Hi chenwj,
For the first question, even if I did not specify "-o fft.bc", it
still generated fft.o which is also a llvm bitcode file.
For the second question, I intended to generate a native executable
"FFT". However, it only generate a llvm bitcode file fft.bc and a
native POSIX shell excuatable named fft. Howerver, the contents of the shell
executable fft is a wrapper to call "lli fft".
I also asked some other people. They told me that pthread came along with the
native system and was not distributed by llvm. Libpthread.so and
libpthread_nonshared.so were located in /usr/lib. "llvm-ld -native -o th
th.o" failed even I told it that "-L/usr/lib".
Best regards,
Hanfeng
> According to the link, I found that during the compiling process, the
option "-emit-llvm" must be added to generate immediate object *.o.
> [hanfeng at os-wstation02 fft]llvm-gcc -c fft.c -emit-llvm
"-emit-llvm" emits object file which contains LLVM bitcode (IR).
Default file name suffix is .o, but you might want to use "-o fft.bc"
to make the suffix self-explained.
> Then using llvm-ld will generate two files - a shell excutable and a llvm
bytecode data both of which would run perfect.
> [hanfeng at os-wstation02 fft]llvm-ld -o FFT fft.o
^^^
Is it not a native excutable?
Regards,
chenwj
--
Wei-Ren Chen (陳韋任)
Computer Systems Lab, Institute of Information Science, Academia Sinica, Taiwan
(R.O.C.)
Tel:886-2-2788-3799 #1667