186 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
186 lines
10 KiB
Markdown
Prometeu VM Runtime — Canonical Architecture
|
||
|
||
Status: canonical
|
||
|
||
This document is the authoritative architectural reference for the Prometeu VM runtime. It reflects the implementation as it exists today and defines the invariants that govern architectural changes in the VM layer.
|
||
|
||
Scope boundary:
|
||
|
||
- PROMETEU itself is a fantasy handheld / fantasy console with a broader machine model, firmware model, cartridge model, and virtual hardware surface.
|
||
- This document does not define the whole PROMETEU machine.
|
||
- This document defines the VM/runtime subsystem that executes bytecode inside that machine.
|
||
- For broader machine-level framing, see [`../specs/README.md`](../specs/runtime/README.md).
|
||
|
||
Document roles:
|
||
|
||
- This file is normative for VM/runtime architecture.
|
||
- Detailed domain specifications may live under `docs/runtime/specs/`, but they must not contradict this document where VM/runtime invariants are concerned.
|
||
- Roadmaps, agendas, and PR proposals may discuss future changes, but they are not authoritative until this document is updated.
|
||
- The machine-wide fantasy console framing lives in the runtime specs manual and related domain specs; those documents are complementary, not competing VM architecture sources.
|
||
|
||
Maintenance rule:
|
||
|
||
- Any PR that changes VM/runtime architectural invariants must update this document in the same change.
|
||
|
||
|
||
1. Overview
|
||
-----------
|
||
|
||
- Stack‑based virtual machine
|
||
- Operand stack + call frames; bytecode is fetched from a ROM/program image with a separate constant pool.
|
||
- GC‑managed heap
|
||
- Non‑compacting mark–sweep collector; stable object handles (`HeapRef`) while live. Sweep invalidates unreachable handles; objects are never moved.
|
||
- Closures (Model B)
|
||
- First‑class closures with a heap‑allocated environment. The closure object is passed to the callee as a hidden `arg0` when invoking a closure.
|
||
- Cooperative coroutines
|
||
- Deterministic, cooperative scheduling. Switching and GC occur only at explicit safepoints (`FRAME_SYNC`).
|
||
- Unified syscall ABI
|
||
- PBX pre-load artifacts declare canonical host bindings in `SYSC` and encode call sites as `HOSTCALL <sysc_index>`. The loader resolves and patches them to numeric `SYSCALL <id>` before verification/execution. Capability gating is enforced at load and checked again defensively at runtime. Syscalls are not first‑class values.
|
||
|
||
|
||
2. Memory Model
|
||
----------------
|
||
|
||
2.1 Stack vs Heap
|
||
|
||
- Stack
|
||
- Each running context has an operand stack plus call frames (locals, return bookkeeping). Primitive values (integers, floats, booleans) reside on the stack. Heap objects are referenced by opaque `HeapRef` values on the stack.
|
||
- The VM’s current operand stack and frames are GC roots.
|
||
|
||
- Heap
|
||
- The heap stores runtime objects that require identity and reachability tracking. Handles are `HeapRef` indices into an internal object store.
|
||
- The collector is mark–sweep, non‑moving: it marks from roots, then reclaims unreachable objects without relocating survivors. Indices for live objects remain stable across collections.
|
||
|
||
2.2 Heap Object Kinds (as used today)
|
||
|
||
- Arrays of `Value`
|
||
- Variable‑length arrays whose elements may contain further `HeapRef`s.
|
||
- Closures
|
||
- Carry a function identifier and a captured environment (a slice/vector of `Value`s stored with the closure). Captured `HeapRef`s are traversed by the GC.
|
||
- Coroutines
|
||
- Heap‑resident coroutine records (state + wake time + suspended operand stack and call frames). These act as GC roots when suspended.
|
||
|
||
Notes:
|
||
- Literals like strings and numbers are sourced from the constant pool in the program image; heap allocation is only used for runtime objects (closures, arrays, coroutine records, and any future heap kinds). The constant pool never embeds raw `HeapRef`s.
|
||
|
||
2.3 GC Roots
|
||
|
||
- VM roots
|
||
- Current operand stack and call frames of the running coroutine (or main context).
|
||
- Suspended coroutines
|
||
- All heap‑resident, suspended coroutine objects are treated as roots. Their saved stacks/frames are scanned during marking.
|
||
- Root traversal
|
||
- The VM exposes a root‑visitor that walks the operand stack, frames, and coroutine records to feed the collector. The collector then follows children from each object kind (e.g., array elements, closure environments, coroutine stacks).
|
||
|
||
|
||
3. Execution Model
|
||
-------------------
|
||
|
||
3.1 Interpreter Loop
|
||
|
||
- The VM runs a classic fetch–decode–execute loop over the ROM’s bytecode. The current program counter (PC), operand stack, and call frames define execution state.
|
||
- Function calls establish new frames; returns restore the caller’s frame and adjust the operand stack to the callee’s declared return slot count (the verifier enforces this shape statically).
|
||
- Errors
|
||
- Traps (well‑defined fault conditions) surface as trap reasons; panics indicate internal consistency failures. The VM can report logical frame endings such as `FrameSync`, `BudgetExhausted`, `Halted`, end‑of‑ROM, `Breakpoint`, `Trap(code, …)`, and `Panic(msg)`.
|
||
|
||
3.2 Safepoints
|
||
|
||
- `FRAME_SYNC` is the only safepoint.
|
||
- At `FRAME_SYNC`, the VM performs two actions in a well‑defined order:
|
||
1) Garbage‑collection opportunity: root enumeration + mark–sweep.
|
||
2) Scheduler handoff: the currently running coroutine may yield/sleep, and a next ready coroutine is selected deterministically.
