ForNeVeR / Cesium

C compiler for the CLI platform
MIT License
356 stars 39 forks source link
c compiler dotnet hacktoberfest

Cesium Status Enfer

Cesium is a fully managed C compiler for CLI platform (.NET).

What? Cesium compiles standard C source code to a .NET assembly. No unmanaged/mixed mode (a-lá C++/CLI) code is generated; everything is fully managed (but may be unsafe).

Why? C programs are very useful in the modern world and solve practical tasks. At the same time, deploying C code alongside .NET code may be tricky (especially if your application supports multiple platforms). Cesium is designed to resolve the problems of C code deployment, and lift it to the managed state (so it is cross-platform in the same way as the underlying CIL code it is compiled to).

Implementation Status

TL;DR: is it ready for use?

Unfortunately, not yet. You won't be able to use Cesium for anything useful today. Probably, you'll be able to start after the next milestone is implemented. Stay tuned!

Sneak Peek

Currently, Cesium is able to compile a "Hello, world" C23 example to a .NET assembly:

#include <stdio.h>

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
    puts("Hello, world!");
    return 42;
}

The next milestone is #61: sha1collisiondetection, which is 80% complete (note that the progress estimation is preliminary and may be changed in either direction at any moment).

Documentation

Usage

$ dotnet run --project Cesium.Compiler -- <path to the input .c file> --out <path to the output assembly>

For example, this will generate an assembly executable by .NET 6, .NET Framework, or Mono:

$ dotnet run --project Cesium.Compiler -- Cesium.Samples/minimal.c --out out.exe
$ dotnet ./out.exe # run with .NET 6
$ ./out.exe # only on Windows, run with .NET Framework
$ mono ./out.exe # run with Mono

Optional Parameters

Implementation Dashboard

Have a question? Welcome to the discussions section!

Looking to contribute? Check open issues with the "help-wanted" label. Cesium is a big project which lives thanks to its contributors.

Not sure where to contribute? Check open issues with the "good first issue" label.

Take a look at the contributor guide.

If you're interested in certain project areas, check the per-area issue labels: