Newspeak is a dynamic, class-based, object-oriented language in the tradition of Smalltalk and Self. SOMns is an implementation of the Newspeak Specification Version 0.0.95 derived from the SOM (Simple Object Machine) class libraries, and based on TruffleSOM. It is implemented using the Truffle framework and runs on the JVM platform.
Truffle provides just-in-time compilation based on the Graal compiler, which enables SOMns to reach performance that is on par with state-of-the-art VMs for dynamic languages, including V8.
A simple Hello World program looks like:
class Hello usingPlatform: platform = (
public main: platform args: args = (
'Hello World!' println.
^ 0
)
)
The basic requirements for SOMns are a system with Java 9 or later, git, ant, and Python. Windows is currently not supported, but we test on Linux and macOS.
To checkout the code:
git clone https://github.com/smarr/SOMns.git
Then, SOMns can be build with Ant:
ant compile
Afterwards, the simple Hello World program is executed with:
./som core-lib/Hello.ns
To get an impression of the benefit o
For testing on the command line, the full command is
./som core-lib/Benchmarks/Harness.ns Mandelbrot 500 0 500
Additionally, there are JUnit tests and ant test
for executing the test suite.
A more comprehensive setup guide is available in the docs
folder and on
ReadTheDocs.
Compared to other Newspeaks and Smalltalks, it is completely file-based and does not have support for images. Instead of using customary bytecodes, SOMns is implemented as self-optimizing AST interpreter using the Truffle framework.
The overall goal is to be compliant with the specification, but include only absolutely necessary features. The current list of intended deviations from the specifications are as follows:
-
the mixin support of slots is not yet complete, see deactivate tests in core-lib/TestSuite/MixinTests.ns
-
simultaneous slots clauses are not fully supported (spec. 6.3.2)
-
object literals currently require a keyword prefix
objL
, to work around parser limitations
This code is distributed under the MIT License. Please see the LICENSE file for details. All contributions to the project are implicitly assumed to be under the MIT License. If this is not desired, we ask that it is stated explicitly. Information on previous authors are included in the AUTHORS file.
SOMns code is best written using our VS Code plugin, which provides support for typical IDE features such as code navigation and compilation, as well as a debugger. The SOMns support can then be installed via the Marketplace.
For the development of SOMns itself, we typically use Eclipse.
A complete guide on how to setup a workspace is available in the docs
folder
and on ReadTheDocs.
Active development of SOMns happens on the dev
branch .
The latest release is reflected by the release
branch .
Changes and releases are documented in our CHANGELOG.md.
SOMns is designed as platform for research on concurrent programming models, and their interactions. Here, we collect related papers:
-
A Concurrency-Agnostic Protocol for Multi-Paradigm Concurrent Debugging Tools, S. Marr, C. Torres Lopez, D. Aumayr, E. Gonzalez Boix, H. Mössenböck; Dynamic Language Symposium'17.
-
Few Versatile vs. Many Specialized Collections: How to design a collection library for exploratory programming? S. Marr, B. Daloze ; Programming Experience Workshop, PX/18.
-
Kómpos: A Platform for Debugging Complex Concurrent Applications, S. Marr, C. Torres Lopez, D. Aumayr, E. Gonzalez Boix, H. Mössenböck; Demonstration at the <Programming>'17 conference.
-
Toward Virtual Machine Adaption Rather than Reimplementation: Adapting SOMns for Grace, R. Roberts, S. Marr, M. Homer, J. Noble; Presentation at the MoreVMs'17 workshop at the <Programming>'17 conference.
-
Optimizing Communicating Event-Loop Languages with Truffle, S. Marr, H. Mössenböck; Presentation at the AGERE!’15 Workshop, co-located with SPLASH’15.
-
Cross-Language Compiler Benchmarking: Are We Fast Yet? S. Marr, B. Daloze, H. Mössenböck at the 12th Symposium on Dynamic Languages co-located with SPLASH'16.