Manticore is a high-level parallel programming language aimed at general-purpose applications running on multi-core processors. Manticore supports parallelism at multiple levels: explicit concurrency and coarse-grain parallelism via CML-style constructs and fine-grain parallelism via various light-weight notations, such as parallel tuple expressions and NESL/Nepal-style parallel array comprehensions.
Manticore currently only supports the x86-64 (a.k.a. AMD64) architecture running on either Linux or Mac OS X. It is possible to build the compiler on other systems (see below), but we have not ported the runtime or code generator to them yet.
Manticore is implemented in a mix of C and SML code. You will need a recent version of SML/NJ (version 110.81) installed. Furthermore, your installation should include the MLRISC library. Note that SML/NJ 110.82's version of MLRISC is currently incompatible with our build system.
If building and installing the system from the Git sources you first must initialize the configuration script. To do so, run the following two commands:
autoheader -Iconfig
autoconf -Iconfig
Then proceed with the installation instructions below
Our first step is to run the configure script.
./configure
This command links the compiler against the MLRISC libraries provided with the SML/NJ installation. Alternatively, we can build against external MLRISC libraries.
./configure --with-mlrisc=<path to mlrisc>
To build the compiler, we use the following command.
make build
We can install locally
make local-install
or globally.
make install
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The frontend does not support signatures, functors, record types, and a slew of corner cases in the language.
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PVal and PTuples cannot be used together. The "fast clone" translation breaks invariants relied on by the work-stealing scheduler with regards to the valid intermediate states of the work queues.
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Exception handling is not implemented.
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The inatomic/from-atomic/to-atomic naming convention used in inline BOM is still a bugfest and should really be replaced by a static annotation that is checked by the compiler.
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The basis library is a hodgepodge mess. The few structures that exist are typically dramatically different from the SML basis library due to the subset of the language implemented, which both makes existing code from another system hard to reuse and sometimes the interface cannot even be written.
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The effect analysis defined in bom-opt/remove-atomics.sml should be changed from being name-based to instead either have a trackable annotation or other better marker for user-level code that uses mutable state. Additionally, while we remove ATOMIC operations around PURE functions, we do not handle reducing them in the case where the code between the parallel spawn and another lock is PURE.
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We cannot handle allocations larger than a single heap page size (minus some slop). These allocations result in an exception, which is tough to debug because there is no exception handling.
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The work-stealing scheduler cannot handle more than a stack of 32k tasks, and crashes quietly when that is exceeded.
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Memoization and mutable state exist only as hand-performed translations to call basis library functions.
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The safe-for-space closure conversion was not completed. While its code may be used for inspiration, we were not able to get a full write-up on its status before the student graduated.
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In CFG, we now have code that performs rudimentary loop identification and can also generate a DOT file for visualization of basic blocks. Loop unrolling was not implemented.
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A branch was created for the BOM implementation of flattening, but it is still in the design phase.