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SixtyPical

SixtyPical is a very low-level programming language, similar to 6502 assembly, with block structure and static analysis through abstract interpretation.

It is a work in progress, currently at the proof-of-concept stage.

It is expected that a common use case for SixtyPical would be retroprogramming for the Commodore 64, VIC-20, Apple ][, etc.

Many SixtyPical instructions map precisely to 6502 opcodes. However, SixtyPical is not an assembly language. The programmer does not have total control over the layout of code and data in memory. The language has a type system which distinguishes addresses from non-addresses (16-bit values for which it does not make sense to treat them as addresses.) Some 6502 opcodes have no SixtyPical equivalent. Some SixtyPical instructions are named after 6502 opcodes, but generate slightly different (safer, but intuitively related) sequences of opcodes. Et cetera.

sixtypical is the reference implementation of SixtyPical. It is written in Haskell. It can currently parse and analyze a SixtyPical program, and will eventually be able to compile it to an Ophis assembler listing.

Concepts

Routines

Instead of the assembly-language subroutine, SixtyPical provides the routine as the abstraction for a reusable sequence of code.

A routine may be called, or may be included inline, by another routine.

There is one top-level routine called main which represents the entire program.

The instructions of a routine are analyzed using abstract interpretation. One thing we specifically do is determine which registers and memory locations are not affected by the routine.

If a register is not affected by a routine, then a caller of that routine may assume that the value in that register is retained.

Of course, a routine may intentionally affect a register or memory location, as an output. It must declare this. We're not there yet.

Addresses

The body of a routine may not refer to an address literally. It must use a symbol that was declared previously.

An address may be declared with reserve, which is like .data or .bss in an assembler. This is an address into the program's data. It is global to all routines.

An address may be declared with locate, which is like .alias in an assembler, with the understanding that the value will be treated "like an address." This is generally an address into the operating system or hardware (e.g. kernal routine, I/O port, etc.)

Inside a routine, an address may be declared with temporary. This is like static in C, except the value at that address is not guaranteed to be retained between invokations of the routine. Such addresses may only be used within the routine where they are declared. If analysis indicates that two temporary addresses are never used simultaneously, they may be merged to the same address.

An address knows if it is an address of a byte, of a word, or of a table.

Blocks

Each routine is a block. It may be composed of inner blocks, attached to some instructions.

SixtyPical does not have instructions that map literally to the 6502 branch instructions. Instead, each branch instruction has a corresponding "if-then-else"-like construct with the same name as the branch instruction. These test instructions each have two blocks, for the then and the else.

The abstract states of the machine at each of the different block exits are merged during analysis. If any register or memory location is treated inconsistently (e.g. updated in one branch of the test, but not the other,) that register cannot subsequently be used without a declaration to the effect that we know what's going on. (This is all a bit fuzzy right now.)

There is also no rts instruction. It is included at the end of a routine, but only when the routine is used as a subroutine.

There are also with instructions, which are associated with an opcode that has a natural symmetrical opcode (e.g. pha, sei). These instructions take a block. The natural symmetrical opcode is inserted at the end of the block.

TODO

  • Parse HEX values like $40A3
  • Full machine model
  • Addressing modes; rename instructions to match

Tests

-> Tests for functionality "Parse SixtyPical program"

-> Functionality "Parse SixtyPical program" is implemented by
-> shell command "bin/sixtypical parse %(test-file)"

-> Tests for functionality "Check SixtyPical program"

-> Functionality "Check SixtyPical program" is implemented by
-> shell command "bin/sixtypical check %(test-file)"

main must be present.

| routine main {
|    nop
| }
= True

| routine frog {
|    nop
| }
? missing 'main' routine

A program may reserve and assign.

| reserve word score
| assign word screen 4000
| routine main {
|    lda screen
|    tax
|    tay
|    cmp score
|    ldx score
|    txa
|    ldy score
|    tya
| }
= True

All declarations (reserves and assigns) must come before any routines.

| routine main {
|    lda score
| }
| reserve word score
? expecting "routine"

All locations used in all routines must be declared first.

| reserve word score
| routine main {
|    lda score
|    cmp screen
| }
? undeclared location

Even in inner blocks.

| reserve word score
| assign word screen 4000
| routine main {
|    lda score
|    cmp screen
|    beq {
|      lda score
|    } else {
|      lda fnord
|    }
| }
? undeclared location

No duplicate declarations.

| reserve word score
| assign word score 4000
| routine main {
|    nop
| }
? duplicate declaration

-> Tests for functionality "Emit ASM for SixtyPical program"

-> Functionality "Emit ASM for SixtyPical program" is implemented by
-> shell command "bin/sixtypical emit %(test-file)"

| reserve word score
| assign word screen 4000
| routine main {
|    lda screen
|    tax
|    tay
|    cmp score
|    ldx score
|    txa
|    ldy score
|    tya
| }
= .org 0
= .word $0801
= .org $0801
= .byte $10, $08, $c9, $07, $9e, $32, $30, $36, $31, $00, $00, $00
=   jmp main
= score: .word 0
= .alias screen 4000
= main:
=   lda screen
=   tax
=   tay
=   cmp score
=   ldx score
=   txa
=   ldy score
=   tya
=   rts