Displaying 20 results from an estimated 1000 matches similar to: "[LLVMdev] Primer with LLVM"
2004 Dec 30
0
[LLVMdev] Primer with LLVM
On Thu, 2004-12-30 at 11:14, Francisco Puentes wrote:
> Hi, everybody:
>
Hi Francisco
>
> I am a beginner with LLVM, in fact today was the first day that I use it.
Welcome!
>
> I have several questions about LLVM:
If you haven't already, a good place to start is the Getting Started
Guide, at http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu/docs/GettingStarted.html
> Can I use LLVM to
2004 Dec 31
4
[LLVMdev] Primer with LLVM
Hi again, and thanks (Reid) for your fast response:
Yes, it works!!! Only changing the order of libraries in the Makefile.
Nowaday I have my software with the capability of compile assembly, bytecode
(from buffer and file) and link them with a set of libraries. It seems to
work perfectly (I don't generate code yet).
My real aim is to have a process (host) with execute several no-jit
2004 Dec 31
0
[LLVMdev] Primer with LLVM
On Fri, Dec 31, 2004 at 02:30:00PM +0100, Francisco Puentes wrote:
> Now I have other problem: I have a Module and I need generate a
> iostream (memory) with native x86 code (maybe elf/coff) to be executed
> later (into the guest process space, without fork!!). I studied llc
> and lli, but they don't help me much. Any idea? Are there any guy
> working in some like that?
In
2005 Jan 07
2
[LLVMdev] Primer with LLVM
Really JIT isn't my goal. I prefer use a native execution engine; and ok, I
don't need save the generated Module so it ever lives in memory, so if LLVM
doesn't generate relocatable code it's fine for me.
About the reentrant lacks of LLVM, I can convert my own code - which build
the Module - into a critical section so I think it is enough; but I need to
know if several independent
2005 Jan 08
2
[LLVMdev] Primer with LLVM
> > Now I have other problem: I have a Module and I need generate a iostream
> > (memory) with native x86 code (maybe elf/coff) to be executed later
> (into
> > the guest process space, without fork!!). I studied llc and lli, but
> they
> > don't help me much. Any idea? Are there any guy working in some like
> that?
>
> There's two approaches that
2005 Jan 08
1
[LLVMdev] Primer with LLVM
> > What are the classes evolved in to convert bytecode to x86 code
> > directly? Without Just In Time (all at once).
>
> There is currently no such thing. Please see the other email I just
> sent for details as to what your choices are.
>
Last question (I promise you):
Can LLVM generated ELF or COFF binaries from a Module into an iostream?
> --
> Misha Brukman
2002 Jan 31
4
Boot messages on VT
Hello,
I am using with success SYSLINUX-1.48 to boot a CD-Rom in order to realize
an automatic installation of Linux.
Actually all messages during the boot step are displayed on VGA screen. In
the operational version, we have only a VT on COM1.
I have tested to modified my syslinux.cfg like the following listing but
boot messages are always displayed on VGA screen ! Can you help me, please ?
(I
2005 Jan 08
3
[LLVMdev] Primer with LLVM
> >>> Would be great if we append into the documentation several "patters"
> >>> to show how perform with LLVM. It would accelerate the learn curve for
> >>> beginners like me, avoiding basic errors and mistakes. If I reach a
> >>> good level with LLVM I can make these.
> >>
> >> I'm not sure if I understand what you
2005 Jan 08
2
[LLVMdev] Primer with LLVM
> > Would be great if we append into the documentation several "patters"
> > to show how perform with LLVM. It would accelerate the learn curve for
> > beginners like me, avoiding basic errors and mistakes. If I reach a
> > good level with LLVM I can make these.
>
> I'm not sure if I understand what you mean. Are you looking for an
> "LLVM
2004 Jul 30
3
New to IP-PBX
Hi,
I'd really appreciate it if you can explain this to me.
I have a D/41JCT-LS Dialogic board and I want to use it as an IP-PBX.
I'm new to IP Telephony and telephony and general and I researched a lot
but still confused about what I really need.
I know that I can setup an IP-Telephony for my LAN using a SIP server
and SIP compatible software phones. But the challenge is how can I
2005 Apr 10
1
Fwd: Re: [LLVMdev] new IA64 backend
Does anybody know if there is some tool to convert from WHIRL to LLVM? maybe some project under
development? a similar project?
