr[0] = 2`, `arr[0] += 2`, etc)
88
173
  - Array constructor (`Array(5)`, `new Array(1, 2, 3)`)
174
+ - Labelled statements (`foo: while (...)`)
175
+ - `do...while` loops
89
176
 
90
177
  ### Built-ins
91
178
 
92
- - `NaN` and `Infinity` (f64 only)
93
- - `isNaN()` and `isFinite()` (f64 only)
94
- - Most of `Number` (`MAX_VALUE`, `MIN_VALUE`, `MAX_SAFE_INTEGER`, `MIN_SAFE_INTEGER`, `POSITIVE_INFINITY`, `NEGATIVE_INFINITY`, `EPSILON`, `NaN`, `isNaN`, `isFinite`, `isInteger`, `isSafeInteger`) (some f64 only)
95
- - Some `Math` funcs (`Math.sqrt`, `Math.abs`, `Math.floor`, `Math.sign`, `Math.round`, `Math.trunc`, `Math.clz32`, `Math.fround`, `Math.random`) (f64 only)
179
+ - `NaN` and `Infinity`
180
+ - `isNaN()` and `isFinite()`
181
+ - Most of `Number` (`MAX_VALUE`, `MIN_VALUE`, `MAX_SAFE_INTEGER`, `MIN_SAFE_INTEGER`, `POSITIVE_INFINITY`, `NEGATIVE_INFINITY`, `EPSILON`, `NaN`, `isNaN`, `isFinite`, `isInteger`, `isSafeInteger`)
182
+ - Some `Math` funcs (`sqrt`, `abs`, `floor`, `sign`, `round`, `trunc`, `clz32`, `fround`, `random`)
96
183
  - Basic `globalThis` support
97
184
  - Basic `Boolean` and `Number`
98
185
  - Basic `eval` for literals
99
186
  - `Math.random()` using self-made xorshift128+ PRNG
100
- - Some of `performance` (`now()`)
101
- - Some of `Array.prototype` (`at`, `push`, `pop`, `shift`, `fill`)
102
- - Some of `String.prototype` (`at`, `charAt`, `charCodeAt`)
187
+ - Some of `performance` (`now()`, `timeOrigin`)
188
+ - Some of `Array.prototype` (`at`, `push`, `pop`, `shift`, `fill`, `slice`, `indexOf`, `lastIndexOf`, `includes`, `with`, `reverse`, `toReversed`)
189
+ - Some of `Array` (`of`, `isArray`)
190
+ - Most of `String.prototype` (`at`, `charAt`, `charCodeAt`, `toUpperCase`, `toLowerCase`, `startsWith`, `endsWith`, `indexOf`, `lastIndexOf`, `includes`, `padStart`, `padEnd`, `substring`, `substr`, `slice`, `trimStart`, `trimEnd`, `trim`, `toString`, `big`, `blink`, `bold`, `fixed`, `italics`, `small`, `strike`, `sub`, `sup`, `trimLeft`, `trimRight`, )
191
+ - Some of `crypto` (`randomUUID`)
192
+ - `escape`
193
+ - `btoa`
194
+ - Most of `Number.prototype` (`toString`, `toFixed`, `toExponential`)
195
+ - `parseInt`
196
+ - Spec-compliant `Date`
103
197
 
104
198
  ### Custom
105
199
 
@@ -108,48 +202,8 @@ These include some early (stage 1/0) and/or dead (last commit years ago) proposa
108
202
  - Intrinsic functions (see below)
109
203
  - Inlining wasm via ``asm`...``\` "macro"
110
204
 
