Displaying 4 results from an estimated 4 matches for "typebecameconcrete".
2008 Jan 14
1
[LLVMdev] Opaque type
..., label_entry);
//I create pointer of Array type when it is initialized
ArrayType* art = ArrayType::get(Type::IntTy, 1);
AllocaInst* ptr_addrAr = new AllocaInst(art, "ai_addr", label_entry);
//I try to make concrete the abstract pointer
((PointerType*)ptr_addrOP -> getType()) ->
typeBecameConcrete(ptr_addrAr-> getType());
But "ptr_addrOP" type is still abstract and nothing changed, in the
SymbolTable there are still both the pointers.
What I'm doing wrong?
Can you suggest me the wright way to do?
thanks
Alessandro Cogliati
P.S
I am using LLVM 1.9
2007 May 03
1
[LLVMdev] which g++ to compile LLVM CVS on Linux/AMD64?
...id llvm::OpaqueType::refineAbstractType(const llvm::DerivedType*, const llvm::Type*)':
/usr/src/Lang/llvm/include/llvm/DerivedTypes.h:412: error: 'abort' was not declared in this scope
/usr/src/Lang/llvm/include/llvm/DerivedTypes.h: In member function 'virtual void llvm::OpaqueType::typeBecameConcrete(const llvm::DerivedType*)':
/usr/src/Lang/llvm/include/llvm/DerivedTypes.h:415: error: 'abort' was not declared in this scope
Hope that this could help someone. I really don't know if it is a bug in GCC
(tuesday's SVN snapshot) or in LLVM (today's CVS snapshot)
Regards.
-...
2007 May 03
0
[LLVMdev] which g++ to compile LLVM CVS on Linux/AMD64?
On Thu, 3 May 2007, Basile STARYNKEVITCH wrote:
>
> What version of g++ is usable to compile the latest LLVM CVS snapshot on a
> Linux/x86-64 (AMD64) Debian/ Sid or Etch plateform?
Please look here:
http://llvm.org/docs/GettingStarted.html#brokengcc
I'd suggest late versions of GCC 4.0.x. The 4.1 series has had numerous
problems compiling LLVM on x86-64, though some people have
2007 May 03
3
[LLVMdev] which g++ to compile LLVM CVS on Linux/AMD64?
Hello All,
What version of g++ is usable to compile the latest LLVM CVS snapshot on a
Linux/x86-64 (AMD64) Debian/ Sid or Etch plateform?
What compiler do LLVM dzevelopers use to compile LLVM on Linux/X86-64
systems? IKt seems that most versions of g++ fail to compile LLVM and that
some others compile it wrongly (producing buggy code)?
Why can't g++-4.1 be used?
FWIW, the latest gcc