RFC194

From RFC-Wiki




                                  Vint Cerf - UCLA
                                  Eric Harslem - Rand

NIC 7139 Category: D.4 Bob Metcalfe - MIT Updates: None Obsoletes: None Jim White - UCSB


              THE DATA RECONFIGURATION SERVICE --
           COMPILER/INTERPRETER IMPLEMENTATION NOTES


                I.  NEW FEATURES OF THE LANGUAGE

The meaning of S(#,E,,l) is only find an arbitrary

 number  (<=256) of EBCDIC characters and store them in
 identifier S.  This descriptor is terminated only by
 an invalid EBCDIC or by exceeding maximum permissible
 character count (256).

The assignment (S .<=. T) causes all attributes of

 identifier T to be given to S, i.e., length, type,
 and contents.

(S .<=. T || X) concatenates X onto the right-hand

 side of T and stores the result in S.  If T and X
 are binary the resulting value has a length equal
 to the sum L(T) + L(X).

T(X) joins L(X) and V(X) as a built-in identifier

 function.
 T(X) = type of identifier X.
 L(X) = length of contents of X.
 V(X) = contents of X converted to binary
        (decimal - binary is presently the only
        transformation).

New types ED and AD are EBCDIC and ASCII encoded

 decimal, respectively.  These have been added to
 complement the V(X) function.

New type SB has been added as signed binary. Type B

 is a logical binary string.

The syntactic notation for return-from-a-form has

 been changed.  See new syntax.




Data Reconfiguration Service RFC 194


II. NEW SYNTAX

form :: = rule | form rule :: = label inputstream outputstream; label :: = INTEGER | NULL inputstream :: = terms | NULL terms :: = term | terms, term outputstream :: = :terms | NULL term :: = identifier | identifier descriptor |

                   descriptor | comparator

identifier :: = <alpha followed by 0-3 alphanumerics> descriptor :: = (replicationexpr, datatype, valueexpr,

                   lengthexpr control)

comparator :: = (concatexpr connective concatexpr control) |

                   (identifier .<=. concatexpr control)

replicationexpr :: = # | arithmetricexpr | NULL datatype :: = B | O | X | E | A | ED | AD | SB | T (identifier) valueexpr :: = concatexpr | NULL lengthexpr :: = arithmeticexpr | NULL connective :: = .LE. | .LT. | .GT. | .GE. | .EQ. | .NE. concatexpr :: = value | concatexpr value value :: = literal | arithmeticexpr arithmeticexpr :: = primary | arithmeticexpr operator primary primary :: = identifier | L(identifier) | V(identifier) |

                     INTEGER

operator :: = + | - | * | / literal :: = literaltype "string"

literaltype :: = B | 0 | X | E | A | ED | AD | SB string :: = <from 0 to 256 chars> control :: = :options | NULL options :: = SFUR (arithmeticexpr) | SFUR (arithmeticexpr),

                   SFUR (arithmeticexpr)

SFUR :: = S | F | U | SR | FR | UR









Data Reconfiguration Service RFC 194


III. THE FORM INTERPRETER

Interpreter Overview

 The interpreter is a simple minded machine having the virtue of

helping the compiler writer by providing a rather powerful instruction set for hard-to-compile operations. Figure 1 shows the machine configuration:


 +-------------+                        +--------------+
 | inputstream |                        | outputstream |
 +-------------+                        +--------------+
         /\                           /
          \                          /
           \                        /
            \                     \/
            +-----------------------+
            |         CPU           |
            +-----------------------+
                   |        /\
                   |         |
                   |         |
                   \/        |
            +-----------------------+
Storage:    | Instruction           |
            | Sequence              |
            +-----------------------+
            | Label Table           |
            +-----------------------+
            | Literal/Identifier    |
            | Pool                  |
            +-----------------------+
            | Variable length       |
            | string area           |
            +-----------------------+


            Fig. 1. Form Interpreter







Data Reconfiguration Service RFC 194


The CPU is a box full of miscellaneous parts, the most important

being the Arithmetic Logic Unit and the instruction decoding unit. The CPU also maintains a collection of state registers to keep track of what it is doing. Figure 2 shows the rough layout.


