Hi Evan,
> Ok. Everyone has different idea about "easy". :-)
I second your opinion that it is not very easy to use and it is very tightly
coupled with the current linear scan register allocator implementation.
> But VirtRegMap is going to be remove one of these days.
When are you going to do that? Are you going to remove it from the source tree?
Will it be replaced with something similar, e.g. with another kind of spiller
and register tracking mechamism?
Please keep in mind that some other allocators being currently developed use
VirtRegMap with all its pros and cons. These allocators include an iterated
coalescing graph colorging register allocator (Lang), a chordal graph register
allocator (Fernando), a puzzle solving register allocator (Fernando), a PQBP
register allocaor (Lang) and an extended linear scan register allocator (Roman).
May be there are some other allocators as well.
And BTW, some other parts of the LLVM API related to register allocation are
also used by other register allocators. So, any major changes to them may break
them as well.
Therefore it would be nice to get a better understanding and common view on how
to proceed with the VirtRegMap with regard to removing, improving or replacing
it with something different.
Thanks,
Roman
> Evan
>
> On Sep 19, 2008, at 11:15 AM, David Greene wrote:
>
> > On Friday 19 September 2008 11:37, Evan Cheng wrote:
> >
> >> Please avoid using VirtRegMap. It's very tied to the current
register
> >> allocation pieces and not easily reusable. One of my mission in
life
> >> is to kill it.
> >
> > Im surprised to see this. I found it rather easy to re-use for custom
> > register allocators.
> >
> > -Dave
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>
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