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  4. <title>Status &amp; Roadmap</title>
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  6. <meta name="Author" content="Mike Pall">
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  17. <a href="http://luajit.org"><span>Lua<span id="logo">JIT</span></span></a>
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  19. <div id="head">
  20. <h1>Status &amp; Roadmap</h1>
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  61. <div id="main">
  62. <p>
  63. The <span style="color: #0000c0;">LuaJIT 1.x</span> series represents
  64. the current <span style="color: #0000c0;">stable branch</span>.
  65. Only a single bug has been discovered in the last three years. So, if
  66. you need a rock-solid VM, you are encouraged to fetch the latest
  67. release of LuaJIT 1.x from the <a href="http://luajit.org/download.html"><span class="ext">&raquo;</span>&nbsp;Download</a>
  68. page.
  69. </p>
  70. <p>
  71. <span style="color: #c00000;">LuaJIT 2.0</span> is the currently active
  72. <span style="color: #c00000;">development branch</span>.
  73. It still has <b>Beta Test</b> status, but it's not undergoing substantial
  74. changes anymore.
  75. It has <a href="http://luajit.org/performance.html"><span class="ext">&raquo;</span>&nbsp;much better performance</a> than LuaJIT 1.x.
  76. It's nearly feature-complete, so you should definitely
  77. start to evaluate it for new projects right now.
  78. </p>
  79. <h2>Current Status</h2>
  80. <p>
  81. This is a list of the things you should know about the LuaJIT 2.0 beta test:
  82. </p>
  83. <ul>
  84. <li>
  85. Obviously there will be some <b>bugs</b> in a VM which has been
  86. rewritten from the ground up. Please report your findings together with
  87. the circumstances needed to reproduce the bug. If possible, reduce the
  88. problem down to a simple test case.<br>
  89. There is no formal bug tracker at the moment. The best place for
  90. discussion is the <a href="http://luajit.org/list.html"><span class="ext">&raquo;</span>&nbsp;LuaJIT mailing list</a>. Of course
  91. you may also send your bug reports <a href="contact.html">directly to me</a>,
  92. especially when they contain lengthy debug output or if you require
  93. confidentiality.
  94. </li>
  95. <li>
  96. The x86 JIT compiler only generates code for CPUs with support for
  97. <b>SSE2</b> instructions. I.e. you need at least a P4, Core 2/i3/i5/i7,
  98. Atom or K8/K10 to get the full benefit.<br>
  99. If you run LuaJIT on older CPUs without SSE2 support, the JIT compiler
  100. is disabled and the VM falls back to the LuaJIT interpreter. This is faster
  101. than the Lua interpreter, but not nearly as fast as the JIT compiler of course.
  102. Run the command line executable without arguments to show the current status
  103. (<tt>JIT: ON</tt> or <tt>JIT: OFF</tt>).
  104. </li>
  105. <li>
  106. The VM is complete in the sense that it <b>should</b> run all Lua code
  107. just fine. It's considered a serious bug if the VM crashes or produces
  108. unexpected results &mdash; please report this. There are only very few
  109. known incompatibilities with standard Lua:
  110. <ul>
  111. <li>
  112. The Lua <b>debug API</b> is missing a couple of features (return
  113. hooks for non-Lua functions) and shows slightly different behavior
  114. (no per-coroutine hooks, no tail call counting).
  115. </li>
  116. <li>
  117. Some of the <b>configuration options</b> of Lua&nbsp;5.1 are not supported:
  118. <ul>
  119. <li>The <b>number type</b> cannot be changed (it's always a <tt>double</tt>).</li>
  120. <li>The stand-alone executable cannot be linked with <b>readline</b>
  121. to enable line editing. It's planned to add support for loading it
  122. on-demand.</li>
  123. </ul>
  124. </li>
  125. <li>
  126. Most other issues you're likely to find (e.g. with the existing test
  127. suites) are differences in the <b>implementation-defined</b> behavior.
  128. These either have a good reason (like early tail call resolving which
  129. may cause differences in error reporting), are arbitrary design choices
  130. or are due to quirks in the VM. The latter cases may get fixed if a
  131. demonstrable need is shown.