+-----------------+ +---------------+ | Instruction | | Instruction | | Counter | | Register | +-----------------+ +---------------+

                                       |
                                       |
                                       V
                                +----------------+
                                | Operation Code |
                                | Decoding       |
 Run Time Stack                 +----------------+

+------------------+ / | \ | Operands | / | \ +------------------+ \/ V \/ | | +-----------------+ +------------------+ / Instruction \ | | | Interpreter | +------------------+ | Routines | | | \ / +------------------+ +---------------+ | | | /\ +------------------+ | | | | | | +------------------+ V | | | +---------------+ +------------------+ <------------- | Arithmetic | | | -------------> | Logic Unit | +------------------+ +---------------+ | | +------------------+ | | +------------------+


+------------------+ +------------------+ |Initial Input Ptr.| | Output pointer | +------------------+ +------------------+

+------------------+ +------------------+ |Current Input Ptr.| | True/False Flag | +------------------+ +------------------+



Data Reconfiguration Service RFC 194


Fig. 2. The Central Processor

 The CPU is a stack machine driven by a Polish postfix instruction

sequence. Operands placed on the Run Time Stack are used for arithmetic expression evaluation and for parameter passing between the interpreter and the built-in functions.

 The Current Input Pointer and the Output Pointer keep track of the

two data streams. Two input pointers are needed because of the backup requirement in the event of rule failure. All of these pointers are bit pointers into the two streams.

 Various implementations of the Run Time Stack are independent of

the interpretation of the DRS machine's instruction set. It is suggested that the stack will contain instruction operands from the instruction stream.

 The format of a compiled instruction sequence for a form is shown

in Fig. 3.

                    16 bits
             +--------/\---------+
            /                     \
            +---------------------+
            |  length n in bytes  |
       +--  +---------------------+
       |    |                     |
       |    |     compiled        |
       |    |     16-bit          |
    n <     |     instructions    |
       |    |                     |
       |    |                     |
       |    |                     |
       +--  +---------------------+


   Fig. 3.  Compiled Instruction Sequence Format









Data Reconfiguration Service RFC 194


The format of the compiled Label Table is shown in Fig. 4.

                                   16 bits
                              +-----/\-------+
                             /                \
                             +-----------------+
                             |  length n       |
                             |  in bytes       |
    +--   +------------------+-----------------+
    |     | numeric value of |  byte offset    |
    |     | statement number |  in inst. seq.  |
    |     +------------------+-----------------+
    |     |        :                :          |
 n <      |        :                :          |
    |     |        :                :          |
    |     |                                    |
    |     |                                    |
    |     |                                    |
    +--   +------------------------------------+
          \_________________ _________________/
                            V
                          32 bits


                Fig. 4.  Compiled Label Table













Data Reconfiguration Service RFC 194


Literals and Identifiers are compiled as shown in fig. 5.

                               2              2
                          +----/\----+   +----/\----+
                         /            \ /            \
                         +-------------+--------------+
        1         1      | length n    |    length n  |
     ___/\____ ___/\____ | in bytes    |    in bytes  |
    +---------+----------+-------------+--------------+
 /  |         |//////////|             |              |
 |  | Type    |//////////| bit length  |  byte offset |
 |  |         |//////////|             |              |
 |  +---------+----------+-------------+--------------+

5*n < | : |

 |  |                           :                     |
 |  |                           :                     | Identifiers
 |  |                                                 |
 \  |                                                 |
    +-------------------------------------------------+
 /  |                                                 |
 |  |            literals are                         |
 |  |            byte-aligned                         | Literals
 m <   |                                                 |
 |  |                                                 |
 |  |                                                 |
 \  +-------------------------------------------------+
 Legend:
 Type 0 = undefined
      1 = B (binary)
      2 = 0 (octal)
      3 = X (hexadecimal)
      4 = E (EBCDIC)
      5 = A (ASCII)
      6 = ED (EBCDIC encoded decimal)
      7 = AD (ASCII encoded decimal)
      8 = SB (signed binary, two's complement)


         Fig. 5.  Compiled Literals and Identifiers





Data Reconfiguration Service RFC 194


Types B, 0, X, AD, ED, and SB point to 32-bit word- aligned data shown below.

