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Compilers, Languages, and Runtimes

Learn more about the Compilers, Languages, and Runtimes initiative.


Programming, if not the whole, is still the core of software development. In the last few years, programming has been impacted dramatically by three distinct trends. First is the continual evolution of component models to support code-reuse and development efficiency. Second is the move to disconnect programming languages from specific runtimes to give programmers greater freedom of choice to select a programming language best suited to programming goals, rather than making this decision based on the intended runtime environment. Third, there is the increased prevalence of managed execution, in which machines become smarter and provide a variety of services to ensure performance and security of the code they are running.

Managed code execution, language-agnostic runtime services, and component-based software design are at the heart of Microsoft .NET Framework for systems and application programming. For the last several years, Microsoft Research External Research & Programs has encouraged and supported research and teaching in the areas of compiler construction, virtual machines, program analysis, and tools that improve understanding of these paradigms. Through these efforts we hope to create real opportunities for technology evolution.

Our engagement around these trends centers on two complementary offerings: Phoenix and SSCLI.

Phoenix

This state-of-the-art framework is built by Microsoft Research and Microsoft’s product compiler team. It enables teaching and collaborative research in code generation, optimization, program analysis, binary transformation, and software correctness. Phoenix is used as a research platform by Microsoft Research and will be the universal compiler backend for upcoming Microsoft languages and development tools.

Phoenix is managed by John Lefor.

SSCLI

The Shared Source CLI (SSCLI), also known as Rotor, is a full source code distribution of Microsoft’s C# language compiler and the ECMA-standardized language-neutral Common Language Infrastructure. SSCLI is derived directly from the product source code for Microsoft Common Language Runtime and .NET Framework and is available for the FreeBSD operating system and Windows. SSCLI has been used in dozens of research and teaching settings around the world, enabling work in the areas of memory management, garbage collection, virtual object systems, just-in-time compilation, and code security, among others.

SSCLI (Rotor) is managed by Mark Lewin.

 

 
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