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Virtual Machines / by Iain D. Craig.

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoEditor: London : Springer London, 2006Descripción: xv, 269 páginas 43 ilustraciones recurso en líneaTipo de contenido:
  • texto
Tipo de medio:
  • computadora
Tipo de portador:
  • recurso en línea
ISBN:
  • 9781846282461
Formatos físicos adicionales: Edición impresa:: Sin títuloClasificación LoC:
  • QA76.7-76.73
Recursos en línea:
Contenidos:
VMs for Portability: BCPL -- The Java Virtual Machine -- DIY VMs -- More Stack-Based VMs -- Case Study: An Event-Driven Language -- Register-Based Machines -- Implementation Techniques -- Open Issues.
Resumen: Virtual Machines offers a unique insight into the building of virtual machines for sequential, object-oriented and parallel languages, and uses comparisons of different VMs to provide actual, practical examples on how to build VMs. State transitions are used as a formal technique for the specification of virtual machines throughout and - in addition – transitions and state transitions relating to the general operation are included for specification of the virtual machine for the event-based system. Two virtual machines are defined using a simple sequential language, which is then generalised to include object and parallelism. Other themes explored include the implementation of VMs and proposals for future work. Appendices contain high-level specifications of two compilers: one for the simple language that serves as the basic example throughout the book, the other for the event-based language specified in Chapter 6. This book is an essential reference tool for academic and industrial researchers as well as postgraduates in this area.
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Springer eBooks

VMs for Portability: BCPL -- The Java Virtual Machine -- DIY VMs -- More Stack-Based VMs -- Case Study: An Event-Driven Language -- Register-Based Machines -- Implementation Techniques -- Open Issues.

Virtual Machines offers a unique insight into the building of virtual machines for sequential, object-oriented and parallel languages, and uses comparisons of different VMs to provide actual, practical examples on how to build VMs. State transitions are used as a formal technique for the specification of virtual machines throughout and - in addition – transitions and state transitions relating to the general operation are included for specification of the virtual machine for the event-based system. Two virtual machines are defined using a simple sequential language, which is then generalised to include object and parallelism. Other themes explored include the implementation of VMs and proposals for future work. Appendices contain high-level specifications of two compilers: one for the simple language that serves as the basic example throughout the book, the other for the event-based language specified in Chapter 6. This book is an essential reference tool for academic and industrial researchers as well as postgraduates in this area.

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