+---+---+-----+-------+       +-------------------+    word-aligned,
| T |///|  L  |    ---+-----> |                   |    32-bit right-
+---+---+-----+-------+       +-------------------+    justified


  Types E and A point to byte-aligned symbol streams

as shown below.

                             byte-aligned, L <= 256
+---+---+-----+-------+       +------------------------+
| T |///|  L  |    ---+-----> |                        |
+---+---+-----+-------+       +------------------------+



















Data Reconfiguration Service RFC 194


Instruction Format

 Since literals and identifiers will be stored in the same data

area, more than 256 literals plus identifiers might be encountered so more than 8 bits are needed to reference literal/id pool. Furthermore, such references must be distinguished from operators in the instruction stream, so a 16-bit instruction will be used, as shown below.

 +--------+------------------------+
 |    4   |          12            |
 +--------+------------------------+
     |
    /
   /
  /
 |
 V
 LD = 0  literal or identifier reference (12-bit positive integer)
 IC = 1  12-bit two's complement integer constant
 OP = 2  operator
 AD = 3  address (12-bit positive integer)
ARB = 4  indefinite replication factor

NULL = 5 missing attribute of term

 The operation code decoder picks up types 0, 1, 3, 4,

and 5 and deposits them on top of the stack (TOS). LD is an index into the literal/identifier table, and AD is an index into the instruction sequence.

 The decoder examines OP elements further:


     4        4            8
 +--------+--------+----------------+
 |  0010  |        |////////////////|
 +--------+--------+----------------+
    OP        |
              +----------> 0 = binary operator
                           1 = unary operator
                           2 = special operator






Data Reconfiguration Service RFC 194


Binary Operators (*)

 Let the TOS contain y and the next level, x.  The binary operators

compute x <bop> y, popping both x, y from stack, and put the result back on top of the stack.

                 +---+ <-- TOS  +-----+ <-- TOS
                 | y |          | x-y |
 e.g.     x-y => +---+     ===> +-----+
                 | x |          |/////|
                 +---+          +-----+


Binary Operator Encoding

                 4        4        4        4
            +--------+--------+--------+--------+
            |  0010  |  0000  |        |////////|
            +--------+--------+--------+--------+
                                   |
        +--------------------------+
        |
        V
 0 = integer +
 1 = integer -
 2 = integer x
 3 = integer : (or /), no remainder
 4 = concatenate ||
 All binary operations except concatenate expect the top

two elements on the stack to describe type B, 0, X, or SB. The result is always a 32-bit type B element. The concatenate operator fails unless both types are identical. For example:



 (*) As suggested above, the stack really contains instruction

operands that describe data; for convenience in illustrations the data rather than their descriptors are shown on the stack.







Data Reconfiguration Service RFC 194


    type     L    value             T       L     V
   +------+------+------+        +------+------+------+

TOS -> | B | 32 | 4 | | B | 32 | 12 | <- TOS

   +------+------+------+   ==>  +------+------+------+
   |  B   |  8   |  16  |        |//////|//////|//////|
   +------+------+------+        +------+------+------+
   Before-operation                after-operation


   +------+------+------+        +------+------+------+

TOS -> | A | 2 | DE | | A | 5 |ABCDE | <- TOS

   +------+------+------+   ==>  +------+------+------+
   |  A   |  3   | ABC  |        |//////|//////|//////|
   +------+------+------+        +------+------+------+
   Before || operation             after || operation


No binary operator has any effect on the TRUE/FALSE flag.


