Emil Mikulic
2006-Nov-20 06:49 UTC
[LLVMdev] libstdc++ as bytecode, and compiling C++ to C
I've compiled all the object files that make up libstdc++ and libsupc++ into LLVM bytecode: http://goanna.cs.rmit.edu.au/~emil/libstdcxx.tar.bz2 (438KB) A simple test program, x.cpp: #include <iostream> int main() { std::cout << "hello world\n"; return 0; } $ llvm-g++ -emit-llvm -c x.cpp $ llvmc -o=out x.o std/*.o sup/*.o $ lli out.bc Segmentation fault (core dumped) $ Oops, no go. Try a different way: $ llvm-g++ -emit-llvm -c x.cpp $ llvm-link -o=linked.o x.o std/*.o sup/*.o $ lli linked.o hello world $ So far, so good! Compile to C: $ llc -o=cbe.c -march=c linked.o WARNING: this target does not support the llvm.stacksave intrinsic. $ gcc cbe.c /var/tmp//ccVAM4W2.o(.text+0x329a): In function `operator new(unsigned int)': : undefined reference to `__cxa_throw' [...and more errors] $ But __cxa_throw is right there, in sup/eh_throw.o, and in linked.o, it just isn't being emitted as C code. (at this point, I suspect the problem might be that I don't quite understand how some of the llvm tools are intended to work - e.g. llvm-link vs llvmc) Strangely enough: $ llvm-g++ -emit-llvm -c x.cpp $ llvm-link -o=linked.o x.o std/*.o sup/*.o $ llvmc -o=out linked.o $ llc -o=cbe.c -march=c out.bc WARNING: this target does not support the llvm.stacksave intrinsic. $ gcc cbe.c $ ./a.out hello world $ Works! --Emil
Mohd-Hanafiah Abdullah
2006-Nov-20 09:21 UTC
[LLVMdev] libstdc++ as bytecode, and compiling C++ to C
On Mon, 2006-11-20 at 17:49 +1100, Emil Mikulic wrote:> I've compiled all the object files that make up libstdc++ and libsupc++ > into LLVM bytecode: > http://goanna.cs.rmit.edu.au/~emil/libstdcxx.tar.bz2 (438KB) > > A simple test program, x.cpp: > > #include <iostream> > int main() { std::cout << "hello world\n"; return 0; } > > $ llvm-g++ -emit-llvm -c x.cpp > $ llvmc -o=out x.o std/*.o sup/*.o > $ lli out.bc > Segmentation fault (core dumped) > $ > > Oops, no go. Try a different way: > > $ llvm-g++ -emit-llvm -c x.cpp > $ llvm-link -o=linked.o x.o std/*.o sup/*.o > $ lli linked.o > hello worldEmil: Thanks for your email. I tried the above and got the following errors: $ llvm-link -o=linked.o x.o std/*.o sup/*.o llvm-link: error loading file 'std/allocator-inst.o' And when I do this: $ llvmc -o=out x.o std/*.o sup/*.o llvm-ld: error: Cannot load file 'std/allocator-inst.o'Bytecode file 'std/allocator-inst.o' could not be loaded: Unknown bytecode version number: 6 (Vers=6, Pos=13) llvmc: Action failed I'm using LLVM 1.8. Is it due to compatibility problem? Thanks. Napi
Reid Spencer
2006-Nov-20 16:01 UTC
[LLVMdev] libstdc++ as bytecode, and compiling C++ to C
On Mon, 2006-11-20 at 17:49 +1100, Emil Mikulic wrote:> I've compiled all the object files that make up libstdc++ and libsupc++ > into LLVM bytecode: > http://goanna.cs.rmit.edu.au/~emil/libstdcxx.tar.bz2 (438KB) > > A simple test program, x.cpp: > > #include <iostream> > int main() { std::cout << "hello world\n"; return 0; } > > $ llvm-g++ -emit-llvm -c x.cpp > $ llvmc -o=out x.o std/*.o sup/*.o > $ lli out.bc > Segmentation fault (core dumped) > $llvmc isn't a completed tool. In particular it doesn't handle native linking properly. However, I'm not sure what it would do in your example above that would cause the program to seg fault. Can you get a stack trace?