  132. </li>
  133. </ul>
  134. </li>
  135. <li>
  136. The <b>JIT compiler</b> falls back to the
  137. interpreter in some cases. All of this works transparently, so unless
  138. you use <tt>-jv</tt>, you'll probably never notice (the interpreter is
  139. <a href="http://luajit.org/performance.html"><span class="ext">&raquo;</span>&nbsp;quite fast</a>, too). Here are the known issues:
  140. <ul>
  141. <li>
  142. Most known issues cause a <b>NYI</b> (not yet implemented) trace abort
  143. message. E.g. for calls to some internal library
  144. functions. Reporting these is only mildly useful, except if you have good
  145. example code that shows the problem. Obviously, reports accompanied with
  146. a patch to fix the issue are more than welcome. But please check back
  147. with me, before writing major improvements, to avoid duplication of
  148. effort.
  149. </li>
  150. <li>
  151. Some checks are missing in the JIT-compiled code for obscure situations
  152. with <b>open upvalues aliasing</b> one of the SSA slots later on (or
  153. vice versa). Bonus points, if you can find a real world test case for
  154. this.
  155. </li>
  156. <li>
  157. Currently some <b>out-of-memory</b> errors from <b>on-trace code</b> are not
  158. handled correctly. The error may fall through an on-trace
  159. <tt>pcall</tt> (x86) or it may be passed on to the function set with
  160. <tt>lua_atpanic</tt> (x64).
  161. </li>
  162. </ul>
  163. </li>
  164. </ul>
  165. <h2>Roadmap</h2>
  166. <p>
  167. Please refer to the
  168. <a href="http://lua-users.org/lists/lua-l/2011-01/msg01238.html"><span class="ext">&raquo;</span>&nbsp;LuaJIT
  169. Roadmap 2011</a> for the latest release plan. Here's the general
  170. project plan for LuaJIT 2.0:
  171. </p>
  172. <ul>
  173. <li>
  174. The main goal right now is to stabilize LuaJIT 2.0 and get it out of
  175. beta test. <b>Correctness</b> has priority over completeness. This
  176. implies the first stable release will certainly NOT compile every
  177. library function call and will fall back to the interpreter from time
  178. to time. This is perfectly ok, since it still executes all Lua code,
  179. just not at the highest possible speed.
  180. </li>
  181. <li>
  182. The next step is to get it to compile more library functions and handle
  183. more cases where the compiler currently bails out. This doesn't mean it
  184. will compile every corner case. It's much more important that it
  185. performs well in a majority of use cases. Every compiler has to make
  186. these trade-offs &mdash; <b>completeness</b> just cannot be the
  187. overriding goal for a low-footprint, low-overhead JIT compiler.
  188. </li>
  189. <li>
  190. More <b>optimizations</b> will be added in parallel to the last step on
  191. an as-needed basis. Sinking of stores
  192. to aggregates and sinking of allocations are high on the list.
  193. More complex optimizations with less pay-off, such as value-range-propagation
  194. (VRP) will have to wait.
  195. </li>
  196. <li>
  197. LuaJIT 2.0 has been designed with <b>portability</b> in mind.
  198. Nonetheless, it compiles to native code and needs to be adapted to each
  199. architecture. The two major work items are porting the the fast interpreter,
  200. which is written in assembler, and porting the compiler backend.
  201. Most other portability issues like endianess or 32 vs. 64&nbsp;bit CPUs
  202. have already been taken care of.<br>
  203. Several ports are already available, thanks to the
  204. <a href="http://luajit.org/sponsors.html"><span class="ext">&raquo;</span>&nbsp;LuaJIT sponsorship program</a>.
  205. More ports will follow in the future &mdash; companies which are
  206. interested in sponsoring a port to a particular architecture, please
  207. use the given contact address.
  208. </li>
  209. <li>
  210. <b>Documentation</b> about the <b>internals</b> of LuaJIT is still sorely
  211. missing. Although the source code is included and is IMHO well
  212. commented, many basic design decisions are in need of an explanation.
  213. The rather un-traditional compiler architecture and the many highly
  214. optimized data structures are a barrier for outside participation in
  215. the development. Alas, as I've repeatedly stated, I'm better at
  216. writing code than papers and I'm not in need of any academic merits.
  217. Someday I will find the time for it. :-)
  218. </li>
  219. <li>
  220. Producing good code for unbiased branches is a key problem for trace
  221. compilers. This is the main cause for "trace explosion".
  222. <b>Hyperblock scheduling</b> promises to solve this nicely at the
  223. price of a major redesign of the compiler. This would also pave the
  224. way for emitting predicated instructions, which is a prerequisite
  225. for efficient <b>vectorization</b>.
  226. </li>
  227. </ul>
  228. <br class="flush">
  229. </div>
  230. <div id="foot">
  231. <hr class="hide">
  232. Copyright &copy; 2005-2012 Mike Pall
  233. <span class="noprint">
  234. &middot;
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