Unary Operators

     4        4        4        4
 +--------+--------+--------+--------+
 |  0010  |  0001  |        |        |
 +--------+--------+--------+--------+
                      |         |
       +--------------+         |
       |                        |
       V                        |
0 = integer minus               V
1 = load identifier          0 = evaluated contents
                                 (after dec - binary
                                  conversion)
                             1 = length field
                             2 = type field
2 = Label Table Reference







Data Reconfiguration Service RFC 194


 For the unary minus operator the data described by the top of the

stack is replaced with its 2's complement. The form fails if the TOS type is not SB, B, 0, or X.

 The Load identifier expects the TOS to describe an index into the

literal/identifier pool (that is, an LD instruction) . The TOS described data is replaced by 32-bit type B values. The operation fails if the contents cannot be converted from encoded decimal to binary. B, 0, and X types are treated as unsigned integers, SB is treated as 2's complement.

 The Label Table Reference operator expects a 32-bit type B value

described by TOS and searches for this label in the label Table. If found, the TOS described data is replaced by the relative address in the instruction sequence of the label (in the form of an AD instruction). If not found, the form fails. No Unary operator has any effect on the TRUE/FALSE flag.


Special Operators

            4        4        4        4
        +--------+--------+--------+--------+
        |  0010  |  0010  |        |        |
        +--------+--------+--------+--------+
                             |         |
     +-----------------------+        /
     |                               /
     V                              /

0 = store TOS | 1 = return V 2 = branch 0 = true, 1 = false, 2 = unconditional

3 = compare 0 = .EQ. 2 = .LE. 4 = .GE.

                        1 = .NE.  3 = .LT.   5 = .GT.

4 = move input ptr 0 = store current into initial

                        1 = store initial into current

5 = input call 0 = no compare

                        1 = compare

6 = output call






Data Reconfiguration Service RFC 194


Store TOS

The TOS describes an index into the ID table and the next lower

element in the stack describes a value to be stored. After execution, both elements are popped off the stack.

Return

 The TOS describes a value to be returned to the routine which

initiated the FORM MACHINE. The actual mechanism will be implementation dependent, but the FORM MACHINE will relin- quish control after this instruction completes execution.

Branch

 The TOS describes an index into the instruction sequence to be used

as the new instruction counter (IC) if the branch conditions are satisfied. The branch instruction checks the state of the TRUE/FALSE flag register and either increments the IC by 1 or replaces it with the TOS described element. In any case, the TOS is popped.

Compare

 The compare operator takes the two elements described by the two

top stack entries and compares them (.EQ.,.LT.,etc.). If n is at the top of the stack, and m is just below, then m.xx.n is performed, and the TRUE/False flag is set accordingly. For .xx. = .EQ. or .NE. we must have identical type, length, and content for equality to hold.

 The other boolean comparators will not be attempted if types are

different (i.e., form fails), but for same types, B, 0, X cause binary- justified compares, and A, E, AD, ED cause left-justified string compares with the shorter string padded with blanks.

Move Input Pointer

 This operator (no operands) replaces the Current Input Pointer with

the Initial Input Pointer (back-up), or the Initial Input Pointer with the current one (entry to rule).

Input Call

This is the most complex operator thus far encountered.  It requires

four operands from the run-time stack:





Data Reconfiguration Service RFC 194


TOS +----------------------------+

 | binary or null             |  length to find
 +----------------------------+
 | LD to literal or null      |  value (literal)
 +----------------------------+
 | binary code                |  input data type
 +----------------------------+
 | binary, arbitrary, or null |  replication count
 +----------------------------+
 The input call operator can be invoked with the "no compare" flag

set, in which case the value expression parameter is ignored and only the input type and length expressions are used. In this case, the input routine tries to find in the input stream as many characters of the required type (bits, digits, etc.) as needed to fill the length expression requirement. If successful, the TRUE/FALSE flag is set TRUE, the stack is popped to remove the input parameters, and the string obtained is described by the TOS. If the input stream cannot be matched then the parameters are popped off the stack, and the TRUE/FALSE flag is set FALSE.

