Evan Cheng
2014-Jul-09 22:12 UTC
[LLVMdev] Clarification on the backward compatibility promises
> On Jun 17, 2014, at 2:10 PM, Eric Christopher <echristo at gmail.com> wrote: > >>> 2. Metadata compatibility. We already had precedence of introducing >>> incompatible changes into metadata format in the past within release. >>> Should we use relaxes rules for metadata compatibility? >> >> I think we have a special case for debug metadata (and should document >> that), but otherwise I think we should hold metadata to the same >> standard as the rest of the IR. >> > > The idea with metadata is that it can be removed and everything still > works. I'm definitely not ready to lock down the debug metadata format > and I really don't think we should for any of the other uses since > stripping already works. (Note, I don't consider function attributes > etc as metadata)We may need to rethink this. If metadata is used only as optimization / codegen hints, then yes I agree they can be dropped. But I suspect there is a need for metadata that’s *required* for correctness. As LLVM continues to gain clients beyond “just” compilers, we will need to be sensitive to their needs. I anticipate use of LLVM bitcode files as persistent object format. Evan> > -eric > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu > http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev
Eric Christopher
2014-Jul-09 22:51 UTC
[LLVMdev] Clarification on the backward compatibility promises
On Wed, Jul 9, 2014 at 3:12 PM, Evan Cheng <evan.cheng at apple.com> wrote:> >> On Jun 17, 2014, at 2:10 PM, Eric Christopher <echristo at gmail.com> wrote: >> >>>> 2. Metadata compatibility. We already had precedence of introducing >>>> incompatible changes into metadata format in the past within release. >>>> Should we use relaxes rules for metadata compatibility? >>> >>> I think we have a special case for debug metadata (and should document >>> that), but otherwise I think we should hold metadata to the same >>> standard as the rest of the IR. >>> >> >> The idea with metadata is that it can be removed and everything still >> works. I'm definitely not ready to lock down the debug metadata format >> and I really don't think we should for any of the other uses since >> stripping already works. (Note, I don't consider function attributes >> etc as metadata) > > We may need to rethink this. If metadata is used only as optimization / codegen hints, then yes I agree they can be dropped. But I suspect there is a need for metadata that’s *required* for correctness. As LLVM continues to gain clients beyond “just” compilers, we will need to be sensitive to their needs. I anticipate use of LLVM bitcode files as persistent object format. >I think that metadata that's required for correctness should be baked into the IR and not be metadata - so if there's something we need for correctness we need to come up with an IR extension. See the recent comdat work as an example. Sadly, I agree with you that bitcode might be a persistent object format - I'd personally want an LLVM 3.0 that came up with a better format though. -eric
Owen Anderson
2014-Jul-10 04:33 UTC
[LLVMdev] Clarification on the backward compatibility promises
On Jul 9, 2014, at 3:51 PM, Eric Christopher <echristo at gmail.com> wrote:> On Wed, Jul 9, 2014 at 3:12 PM, Evan Cheng <evan.cheng at apple.com> wrote: >> >>> On Jun 17, 2014, at 2:10 PM, Eric Christopher <echristo at gmail.com> wrote: >>> >>>>> 2. Metadata compatibility. We already had precedence of introducing >>>>> incompatible changes into metadata format in the past within release. >>>>> Should we use relaxes rules for metadata compatibility? >>>> >>>> I think we have a special case for debug metadata (and should document >>>> that), but otherwise I think we should hold metadata to the same >>>> standard as the rest of the IR. >>>> >>> >>> The idea with metadata is that it can be removed and everything still >>> works. I'm definitely not ready to lock down the debug metadata format >>> and I really don't think we should for any of the other uses since >>> stripping already works. (Note, I don't consider function attributes >>> etc as metadata) >> >> We may need to rethink this. If metadata is used only as optimization / codegen hints, then yes I agree they can be dropped. But I suspect there is a need for metadata that’s *required* for correctness. As LLVM continues to gain clients beyond “just” compilers, we will need to be sensitive to their needs. I anticipate use of LLVM bitcode files as persistent object format. >> > > I think that metadata that's required for correctness should be baked > into the IR and not be metadata - so if there's something we need for > correctness we need to come up with an IR extension. See the recent > comdat work as an example.That’s not really a practical suggestion for clients that aren’t essentially clang. The bar to changing the IR is (correctly) very high, essentially unreachable if the client is out-of-tree. —Owen -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-dev/attachments/20140709/d739eb23/attachment.html>
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