Thanks
>
> --- Duraid Madina <duraid at octopus.com.au> wrote:
> > Date: Fri, 18 Mar 2005 12:45:54 +0900
> > From: Duraid Madina <duraid at octopus.com.au>
> > To: ahs3 at fc.hp.com, LLVM Developers Mailing List <llvmdev at
2004 Nov 30
2
[LLVMdev] dejagnu tester
Hi all,
This is just to announce that I have a FreeBSD x86 machine running the
test suite more or less continuously:
http://kinoko.c.u-tokyo.ac.jp/~builddonkey/
Of note is that it now runs Dejagnu tests. (Thanks, tonic+co!) I'm also
tracking CVS breakage (internally, for now). At some later point, I'll
make available more real-time information on "is CVS alive and if not,
2005 Mar 17
4
[LLVMdev] new IA64 backend
Hi everyone,
I've just checked in an IA64 backend to LLVM! Be warned, it's pretty
rough right now. Here are some of the known defects:
- No varargs
- No alloca
- No instruction scheduling/bundling of any sort
...or in other words, it breaks often and when it does work, it's a
dog. On the plus side, it _does_ have a tasty new pattern instruction
selector. :) Beyond fixing the
2005 May 11
3
[LLVMdev] LLVM 1.5 Release Plan
Oleg Smolsky wrote:
> I've just tried building CVS/HEAD of llvm using gcc 4.0.0 that I have
> installed to /opt/gcc
... then you should either add /opt/gcc/lib to /etc/ld.so.conf and rerun
ldconfig, or add /opt/gcc/lib to your LD_LIBRARY_PATH . However, GCC 4.x
definitely has issues building LLVM, at least on ia64. If you want to
use LLVM in anger, I'd stick with 3.4 for now.
2006 Aug 03
0
[LLVMdev] Building llvm under cygwin
Hello Anton
Thu, 3 Aug 2006 15:06:56 +0400 you wrote:
> here it is in the attachment :)
Ok. Could you also send LibDeps.txt file? It should be
in /obj/tools/llvm-config directory
--
With best regards, Anton Korobeynikov.
Faculty of Mathematics & Mechanics, Saint Petersburg State University.
2005 May 11
0
[LLVMdev] LLVM 1.5 Release Plan
Hello Duraid,
Duraid Madina wrote on Wednesday, 11 May 2005:
>> I've just tried building CVS/HEAD of llvm using gcc 4.0.0 that I
>> have installed to /opt/gcc
> ... then you should either add /opt/gcc/lib to /etc/ld.so.conf and
> rerun ldconfig, or add /opt/gcc/lib to your LD_LIBRARY_PATH .
> However, GCC 4.x definitely has issues building LLVM, at least on
> ia64.
Oh,
2005 Jun 01
4
[LLVMdev] 64-bit Linux Support
Hi Misha,
On 6/1/05, Misha Brukman <brukman at uiuc.edu> wrote:
> On Wed, Jun 01, 2005 at 10:33:39AM -0400, Bill Wendling wrote:
> > What's the plan for support on Linux 64-bit machines? Is that actively
> > being worked on right now or is there a roadmap for doing this?
>
> Do you mean compiling on 64-bit Linux or generating code for 64-bits?
>
I meant
2009 Mar 27
6
gecko not displaying html
Hello,
Im having a problem with gecko and an aplication built on PowerBuilder.
My application calls some sort of HTML rendering and gecko is downloaded.
After downloading, I can browse the menus but not the content in those. I only see a white screen
The debug output:
a) When I change the view in the menu list i get this
err:mshtml:nsChannelBSC_stop_binding RemoveRequest failed: 80004005
b)
2002 Feb 27
3
winsock 16 BIT
Hi!
In October I worked with a client-server (using winsock.dll) 16 bit
aplication
emulated in wine (Not using ODBC), it worked fine. This aplication needs
to connect to a
server using port ctsql 5557/tcp, this service is in my /etc/services.
And wine made all realy fine (Version 20011108). With the release
20011226 (I think)started the problem. Something changed with winsock
16-bit.
I've
2005 Jun 01
0
[LLVMdev] 64-bit Linux Support
On Wed, Jun 01, 2005 at 10:50:35AM -0400, Bill Wendling wrote:
> It didn't look like there was a cftonend binary for the IA-64
> platform. Are we supposed to use the x86 binaries instead?
The answer to that is that we don't have IA-64 in-house, so we don't
provide an IA-64 C/C++ front-end, but if someone were to contribute it
to us, we would gratefully host it.
Note that if you