111
- ## Todo
112
- No particular order and no guarentees, just what could happen soon™
113
-
114
- - Arrays
115
- - More of `Array` prototype
116
- - Arrays/strings inside arrays
117
- - Destructuring
118
- - Objects
119
- - Basic object expressions (eg `{}`, `{ a: 0 }`)
120
- - Wasm
121
- - *Basic* Wasm engine (interpreter) in JS
122
- - More math operators (`**`, etc)
123
- - `do { ... } while (...)`
124
- - Rewrite `console.log` to work with strings/arrays
125
- - Exceptions
126
- - Rewrite to use actual strings (optional?)
127
- - `try { } finally { }`
128
- - Rethrowing inside catch
129
- - Optimizations
130
- - Rewrite local indexes per func for smallest local header and remove unused idxs
131
- - Smarter inline selection (snapshots?)
132
- - Remove const ifs (`if (true)`, etc)
133
- - Experiment with byte strings?
134
- - Runtime
135
- - WASI target
136
- - Run precompiled Wasm file if given
137
- - Cool proposals
138
- - [Optional Chaining Assignment](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-optional-chaining-assignment)
139
- - [Modulus and Additional Integer Math](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-integer-and-modulus-math)
140
- - [Array Equality](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-array-equality)
141
- - [Declarations in Conditionals](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-Declarations-in-Conditionals)
142
- - [Seeded Pseudo-Random Numbers](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-seeded-random)
143
- - [`do` expressions](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-do-expressions)
144
- - [String Trim Characters](https://github.com/Kingwl/proposal-string-trim-characters)
145
- - Posts
146
- - Inlining investigation
147
- - Self hosted testing?
148
-
149
205
  ## Performance
150
- *For the things it supports most of the time*, Porffor is blazingly fast compared to most interpreters, and common engines running without JIT. For those with JIT, it is not that much slower like a traditional interpreter would be; mostly the same or a bit faster/slower depending on what.
151
-
152
- ![Screenshot of comparison chart](https://github.com/CanadaHonk/porffor/assets/19228318/76c75264-cc68-4be1-8891-c06dc389d97a)
206
+ *For the features it supports most of the time*, Porffor is *blazingly fast* compared to most interpreters and common engines running without JIT. For those with JIT, it is usually slower by default, but can catch up with compiler arguments and typed input, even more so when compiling to native binaries.
153
207
 
154
208
  ## Optimizations
155
209
  Mostly for reducing size. I do not really care about compiler perf/time as long as it is reasonable. We do not use/rely on external opt tools (`wasm-opt`, etc), instead doing optimization inside the compiler itself creating even smaller code sizes than `wasm-opt` itself can produce as we have more internal information.
@@ -184,7 +238,7 @@ Porffor can run Test262 via some hacks/transforms which remove unsupported featu
184
238
  ## Codebase
185
239
  - `compiler`: contains the compiler itself
186
240
  - `builtins.js`: all built-ins of the engine (spec, custom. vars, funcs)
187
- - `codeGen.js`: code (wasm) generation, ast -> wasm. The bulk of the effort
241
+ - `codegen.js`: code (wasm) generation, ast -> wasm. The bulk of the effort
188
242
  - `decompile.js`: basic wasm decompiler for debug info
189
243
  - `embedding.js`: utils for embedding consts
190
244
  - `encoding.js`: utils for encoding things as bytes as wasm expects
@@ -192,7 +246,7 @@ Porffor can run Test262 via some hacks/transforms which remove unsupported featu
192
246
  - `index.js`: doing all the compiler steps, takes code in, wasm out
193
247
  - `opt.js`: self-made wasm bytecode optimizer
194
248
  - `parse.js`: parser simply wrapping acorn
195
- - `sections.js`: assembles wasm ops and metadata into a wasm module/file
249
+ - `assemble.js`: assembles wasm ops and metadata into a wasm module/file
196
250
  - `wasmSpec.js`: "enums"/info from wasm spec
197
251
  - `wrap.js`: wrapper for compiler which instantiates and produces nice exports
198
252
 
@@ -211,48 +265,65 @@ Porffor can run Test262 via some hacks/transforms which remove unsupported featu
211
265
  ## Usecases
212
266
  Basically none right now (other than giving people headaches). Potential ideas:
213
267
  - Safety. As Porffor is written in JS, a memory-safe language\*, and compiles JS to Wasm, a fully sandboxed environment\*, it is quite safe. (\* These rely on the underlying implementations being secure. You could also run Wasm, or even Porffor itself, with an interpreter instead of a JIT for bonus security points too.)
214
- - Compiling JS to native binaries. This is still very early, [`2c`](#2c) is not that good yet :(
268
+ - Compiling JS to native binaries. This is still very early!
215
269
  - More in future probably?
216
270
 
217
- ## Usage
218
- Basically nothing will work :). See files in `test` and `bench` for examples.
271
+ ## Todo
272
+ No particular order and no guarentees, just what could happen soon™
219
273
 