> > Oops, no go. Try a different way: > > $ llvm-g++ -emit-llvm -c x.cpp > $ llvm-link -o=linked.o x.o std/*.o sup/*.o > $ lli linked.o > hello world > $ > > So far, so good! Compile to C:llvm-link should work fine because its just dealing with bytecode. BTW, You could put all the std/*.o and sup/*.o files into a bc archive using llvm-ar and then just link with that archive.> > $ llc -o=cbe.c -march=c linked.o > WARNING: this target does not support the llvm.stacksave intrinsic. > $ gcc cbe.c > /var/tmp//ccVAM4W2.o(.text+0x329a): In function `operator new(unsigned int)': > : undefined reference to `__cxa_throw' > [...and more errors] > $ > > But __cxa_throw is right there, in sup/eh_throw.o, and in linked.o, it > just isn't being emitted as C code. (at this point, I suspect the > problem might be that I don't quite understand how some of the llvm > tools are intended to work - e.g. llvm-link vs llvmc)CBE doesn't support exceptions ?> Strangely enough: > > $ llvm-g++ -emit-llvm -c x.cpp > $ llvm-link -o=linked.o x.o std/*.o sup/*.o > $ llvmc -o=out linked.o > $ llc -o=cbe.c -march=c out.bc > WARNING: this target does not support the llvm.stacksave intrinsic.CBE doesn't support llvm.stacksave> $ gcc cbe.c > $ ./a.out > hello world > $ > > Works!However it doesn't seem to matter for this program.> > --Emil > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu > http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev
Reid Spencer
2006-Nov-20 16:01 UTC
[LLVMdev] libstdc++ as bytecode, and compiling C++ to C
On Mon, 2006-11-20 at 17:21 +0800, Mohd-Hanafiah Abdullah wrote:> On Mon, 2006-11-20 at 17:49 +1100, Emil Mikulic wrote: > > I've compiled all the object files that make up libstdc++ and libsupc++ > > into LLVM bytecode: > > http://goanna.cs.rmit.edu.au/~emil/libstdcxx.tar.bz2 (438KB) > > > > A simple test program, x.cpp: > > > > #include <iostream> > > int main() { std::cout << "hello world\n"; return 0; } > > > > $ llvm-g++ -emit-llvm -c x.cpp > > $ llvmc -o=out x.o std/*.o sup/*.o > > $ lli out.bc > > Segmentation fault (core dumped) > > $ > > > > Oops, no go. Try a different way: > > > > $ llvm-g++ -emit-llvm -c x.cpp > > $ llvm-link -o=linked.o x.o std/*.o sup/*.o > > $ lli linked.o > > hello world > > Emil: > > Thanks for your email. I tried the above and got the following errors: > > $ llvm-link -o=linked.o x.o std/*.o sup/*.o > llvm-link: error loading file 'std/allocator-inst.o' > > And when I do this: > $ llvmc -o=out x.o std/*.o sup/*.o > llvm-ld: error: Cannot load file 'std/allocator-inst.o'Bytecode file > 'std/allocator-inst.o' could not be loaded: Unknown bytecode version > number: 6 (Vers=6, Pos=13) > llvmc: Action failed > > > I'm using LLVM 1.8. Is it due to compatibility problem?Yes. version 6 is the LLVM 1.9 bytecode format and 1.8 doesn't know up to downgrade it.> > Thanks. > > Napi > > > _______________________________________________ > LLVM Developers mailing list > LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu > http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev
Emil Mikulic
2006-Nov-20 23:57 UTC
[LLVMdev] libstdc++ as bytecode, and compiling C++ to C