|
||
- No other opcode constitutes a GC or scheduling safepoint. Syscalls do not implicitly trigger GC or rescheduling.
|
||
|
||
3.3 Scheduler Behavior (Cooperative Coroutines)
|
||
|
||
- Coroutines are cooperative and scheduled deterministically (FIFO among ready coroutines).
|
||
- `YIELD` and `SLEEP` take effect at `FRAME_SYNC`:
|
||
- `YIELD` places the current coroutine at the end of the ready queue.
|
||
- `SLEEP` parks the current coroutine until its exact `wake_tick`, after which it re‑enters the ready queue at the correct point.
|
||
- `SPAWN` creates a new coroutine with its own stack/frames recorded in the heap and enqueues it deterministically.
|
||
- No preemption: the VM never interrupts a coroutine between safepoints.
|
||
|
||
|
||
4. Verification Model
|
||
----------------------
|
||
|
||
4.1 Verifier Responsibilities
|
||
|
||
The verifier statically checks bytecode for structural safety and stack‑shape correctness. Representative checks include:
|
||
|
||
- Instruction well‑formedness
|
||
- Unknown opcode, truncated immediates/opcodes, malformed function boundaries, trailing bytes.
|
||
- Control‑flow integrity
|
||
- Jump targets within bounds and to instruction boundaries; functions must have proper terminators; path coverage ensures a valid exit.
|
||
- Stack discipline
|
||
- No underflow/overflow relative to declared max stack; consistent stack height at control‑flow joins; `RET` occurs at the expected height.
|
||
- Call/return shape
|
||
- Direct calls and returns must match the declared argument counts and return slot counts. Mismatches are rejected.
|
||
- Syscalls
|
||
- The verifier runs only on the patched executable image. `HOSTCALL` is invalid at verification time. Final `SYSCALL` IDs must exist per `SyscallMeta`, and arity/declared return slot counts must match metadata.
|
||
- Closures
|
||
- `CALL_CLOSURE` is only allowed on closure values; the callee function must be known; argument counts for closure calls must match.
|
||
- Coroutines
|
||
- `YIELD` context must be valid; `SPAWN` argument counts are validated.
|
||
|
||
4.2 Runtime vs Verifier Guarantees
|
||
|
||
- The verifier guarantees structural correctness and stack‑shape invariants. It does not perform full type checking of value contents; dynamic checks (e.g., numeric domain checks, polymorphic comparisons, concrete syscall argument validation) occur at runtime and may trap.
|
||
- Capability gating for syscalls is enforced at load from cartridge capability flags and checked again at runtime by the VM/native interface.
|
||
|
||
|
||
5. Closures (Model B) — Calling Convention
|
||
-------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
- Creation
|
||
- `MAKE_CLOSURE` captures N values from the operand stack into a heap‑allocated environment alongside a function identifier. The opcode _pushes a `HeapRef` to the new closure.
|
||
- Call
|
||
- `CALL_CLOSURE` invokes a closure. The closure object itself is supplied to the callee as a hidden `arg0`. User‑visible arguments follow the function’s declared arity.
|
||
- Access to captures
|
||
- The callee can access captured values via the closure’s environment. Captured `HeapRef`s are traced by the GC.
|
||
|
||
|
||
6. Unified Syscall ABI
|
||
-----------------------
|
||
|
||
- Identification
|
||
- Host bindings are declared canonically as `(module, name, version)` in PBX `SYSC`, then executed as numeric IDs after loader patching. Syscalls are not first‑class values.
|
||
- Metadata‑driven
|
||
- `SyscallMeta` defines expected arity and return slot counts. The loader resolves `HOSTCALL` against this metadata and rejects raw `SYSCALL` in PBX pre-load artifacts; the verifier checks final IDs/arity/return‑slot counts against the same metadata.
|
||
- Arguments and returns
|
||
- Arguments are taken from the operand stack in the order defined by the ABI. Returns use multi‑slot results via a host‑side return buffer (`HostReturn`) which the VM copies back onto the stack, or zero slots for “void”. A mismatch in result counts is a fault/panic per current hardening logic.
|
||
- Example: the canonical asset runtime load surface is `asset.load(asset_id, slot) -> (status, handle)`. The caller does not supply `asset_name` or `asset_type`; bank kind is derived from `asset_table` using `asset_id`.
|
||
- Capabilities
|
||
- Cartridge capability flags are applied before load-time host resolution. Missing required capability aborts load; invoking a syscall without the required capability also traps defensively at runtime.
|
||
|
||
|
||
7. Garbage Collection
|
||
----------------------
|
||
|
||
- Collector
|
||
- Non‑moving mark–sweep.
|
||
- Triggers
|
||
- GC runs only at `FRAME_SYNC` safepoints.
|
||
- Liveness
|
||
- Roots comprise: the live VM stack/frames and all suspended coroutines. The collector traverses object‑specific children (array elements, closure environments, coroutine stacks).
|
||
- Determinism
|
||
- GC opportunities and scheduling order are tied to `FRAME_SYNC`, ensuring repeatable execution traces across runs with the same inputs.
|
||
|
||
|
||
8. Non‑Goals
|
||
-------------
|
||
|
||
- No RC
|
||
- No HIP
|
||
- No preemption
|
||
- No mailbox
|
||
|
||
|
||
9. Notes for Contributors
|
||
--------------------------
|
||
|
||
- Keep the public surface minimal and metadata‑driven (e.g., syscalls via `SyscallMeta`).
|
||
- Do not assume implicit safepoints; schedule and GC only at `FRAME_SYNC`.
|
||
- When adding new opcodes or object kinds, extend the verifier and GC traversal accordingly (children enumeration, environment scanning, root sets).
|
||
- Update this document alongside any architectural change that affects runtime invariants.
|