A fast, small, safe, gradually typed embeddable scripting language derived from Lua
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Arseny Kapoulkine 48aa7a5162
bench: Implement first class support for callgrind (#570)
Since callgrind allows to control stats collection from the guest, this
allows us to reset the collection right before the benchmark starts.

This change exposes this to the benchmark runner and integrates
callgrind data parsing into bench.py, so that we can run bench.py with
--callgrind argument and, as long as the runner was built with callgrind
support, we get instruction counts from the run.

We convert instruction counts to seconds using 10G instructions/second
rate; there's no correct way to do this without simulating the full CPU
pipeline but it results in time units on a similar scale to real runs.
2022-07-04 11:13:07 -07:00
.github bench: Implement first class support for callgrind (#570) 2022-07-04 11:13:07 -07:00
Analysis Sync to upstream/release/534 (#569) 2022-06-30 16:52:43 -07:00
Ast Sync to upstream/release/534 (#569) 2022-06-30 16:52:43 -07:00
bench bench: Implement first class support for callgrind (#570) 2022-07-04 11:13:07 -07:00
CLI bench: Implement first class support for callgrind (#570) 2022-07-04 11:13:07 -07:00
CodeGen Sync to upstream/release/529 (#505) 2022-05-26 15:08:16 -07:00
Common/include/Luau Sync to upstream/release/534 (#569) 2022-06-30 16:52:43 -07:00
Compiler Sync to upstream/release/534 (#569) 2022-06-30 16:52:43 -07:00
docs Update compatibility.md (#566) 2022-06-30 17:07:56 -07:00
extern Sync to upstream/release/527 (#481) 2022-05-13 12:36:37 -07:00
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papers Fix HATRA '21 README.md formatting (#118) 2021-11-04 09:00:41 -05:00
prototyping Prototyping function overload resolution (#508) 2022-06-14 20:03:43 -07:00
rfcs Update STATUS.md 2022-06-28 09:08:12 -07:00
scripts Added multi-os runners for benchmark & implemented luau analyze (#542) 2022-06-24 09:46:29 -07:00
tests Sync to upstream/release/534 (#569) 2022-06-30 16:52:43 -07:00
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Luau CI Coverage

Luau (lowercase u, /ˈlu.aʊ/) is a fast, small, safe, gradually typed embeddable scripting language derived from Lua.

It is designed to be backwards compatible with Lua 5.1, as well as incorporating some features from future Lua releases, but also expands the feature set (most notably with type annotations). Luau is largely implemented from scratch, with the language runtime being a very heavily modified version of Lua 5.1 runtime, with completely rewritten interpreter and other performance innovations. The runtime mostly preserves Lua 5.1 API, so existing bindings should be more or less compatible with a few caveats.

Luau is used by Roblox game developers to write game code, as well as by Roblox engineers to implement large parts of the user-facing application code as well as portions of the editor (Roblox Studio) as plugins. Roblox chose to open-source Luau to foster collaboration within the Roblox community as well as to allow other companies and communities to benefit from the ongoing language and runtime innovation.

This repository hosts source code for the language implementation and associated tooling, documentation for the language as well as RFCs and other materials. The documentation portion of this repository can be viewed at https://luau-lang.org/

Usage

Luau is an embeddable language, but it also comes with two command-line tools by default, luau and luau-analyze.

luau is a command-line REPL and can also run input files. Note that REPL runs in a sandboxed environment and as such doesn't have access to the underlying file system except for ability to require modules.

luau-analyze is a command-line type checker and linter; given a set of input files, it produces errors/warnings according to the file configuration, which can be customized by using --! comments in the files or .luaurc files. For details please refer to type checking and linting documentation.

You can download the binaries from a recent release.

Building

To build Luau tools or tests yourself, you can use CMake on all platforms:

mkdir cmake && cd cmake
cmake .. -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo
cmake --build . --target Luau.Repl.CLI --config RelWithDebInfo
cmake --build . --target Luau.Analyze.CLI --config RelWithDebInfo

Alternatively, on Linux/macOS you can use make:

make config=release luau luau-analyze

To integrate Luau into your CMake application projects, at the minimum you'll need to depend on Luau.Compiler and Luau.VM projects. From there you need to create a new Luau state (using Lua 5.x API such as lua_newstate), compile source to bytecode and load it into the VM like this:

// needs lua.h and luacode.h
size_t bytecodeSize = 0;
char* bytecode = luau_compile(source, strlen(source), NULL, &bytecodeSize);
int result = luau_load(L, chunkname, bytecode, bytecodeSize, 0);
free(bytecode);

if (result == 0)
    return 1; /* return chunk main function */

For more details about the use of host API you currently need to consult Lua 5.x API. Luau closely tracks that API but has a few deviations, such as the need to compile source separately (which is important to be able to deploy VM without a compiler), or lack of __gc support (use lua_newuserdatadtor instead).

To gain advantage of many performance improvements it's highly recommended to use safeenv feature, which sandboxes individual scripts' global tables from each other as well as protects builtin libraries from monkey-patching. For this to work you need to call luaL_sandbox for the global state and luaL_sandboxthread for each new script's execution thread.

Testing

Luau has an internal test suite; in CMake builds it is split into two targets, Luau.UnitTest (for bytecode compiler and type checker/linter tests) and Luau.Conformance (for VM tests). The unit tests are written in C++, whereas the conformance tests are largely written in Luau (see tests/conformance).

Makefile builds combine both into a single target and can be ran via make test.

Dependencies

Luau uses C++ as its implementation language. The runtime requires C++11, whereas the compiler and analysis components require C++17. It should build without issues using Microsoft Visual Studio 2017 or later, or gcc-7 or clang-7 or later.

Other than the STL/CRT, Luau library components don't have external dependencies. The test suite depends on doctest testing framework, and the REPL command-line depends on isocline.

License

Luau implementation is distributed under the terms of MIT License. It is based on Lua 5.x implementation that is MIT licensed as well.

When Luau is integrated into external projects, we ask to honor the license agreement and include Luau attribution into the user-facing product documentation. The attribution using Luau logo is also encouraged.