On Mon, Nov 20, 2006 at 08:01:23AM -0800, Reid Spencer wrote:> On Mon, 2006-11-20 at 17:49 +1100, Emil Mikulic wrote: > > I've compiled all the object files that make up libstdc++ and libsupc++ > > into LLVM bytecode: > > http://goanna.cs.rmit.edu.au/~emil/libstdcxx.tar.bz2 (438KB) > > > > A simple test program, x.cpp: > > > > #include <iostream> > > int main() { std::cout << "hello world\n"; return 0; } > > > > $ llvm-g++ -emit-llvm -c x.cpp > > $ llvmc -o=out x.o std/*.o sup/*.o > > $ lli out.bc > > Segmentation fault (core dumped) > > $ > > llvmc isn't a completed tool. In particular it doesn't handle native > linking properly. However, I'm not sure what it would do in your example > above that would cause the program to seg fault. Can you get a stack > trace?Actually, it looks to me like it generates bad code. $ llvm-dis < out.bc | grep -- -3 %tmp4.i.i = getelementptr int (...)** %tmp.i.i, int -3 [and a bunch more, one of which is in main()...] $ llc -march=c -o=cbe.c out.bc WARNING: this target does not support the llvm.stacksave intrinsic. $ gcc -g cbe.c [n.b.: compiles successfully!] $ gdb a.out (gdb) run Starting program: a.out Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault. 0x08048958 in main () at cbe.c:1154 1154 ltmp_173_15 = *((int *)(<mp_172_54[-3])); (gdb) print ltmp_172_54 $1 = (int (**)()) 0x0 Can I send you bytecode files or any further diagnostics to chase this up?> > Oops, no go. Try a different way: > > > > $ llvm-g++ -emit-llvm -c x.cpp > > $ llvm-link -o=linked.o x.o std/*.o sup/*.o > > $ lli linked.o > > hello world > > $ > > > > So far, so good! Compile to C: > > llvm-link should work fine because its just dealing with bytecode. BTW, > You could put all the std/*.o and sup/*.o files into a bc archive using > llvm-ar and then just link with that archive.I thought so, and I even tried playing with llvm-ar, but couldn't figure it out. $ llvm-ar rs mylib.a std/*.o sup/*.o llvm-ar: creating mylib.a $ llvm-link -o=linked.o x.o mylib.a llvm-link: error loading file 'mylib.a'> > $ llc -o=cbe.c -march=c linked.o > > WARNING: this target does not support the llvm.stacksave intrinsic. > > $ gcc cbe.c > > /var/tmp//ccVAM4W2.o(.text+0x329a): In function `operator new(unsigned int)': > > : undefined reference to `__cxa_throw' > > [...and more errors] > > $ > > > > But __cxa_throw is right there, in sup/eh_throw.o, and in linked.o, it > > just isn't being emitted as C code. (at this point, I suspect the > > problem might be that I don't quite understand how some of the llvm > > tools are intended to work - e.g. llvm-link vs llvmc) > > CBE doesn't support exceptions ?Fair enough. It's just that if I use llc to compile sup/eh_throw.o to a C file, it contains a __cxa_throw() function. (whether it does the right thing or not, I don't know - I haven't gotten that far) But, after the big llvm-link step, cbe.c doesn't contain a __cxa_throw() function even though it's called from the code.> > Strangely enough: > > > > $ llvm-g++ -emit-llvm -c x.cpp > > $ llvm-link -o=linked.o x.o std/*.o sup/*.o > > $ llvmc -o=out linked.o > > $ llc -o=cbe.c -march=c out.bc > > WARNING: this target does not support the llvm.stacksave intrinsic. > > CBE doesn't support llvm.stacksaveFair enough. =)> > $ gcc cbe.c > > $ ./a.out > > hello world > > $ > > > > Works! > > However it doesn't seem to matter for this program.The program is very simple, and doesn't use any EH itself, but I think pieces of libstdc++ do... --Emil
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