 If the "compare" flag is set, the input stream must be searched for

the value expression. However, we must take some care here to be sure we know what to look for. There are several cases:

a) The length expression parameter is greater than the

length of the value expression but the type of input de-
sired is the same as the value expression type.  For B, 0
and X types, right-justify value expression in length-
expression field, sign bit is extended left if type BS.
If type A, E, AD, or ED pad on the right with blanks.  b)  Same as

a) but length is too small. B, 0, and X type strings

are truncated on the left.  A, E, AD and ED are truncated
on the right.  c)  The type of the value expression and the type

parameter

differ.  This case is deferred for discussion and pre-
sently is considered an error causing form failure.
 If the input string matches, then the TRUE/FALSE flag is set true,

the parameters are popped from the stack, and the resulting string is described by the TOS. Otherwise, the FALSE flag is set and the parameters are popped.

 When a successful match is found the input subroutine always

advances the Current Input Pointer by the appropriate amount. Since we are dealing at the bit level this pointer must be maintained as a bit pointer!



Data Reconfiguration Service RFC 194


Output Call

 This routine utilizes the same parameters as the input call, but

operates on the output stream. The TRUE/FALSE flag is not distributed by this operator. As for input, there are four parameters on top of the stack, the length expression value, the value expression value, the desired output type, and the replication expression value. When there is a mis- match between the output type and the value expression type, a conversion must take place. The value expression is trans- formed into the desired output type and fitted into the field length specified by the length expression.

Truncation and Padding Rules

a) Character -> character (A,E,AD,ED -> A,E,AD,ED) conversion

is left-justified and truncated or padded with blanks
on the right.  b)  Character -> numeric and numeric -> character

conversion is

right-justified and truncated or padded on the left with
zeros.  Beware!  Two's complement numbers may be bollixed
by this.  c)  Numeric -> character conversion is right-justified and
left padded with blanks or left-truncated.  As for the unary

operators, a numeric bit-string is treated as unsigned, except SB which is treated as two's complement. Thus we have:

            (1,ED,X"FF",3) = E'255'
           (1,ED,X"100",3) = E'256'
 but (1,ED,SB"10000000",4) = E'-256'
 If the output routine is able to perform the desired action, it

advances the Output Stream Pointer, and pops all parameters from the run-time stack.










Data Reconfiguration Service RFC 194


V. INSTRUCTION SET

it/id ref LD <num> Literal or identifier

                                         reference -> TOS

int const IC <num> small 2's comp. integer

                                         constant -> TOS

address AD <num> Address -> TOS null parameter NULL missing term attribute add ADD TOS = x,y x + y -> TOS subtract SUB TOS = x,y x - y -> TOS multiply MUL TOS = x,y x * y -> TOS divide DIV TOS = x,y x/y -> TOS concatenate CON TOS = x,y x||y -> TOS unary minus UNIN TOS = x -x -> TOS load id value LIV TOS = LD x V(LD x) -> TOS load id length LIL TOS = LD x V(LD x) -> TOS load id type LIT TOS = LD x V(LD x) -> TOS look up label LVL TOS = x AD x -> TOS sto STO TOS = x,y y -> x return RET TOS = x return to

                                                       caller with x

branch true BT TOS = AD x AD x -> Instr.

                                                               counter

branch false BF TOS = AD x AD x -> Instr.

                                                               counter

branch BU TOS = AD x AD x -> Instr.

