On Tue, 01 May 2012 15:10:56 -0500
Peter Bergner <bergner at vnet.ibm.com> wrote:
> On Sat, 2012-04-28 at 15:51 -0500, Hal Finkel wrote:
> > > > - There is no support for generating position-independent
code
> > > > on PPC32. (PIC on PPC64 now works well). Nevertheless, I
have
> > > > sometimes run into linking errors when compiling shared
> > > > libraries with C++ on PPC64.
>
> PPC64 is PIC by nature. As for the linking issue, possibly you blew
> the TOC with too many entries? It used to be even with GCC, we could
> not compile doxygen (with or without -mminimal-toc) without filling
> up the TOC and hitting the TOC overflow linker error. T fix those
> types of problems, we recently added two more code models to
> GCC/binutils, so we're no longer limited to 16-bit TOC offsets. We
> now how -mcmodel=medium (32-bit TOC offsets) and -mcmodel=large
> (64-bit TOC offsets), with -mcmodel=medium being the new GCC default
> (on PPC64). The old TOC code is now called -mcmodel=small.
This is good to know, we should definitely make sure this is supported
in the clang driver. I believe that I've generally been able to compile
shared libraries on PPC64, but, when compiling Boost for example, I've
seen linking errors due to multiply defined constructor and destructor
symbols (I've not yet had a chance to look into this).
>
>
>
>
> > > > - There is currently no support for generating loops using
> > > > control-registers for branch and increment (I am not sure
if
> > > > this matters on POWER, but it does make some difference for
> > > > small trip-count loops on the embedded cores).
>
> It helps on our server class hardware too, so we do make use of it.
>
>
> > > > - Register reservations can use some improvement. We
currently
> > > > need to reserve an additional register to handle the corner
> > > > case where a condition register need to be spilled into a
large
> > > > stack frame (one register to compute the address, and a
second
> > > > one into which to transfer the condition register's
contents).
> > > > I'd like to improve this at some point.
>
> Reserve as in you don't allow anything to be allocated to it just in
> the uncommon case you have to spill a condition reg to a stack slot
> you cannot write to with a 16-bit offset? Speaking as a person who
> has implemented register allocators, that is bad!
Yes, this is exactly what now happens, and it needs to be fixed (this
is also my fault, I introduced this behavior to fix a bug [the
register scavenger used by the spilling code only has one emergency
spill slot, and in the case you mentioned, we need two registers]).
>
>
>
> > Roman pointed out to me that I misspoke. LLVM only generates PIC on
> > Darwin, not for ELF. What does work on PPC64 is dynamic linking
> > (meaning that it will correctly put nop after the calls so that the
> > linker can do its thing). To support dynamic linking on PPC32 we'd
> > need to explicitly add other things (stubs?) and that is not
> > implemented.
>
> If by stubs you mean PLT call stubs, those are created by the linker
> for both PPC and PPC64 binaries.
Yes, exactly. I knew that the linker created these on PPC64, but I
thought some compiler involvement was necessary for PPC32. If that is
not true, then our job just got easier ;)
Unfortunately, I know very little about this; the extent of my
experience is this: when I started working with the PPC backend, on
PPC64, the NOPs were not always placed after the calls correctly (which
predictably caused linking errors when using dynamic linking); I fixed
this and now I can dynamically link executables on PPC64.
If you could look at the asm produced and help us to figure out what,
if anything, is wrong with it, that would be greatly appreciated.
>
> I'm not sure what distro you're running on, but you may be hitting
> the new 32-bit secure-plt implementation all new distros are using.
> The old 32-bit PLT code used to generatie a branch/return to the GOT
> and the updated LR value was used to gain addressability to the GOT.
> The problem is that the GOT is in the date section, so for that to
> work, the data section of your program had to be marked executable.
> With -msecure-plt (the new default for all new distros), that is
> no longer the case. Maybe the non secure-plt code isn't playing
> well with the system crt*.o files and libs?
>
> Are there build directions for building LLVM for ppc/ppc64?
> I thought I had read that clang didn't work for ppc/ppc64 and that
> you had to use llvm-gcc thingy. Is that not the case anymore?
LLVM/clang now will build in the normal way (./configure; make install)
on PPC (you'll need at least the 3.1 release candidate (or trunk)). I
generally build on my PPC64 hosts with:
make ENABLE_OPTIMIZED=1 OPTIMIZE_OPTION=-O2 EXTRA_OPTIONS=-mminimal-toc
Thanks again,
Hal
>
> Peter
>
>
>
>
--
Hal Finkel
Postdoctoral Appointee
Leadership Computing Facility
Argonne National Laboratory