Cretonne is a low-level retargetable code generator. It translates a target-independent intermediate language into executable machine code.
This is a work in progress that is not yet functional.
Cretonne is designed to be a code generator for WebAssembly with these design goals:
- No undefined behavior
- Cretonne does not have a nasal demons clause, and it won't generate code with unexpected behavior if invariants are broken.
- Portable semantics
- As far as possible, Cretonne's input language has well-defined semantics that are the same on all target architectures. The semantics are usually the same as WebAssembly's.
- Fast sandbox verification
- Cretonne's input language has a safe subset for sandboxed code. No advanced analysis is required to verify memory safety as long as only the safe instructions are used. The safe instruction set is expressive enough to implement WebAssembly.
- Scalable performance
- Cretonne can be configured to generate code as quickly as possible, or it can generate very good code at the cost of slower compile times.
- Predictable performance
- When optimizing, Cretonne focuses on adapting the target-independent IL to the quirks of the target architecture. There are no advanced optimizations that sometimes work, sometimes fail.
Cretonne is using the Cargo package manager format. First, ensure you have installed a current stable rust (stable, beta, and nightly should all work, but only stable and beta are tested consistently). Then, change the working directory to your clone of cretonne and run:
cargo build
This will create a target/debug directory where you can find the generated binary.
To build the optimized binary for release:
cargo build --release
You can then run tests with:
./test-all.sh
To build the Cretonne documentation, you need the Sphinx documentation generator:
$ pip install sphinx sphinx-autobuild sphinx_rtd_theme $ cd cretonne/docs $ make html $ open _build/html/index.html
We don't support Sphinx versions before 1.4 since the format of index tuples has changed.