                                                               counter

compare equal CEQ TOS = x,y (y.EQ.x) ->

                                                               TRUE/FALSE
                                                               flag

compare not equal CNE TOS = x,y (y.NE.x) -> T/FF compare <= CLE TOS = x,y (y.LE.x) -> T/FF call output OUT TOS = r,t,v,l (r,t,v,l) -> output call input IN ( INC = compare TOS = r,t,v,l (r,t,v,l) -> TOS

                     INN = no compare )

current -> initial SCIP CIP -> IIP (store current input

                                                        ptr - initial IP)

initial -> current SICP IIP -> CIP (store initial input

                                                        ptr - CIP)







Data Reconfiguration Service RFC 194


VI. EXAMPLE COMPILATION

FORM SOURCE GENERATED POLISH INSTRUCTION SEQUENCE

                 ADDR. INSTR.     COMMENTS

(NUMB.<=.1); 0 SICP RULE PRELUDE

                 1     IC   1
                 2     LD   0   REFERENCE TO NUMB
                 3     STO      STORE IN NUMB
                 4     SCIP     RULE POSTLUDE

1 CC(,E,,1:FR(99)), 5 SICP RULE PRELUDE

                 6     NULL     NO REPLICATION EXPRESSION
                 7     IC   4   TYPE EBCDIC
                 8     NULL     NO VALUE EXPRESSION
                 9     IC   1   LENGTH
                 10    INN      INPUT CALL WITH NO COMPARE
                 11    AD   15
                 12    BT       SKIP RETURN IF INN SUCCEEDS
                 13    IC   99  RETURN CODE
                 14    RET      RETURN TO CALLER IF FAILED
                 15    LD   1   REFERENCE TO CC
                 16    STO      STORE INPUT DATA IN CC

LINE(,E,,121: 17 NULL NO REPLICATION EXPRESSION

     FR(99)),    18    IC   4   TYPE IS EBCDIC
                 19    NULL     NO VALUE EXPRESSION
                 20    IC   121 LENGTH
                 21    INN      INPUT WITH NO COMPARE
                 22    AD   26
                 23    BT       SKIP RETURN IF OK
                 24    IC   98  RETURN CODE
                 25    RET      RETURN TO CALLER IF FAILED
                 26    LD   2   REFERENCE TO LINE
                 27    STO      STORE INPUT IN LINE
CC, 28 SCIP SUCCESSFUL INPUT
                 29    NULL     NO REPLICATION FACTOR
                 30    LD   1   REFERENCE TO CC
                 31    LIT      TYPE OF CC
                 32    LD   1   REFERENCE TO VALUE OF CC
                 33    LD   1   CC AGAIN
                 34    LIL      LENGTH OF CC
                 35    OUT      OUTPUT CC

(,ED,NUMB,2), 36 NULL NO REPLICATION

                 37    IC   6   TYPE IS ED
                 38    LD   0   REFERENCE TO VALUE OF NUMB
                 39    IC   2   LENGTH OF OUTPUT FIELD
                 40    OUT      OUTPUT NUMB AS EBCDIC DEC.

(,E,E".",1), 41 NULL NO REPLICATION

                 42    IC   4   TYPE IS EBCDIC


Data Reconfiguration Service RFC 194


                 43    LD   3   REFERENCE TO E"."
                 44    IC   1   LENGTH TO OUTPUT
                 45    OUT      OUTPUT THE PERIOD

(,E,LINE,117), 46 NULL NO REPLICATION

                 47    IC   4   TYPE IS EBCDIC
                 48    LD   2   REFERENCE TO LINE
                 49    IC   117 LENGTH TO OUTPUT
                 50    OUT      PUT OUT CONTENTS OF LINE

(NUMB.<=.NUMB+1: 51 LD 0 REFERENCE TO NUMB

     U(1));      52    IC   1   AMOUNT TO ADD
                 53    ADD      ADD TO NUMB
                 54    LD   0   REFERENCE TO NUMB
                 55    STO      STORE BACK INTO NUMB
                 56    AD   5   PLACE TO GO
                 57    B        UNCONDITIONAL BRANCH BACK


            LITERAL/IDENTIFIER TABLE
                 0     NUMB
                 1     CC
                 2     LINE
                 3     E"."


                 LABEL TABLE
              LABEL     OFFSET
                1         5


   [ This RFC was put into machine readable form for entry ]
     [ into the online RFC archives by Simone Demmel 6/97 ]