I have been thinking for many months on and off how to solve the problem of calling a function in a custom programming language. There is this strange thing of an infinite set of recursive calls to the same function that I am having difficulty getting mentally beyond.
I'll illustrate like this. Say you are calling some function like doFoo(1, 2)
, and you now have to implement this. What happens (in my mind) is, you first push the variables onto the stack, and then do your jump to the function. But let's focus on this first step, pushing the variables onto the stack.
What you do is create a stack frame, and push that onto the stack. But in order to create a stack frame, you need to allocate space in memory. So to create the stack frame, you first call your custom allocateMemory(size)
sort of function. Now this function needs to push its variables onto the stack, creating a stack frame.... So you allocate space on the stack for this stack frame by calling allocateMemory(size)
from within the original allocateMemory(size)
function. But then it happens again! And again and again and again. Everything needs to allocate memory, but the memory allocation requires pushing onto the stack, which requires memory allocation, which requires pushing onto the stack.... Etc.
So the way I just thought of to potentially resolve this is by thinking about this operation of "pushing onto the stack" as an atomic primitive operation. Essentially, from the "higher up" level of abstraction, pushing onto the stack is one step only. Like I imagine with assembly creating the stack frame under the hood however it does, it is implemented in the hardware (I think?), so you just do push <value>
and the rest is abstracted away in a lower level system.
So thinking like that sort of solves the problem, but not quite.
For the purposes of this question, I am building a custom language interpreter to run in the browser. Essentially it will work like a VM interpreting byte code. Say we have bytecode that has the equivalent command of push <value>
, which creates a stack frame (somehow). The question is, where/how do I implement that implementation of the push
command? Below the VM interpreter? That would mean I have to write the allocation logic and creation of the stack frame in JavaScript land, and then the custom language would run in VM land, calling into JavaScript land to allocate stuff on the stack.
But I don't really want to do that. I want to write everything in this custom language! So how can I accomplish that? It is as if I need to create layers of VMs. One VM is running which creates the stack frames and handles commands from a higher level VM. The lower-level VM is implemented using very low-level primitives, smaller than "push onto the stack". It is using basically store
and fetch
and call
and that's it.
Basically I am getting lost here. How do I handle this situation or think about it to get past the mental block? Is there a way to avoid having to create these sorts of layers? Any better way of conceptualizing this?