Óscar Fuentes
2009-Aug-25 00:40 UTC
[LLVMdev] std::cout << *MyModule does not work anymore
It seems that support for dumping text representation of LLVM objects to standard channels and C++ output streams was removed. My guess is that now we must use errs() instead of std::cerr, llvm::raw_fd_ostream instead of std::ofstream, etc. The changes are not trivial, as for instance llvm::raw_fd_ostream without flags fails if the file exists, but std::ofstream does not. The changes include using new names for flags that already exist on the standard namespace (F_Force instead of O_TRUNC, etc). Is all this an unintended change or an intentional one, and if the later, could you direct me to something that explains what we gain on exchange of this restriction? -- Óscar
Daniel Dunbar
2009-Aug-25 01:55 UTC
[LLVMdev] std::cout << *MyModule does not work anymore
On Mon, Aug 24, 2009 at 5:40 PM, Óscar Fuentes<ofv at wanadoo.es> wrote:> It seems that support for dumping text representation of LLVM objects to > standard channels and C++ output streams was removed. My guess is that > now we must use errs() instead of std::cerr, llvm::raw_fd_ostream > instead of std::ofstream, etc.Correct. std::ostream has been purged from LLVM; the only exception is the raw_os_ostream class, which can be used to adapt an std::ostream for use with raw_ostream. This should be enough for clients which want to keep using std::ostream.> The changes are not trivial, as for instance llvm::raw_fd_ostream > without flags fails if the file exists, but std::ofstream does not. The > changes include using new names for flags that already exist on the > standard namespace (F_Force instead of O_TRUNC, etc).I believe that Dan plans to fix the "force by default" issue, at least.> Is all this an unintended change or an intentional one, and if the > later, could you direct me to something that explains what we gain on > exchange of this restriction?Intentional. std::ostream has long been deprecated in LLVM, each release has increased the degree of deprecation. The coding standards document has various bits of information on this http://llvm.org/docs/CodingStandards.html. Among other things, you gain performance. raw_ostream is considerably faster than std::ostream. This is the performance difference on the my synthetic raw_ostream benchmark: - raw_fd_ostream (outs()) - -- name avg min med max SD total user 1.0002 0.9990 0.9992 1.0024 0.0015 3.0006 sys 0.0089 0.0074 0.0079 0.0114 0.0018 0.0268 wall 1.0368 1.0137 1.0185 1.0782 0.0294 3.1104 -- - std::ostream (cout) - -- name avg min med max SD total user 6.8846 6.8807 6.8853 6.8878 0.0029 20.6537 sys 0.0384 0.0377 0.0352 0.0423 0.0029 0.1152 wall 6.9852 6.9685 6.9756 7.0115 0.0188 20.9555 -- - Daniel
Óscar Fuentes
2009-Aug-25 03:04 UTC
[LLVMdev] std::cout << *MyModule does not work anymore
Daniel Dunbar <daniel at zuster.org> writes: [snip]>> Is all this an unintended change or an intentional one, and if the >> later, could you direct me to something that explains what we gain on >> exchange of this restriction? > > Intentional. std::ostream has long been deprecated in LLVM, each > release has increased the degree of deprecation. The coding standards > document has various bits of information on this > http://llvm.org/docs/CodingStandards.html. > > Among other things, you gain performance. raw_ostream is considerably > faster than std::ostream. This is the performance difference on the my > synthetic raw_ostream benchmark:[snip] First of all, thanks to Daniel for the answer to my questions. To the LLVM library designers: Okay, so your wheel is lighter and faster. Sometimes this is a good justification for reinventing the wheel when everybody is eager to throw away the old wheels and use yours instead :-). However, when LLVM is just another library on an application (something that I hope often happens thanks to the great JIT it provides) having to learn the quirks and kinks of something that pretends to replace a common functionality of the language's standard library *plus* integrating it into the existing code can be a real burden. Maybe the LLVM ostream replacement knows how to handle LLVM objects, but it certainly knows nothing about how to deal with user's objects and this may create quite a bit of work when you have a mixed series of output statements with both kinds of objects. Maybe there was a solution that was okay for those concerned with fast & lightweight executables and for the others who care most about consistency and code stability. I would appreciate if this changes are discussed before applying them on the future (maybe I missed the thread), flagging the subject with something that indicates that the outcome of the discussion may break existing code. Thanks for your mostly excellent work on LLVM's design and policy-making ;-) -- Óscar
Óscar Fuentes wrote:> The changes are not trivial, as for instance llvm::raw_fd_ostream > without flags fails if the file exists, but std::ofstream does not. The > changes include using new names for flags that already exist on the > standard namespace (F_Force instead of O_TRUNC, etc).Also, each of LLVM <=2.5, 2.6 and 2.7(svn) provide their own, incompatible llvm::raw_fd_ostream constructors. This makes it unneccessarily hard to support different LLVM versions in a frontend. I understand why the llvm::raw_fd_ostream interface was changed, but it would have been nice if the old constructors were kept and implemented in terms of the new ones. That's completely trivial in this case and shouldn't cause any harm in existing applications. For many applications other than LLVM itself, the basic LLVM <=2.5 interface which just overwrites existing files is all that's ever needed. Albert -- Dr. Albert Gr"af Dept. of Music-Informatics, University of Mainz, Germany Email: Dr.Graef at t-online.de, ag at muwiinfa.geschichte.uni-mainz.de WWW: http://www.musikinformatik.uni-mainz.de/ag
On Aug 25, 2009, at 1:04 AM, Albert Graef wrote:> . For many applications > other than LLVM itself, the basic LLVM <=2.5 interface which just > overwrites existing files is all that's ever needed.On LLVM trunk, raw_fd_ostream is now back to overwriting files by default, as it is the unanimous preference among in-tree users (and out-of-tree users that I'm aware of). Dan
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