How to approach creating a JVM programming language?

ASM can be a solution for generating bytecode. To start, check the topics on generating elements from the manual.


I would also recommend ASM, but have a look at Jasmin, I used it (or, rather, had to use it) for a university project, and it worked quite well. I wrote a lexer-parser-analyzer-optimizer-generator combination for a programing language using Java and Jasmin, so it was generating JVM Code. I uploaded the code here; the interesting part should be the source code itself. In the folder bytecode/InsanelyFastByteCodeCreator.java, you find a piece of code which transforms an AST Tree into the input format of Jasmin assembler. It is quite straightforward.

The source language (which was transformed to the AST by the lexer-parser-analyzer) is a subset of Java called MiniJava. It lacks some “complicated” features like inheritance, constructors, static methods, private fields and methods. None of those features are difficult to implement, but there was another task to write an x86 backend (so to generate machine assembler), and those things tend to get difficult if you got no JVM which handles some of those things.

In case you wonder about the strange class name: The task of the university project was to transform the AST into an SSA Graph (representing the input code), optimize the graph, and then turn it into Java bytecode. That was about ¾ of the work of the project and the InsanlyFastByteCodeCreator was just a short-cut to test everything.

Have a look at the “Java Virtual Machine” book from Jon Meyer and Troy Downing. This book heavily references the Jasmin Assembler; it’s quite helpful for understanding the JVM internals.


Last weekend, I was asking myself the same question to port my toy language to the JVM.

I spend only few hours searching information,so take this references with a grain of salt.

  • Language Implementation Patterns. I hate antlr but this book looks very good. If you dont like antlr neither, there is a very good about parsing "Parsing Techniques. A Practical Guide."

    Learn to build configuration file readers, data readers, model-driven code generators, source-to-source translators, source analyzers, and interpreters. You don’t need a background in computer science—ANTLR creator Terence Parr demystifies language implementation by breaking it down into the most common design patterns. Pattern by pattern, you’ll learn the key skills you need to implement your own computer languages.

    Chapter 10 cover in 30 pages (to fast IMO) this topics. But there are other chapter that probably you will be interested.

    • 10 Building Bytecode Interpreters
      • 10.1 Programming Bytecode Interpreters . .
      • 10.2 Defining an Assembly Language Syntax
      • 10.3 Bytecode Machine Architecture . . . . .
      • 10.4 Where to Go from Here . . . . . . . . . .
      • P.26. Bytecode Assembler . . . . . . . . . . .
      • P.27. Stack-Based Bytecode Interpreter . . .
      • P.28. Register-Based Bytecode Interpreter
      http://pragprog.com/titles/tpdsl/language-implementation-patterns
    • The Implementation of Lua 5.0 This is a great paper about register- based bytecode machines. Go an read it even for the sake of it.

    • Lisp in Small Pieces. This book teach how to write a 2 schme compailers that compile to C. So many lessons can be learned from this book. I own a copy of this book and it is really good for anyone interesting is lisp, but maybe not your cup of tea.

      This is a comprehensive account of the semantics and the implementation of the whole Lisp family of languages, namely Lisp, Scheme and related dialects. It describes 11 interpreters and 2 compilers ...

    http://www.amazon.com/Lisp-Small-Pieces-Christian-Queinnec/dp/0521562473

Check the Dalvik7 VM, a register-based VM. The DVM operates on bytecodes that are transformed from the Java Class files compiled by a Java compiler.

There is a mailing list about the topic, jvm-languages.

Are you planning to upload the code to anyplace? I would like to take a look.


Last semester I have attended a "Compiler Construction" course. Our project was exactly what you want to do.

The language I've used to write my language was Scala. It runs on a JVM but supports a lot of advanced features that Java doesn't (still fully compatible with a pure java JVM).

To output java bytecode I've used the Scala CAFEBABE library. Well documented and you don't have to go deep inside java classes to understand what to do.

Beside the book, I think you can find a lot of infos by going trough the labs we've done during the course.