
This is a big combined change. Other changes in this commit: * Analyze makeinterface and make sure type switches don't include unnecessary cases. * Do not include CGo wrapper functions in the analyzer callgraph. This also avoids some unnecessary type IDs. * Give all Go named structs a name in LLVM. * Use such a named struct for compiler-generated task data. * Use the type and function names defined by the ssa and types package instead of generating our own. * Some improvements to function pointers. * A few other minor improvements. The one thing lacking here is interface-to-interface assertions.
77 строки
2,6 КиБ
Markdown
77 строки
2,6 КиБ
Markdown
# TinyGo - Go compiler for microcontrollers
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> We never expected Go to be an embedded language and so it's got serious
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> problems [...].
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-- Rob Pike, [GopherCon 2014 Opening Keynote](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VoS7DsT1rdM&feature=youtu.be&t=2799)
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TinyGo is a project to bring Go to microcontrollers and small systems with a
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single processor core. It is similar to [emgo](https://github.com/ziutek/emgo)
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but a major difference is that I want to keep the Go memory model (which implies
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garbage collection of some sort). Another difference is that TinyGo uses LLVM
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internally instead of emitting C, which hopefully leads to smaller and more
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efficient code and certainly leads to more flexibility.
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My original reasoning was: if [Python](https://micropython.org/) can run on
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microcontrollers, then certainly [Go](https://golang.org/) should be able to and
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run on even lower level micros.
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Example program (blinky):
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```go
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import "machine"
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func main() {
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led := machine.GPIO{machine.LED}
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led.Configure(machine.GPIOConfig{Mode: machine.GPIO_OUTPUT})
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for {
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led.Low()
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runtime.Sleep(runtime.Millisecond * 1000)
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led.High()
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runtime.Sleep(runtime.Millisecond * 1000)
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}
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}
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```
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Currently supported features:
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* control flow
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* many (but not all) basic types: most ints, strings, structs
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* function calling
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* interfaces for basic types (with type switches and asserts)
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* goroutines (very initial support)
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* function pointers (non-blocking)
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Not yet supported:
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* float, complex, etc.
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* maps
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* slices
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* interface methods
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* garbage collection
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* defer
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* closures
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* channels
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* introspection (if it ever gets implemented)
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* standard library (needs more language support)
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* ...
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## Analysis
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The goal is to reduce code size (and increase performance) by performing all
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kinds of whole-program analysis passes. The official Go compiler doesn't do a
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whole lot of analysis (except for escape analysis) becauses it needs to be fast,
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but embedded programs are necessarily smaller so it becomes practical. And I
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think especially program size can be reduced by a large margin when actually
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trying to optimize for it.
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Implemented analysis passes:
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* Check which functions are blocking. Blocking functions a functions that call
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sleep, chan send, etc. It's parents are also blocking.
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* Check whether the scheduler is needed. It is only needed when there are `go`
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statements for blocking functions.
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* Check whether a given type switch or type assert is possible with
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[type-based alias analysis](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alias_analysis#Type-based_alias_analysis).
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I would like to use flow-based alias analysis in the future.
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