220
- 1. Clone repo
221
- 2. `npm install`
222
- 3. `node test` to run tests (some will fail)
223
- 4. `node runner path/to/code.js` to run a file (or `node runner` to use wip repl)
274
+ - Arrays
275
+ - More of `Array` prototype
276
+ - Arrays/strings inside arrays
277
+ - Destructuring
278
+ - Objects
279
+ - Basic object expressions (eg `{}`, `{ a: 0 }`)
280
+ - Asur
281
+ - Support memory
282
+ - Support exceptions
283
+ - More math operators (`**`, etc)
284
+ - Typed export inputs (array)
285
+ - Exceptions
286
+ - Rewrite to use actual strings (optional?)
287
+ - `try { } finally { }`
288
+ - Rethrowing inside catch
289
+ - Optimizations
290
+ - Rewrite local indexes per func for smallest local header and remove unused idxs
291
+ - Smarter inline selection (snapshots?)
292
+ - Remove const ifs (`if (true)`, etc)
293
+ - Memory alignment
294
+ - Add general pref for always using "fast" (non-short circuiting) or/and
295
+ - Runtime
296
+ - WASI target
297
+ - Run precompiled Wasm file if given
298
+ - Docs
299
+ - Update codebase readme section
300
+ - Cool proposals
301
+ - [Optional Chaining Assignment](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-optional-chaining-assignment)
302
+ - [Modulus and Additional Integer Math](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-integer-and-modulus-math)
303
+ - [Array Equality](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-array-equality)
304
+ - [Declarations in Conditionals](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-Declarations-in-Conditionals)
305
+ - [Seeded Pseudo-Random Numbers](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-seeded-random)
306
+ - [`do` expressions](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-do-expressions)
307
+ - [String Trim Characters](https://github.com/Kingwl/proposal-string-trim-characters)
308
+ - Posts
309
+ - Inlining investigation
310
+ - JS -> Native
311
+ - Precompiled TS built-ins
312
+ - Asur
313
+ - `escape()` optimization
314
+ - Self hosted testing?
224
315
 
225
- You can also use Deno (`deno run -A ...` instead of `node ...`), or Bun (`bun ...` instead of `node ...`).
316
+ ## VSCode extension
317
+ There is a vscode extension in `vscode-ext` which tweaks JS syntax highlighting to be nicer with porffor features (eg highlighting wasm inside of inline asm).
226
318
 
227
- ### Options
228
- - `-target=wasm|c|native` (default: `wasm`) to set target output (native compiles c output to binary, see args below)
229
- - `-target=c|native` only:
230
- - `-o=out.c|out.exe|out` to set file to output c or binary
231
- - `-target=native` only:
232
- - `-compiler=clang` to set compiler binary (path/name) to use to compile
233
- - `-cO=O3` to set compiler opt argument
234
- - `-parser=acorn|@babel/parser|meriyah|hermes-parser` (default: `acorn`) to set which parser to use
235
- - `-parse-types` to enable parsing type annotations/typescript. if `-parser` is unset, changes default to `@babel/parser`. does not type check
236
- - `-opt-types` to perform optimizations using type annotations as compiler hints. does not type check
237
- - `-valtype=i32|i64|f64` (default: `f64`) to set valtype
238
- - `-O0` to disable opt
239
- - `-O1` (default) to enable basic opt (simplify insts, treeshake wasm imports)
240
- - `-O2` to enable advanced opt (inlining). unstable
241
- - `-O3` to enable advanceder opt (precompute const math). unstable
242
- - `-no-run` to not run wasm output, just compile
243
- - `-opt-log` to log some opts
244
- - `-code-log` to log some codegen (you probably want `-funcs`)
245
- - `-regex-log` to log some regex
246
- - `-funcs` to log funcs
247
- - `-ast-log` to log AST
248
- - `-opt-funcs` to log funcs after opt
249
- - `-sections` to log sections as hex
250
- - `-opt-no-inline` to not inline any funcs
251
- - `-tail-call` to enable tail calls (experimental + not widely implemented)
252
- - `-compile-hints` to enable V8 compilation hints (experimental + doesn't seem to do much?)
319
+ ## Wasm proposals used
320
+ Porffor intentionally does not use Wasm proposals which are not commonly implemented yet (eg GC) so it can be used in as many places as possible.
253
321
 
254
- ## VSCode extension
255
- There is a vscode extension in `porffor-for-vscode` which tweaks JS syntax highlighting to be nicer with porffor features (eg highlighting wasm inside of inline asm).
322
+ - Multi-value **(required)**
323
+ - Non-trapping float-to-int conversions **(required)**
324
+ - Bulk memory operations (required, but uncommonly used)
325
+ - Exception handling (optional, for errors)
326
+ - Tail calls (opt-in, off by default)
256
327
 
257
328
  ## Isn't this the same as AssemblyScript/other Wasm langs?
258
329
  No. they are not alike at all internally and have very different goals/ideals:
package/asur/README.md ADDED
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1
+ # asur
2
+ a basic experimental wip wasm engine/interpreter in js. wasm engine for porffor. not serious/intended for (real) use