similar to: [LLVMdev] IntervalPartition bug?

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 2000 matches similar to: "[LLVMdev] IntervalPartition bug?"

2005 Apr 30
0
[LLVMdev] IntervalPartition bug?
On Fri, 29 Apr 2005, Vladimir Prus wrote: > it looks like the IntervalPartition does not work as expected when constructed > from another interval partition. > > Say, I have built an interval partition from function, and the first interval > has two basic blocks. When I create second order partition and print all > intervals, the second basic block of the function is not seen
2005 May 04
1
[LLVMdev] IntervalPartition bug?
On Saturday 30 April 2005 07:30, Chris Lattner wrote: > > Here's NodeTy is a first order interval and can contain several basic > > blocks, but we add only the first one. I attach the patch which tries to > > fixes that. Also, for convenience, there's output of 2-order interval on > > some test case. 'log' is before the change and 'log_good' is
2005 Feb 22
0
[LLVMdev] Area for improvement
On Mon, 21 Feb 2005, Jeff Cohen wrote: > Sorry, I thought I was running selection dag isel but I screwed up when > trying out the really big array. You're right, it does clean it up except > for the multiplication. > > So LoopStrengthReduce is not ready for prime time and doesn't actually get > used? I don't know what the status of it is. You could try it out,
2005 Feb 22
0
[LLVMdev] Area for improvement
On Mon, 21 Feb 2005, Jeff Cohen wrote: > I noticed that fourinarow is one of the programs in which LLVM is much slower > than GCC, so I decided to take a look and see why that is so. The program > has many loops that look like this: > > #define ROWS 6 > #define COLS 7 > > void init_board(char b[COLS][ROWS+1]) > { > int i,j; > > for
2005 Feb 22
2
[LLVMdev] Area for improvement
Sorry, I thought I was running selection dag isel but I screwed up when trying out the really big array. You're right, it does clean it up except for the multiplication. So LoopStrengthReduce is not ready for prime time and doesn't actually get used? I might consider whipping it into shape. Does it still have to handle getelementptr in its full generality? Chris Lattner wrote:
2004 Dec 04
1
[LLVMdev] Question about writing a pass
Hi , I got a few for writing a pass. 1) Is it possible to use input parameters in command line ? For example, we got our own pass, ie. HELLO opt -load ../../Debug/lib/libHELLO.so -HELLO < hello.bc From the above command line, could we use some input parameter and we can read those parameter in Pass routine? 2) For splitting BB, the way what I did is to pick up instruction
2003 Nov 01
0
[LLVMdev] Cute profiling toy for LLVM
Because I've been doing a bit of performance work recently, and because using gprof with the C backend has some limitations, I wrote a little "llvm-prof" utility. Here's a synopsis of how to use it if you're interested: Basic usage: llvm/utils/profile.pl <program.bc> <program arguments> This instruments the bytecode file, executes it with the JIT
2004 Mar 31
0
[LLVMdev] A question about induction variables
On Wed, 31 Mar 2004, Vladimir Prus wrote: > I've just downloaded the latest release of LLVM, and playing with the > following simple example: > > int main() > { > int r(0); > for (int i = 0; i < 100; ++i) > r += i; > ; > return r; > } When I compiled it, I got the following LLVM code: int %main() { entry: call void %__main( )
2004 Apr 01
1
[LLVMdev] A question about induction variables
Chris Lattner wrote: > > int main() > > { > > int r(0); > > for (int i = 0; i < 100; ++i) > > r += i; > > ; > > return r; > > } > > When I compiled it, I got the following LLVM code: The code I get is somewhat different: int %main() { entry: %tmp.1.i = load bool* %Initialized.0__ ; <bool> [#uses=1] br
2003 Dec 22
1
[LLVMdev] How to explain?
hi, I want to know what is exact meaning in the following code. target endian-- %struct..TorRec-- %struct.TorRec-- implementation-- ;<sbyte>[#uses=1/0]-- how to explain them in details? Does anyone give me a guide? thanks yueqiang -------------------------------------------------------------- target endian = little target pointersize = 32 %struct..TorRec = type { int, void ()* }
2012 Jul 24
0
[LLVMdev] regarding opt -indvars
Hello . I ran opt with -indvars options , got wrong result.  This is my example: test.cc :  int test(int a)                 {      for (int i = 2; i < a; ++i) {                            a += ;      }              return a; } clang -O3 -emit-llvm -S test.cc -o test.ll opt -indvards -S test.ll  -o indvars.ll > /dev/null indvars.ll : ; ModuleID = 'test.ll' target datalayout =
2015 Jul 16
2
[LLVMdev] Improving loop vectorizer support for loops with a volatile iteration variable
----- Original Message ----- > From: "Chandler Carruth" <chandlerc at google.com> > To: "Hal Finkel" <hfinkel at anl.gov> > Cc: "Hyojin Sung" <hsung at us.ibm.com>, llvmdev at cs.uiuc.edu > Sent: Thursday, July 16, 2015 1:06:03 AM > Subject: Re: [LLVMdev] Improving loop vectorizer support for loops > with a volatile iteration
2005 Feb 22
5
[LLVMdev] Area for improvement
I noticed that fourinarow is one of the programs in which LLVM is much slower than GCC, so I decided to take a look and see why that is so. The program has many loops that look like this: #define ROWS 6 #define COLS 7 void init_board(char b[COLS][ROWS+1]) { int i,j; for (i=0;i<COLS;i++) for (j=0;j<ROWS;j++) b[i][j]='.';
2015 Apr 25
3
[LLVMdev] alias analysis on llvm internal globals
Hi I have this program in which fooBuf can only take on NULL or the address of local_fooBuf, and fooBuf and local_fooBuf have scope of the foo function. Therefore there is no way for the fooPtr argument to alias with fooBuf. However, LLVM basicaa and globalsmodref-aa say the 2 pointers may alias. I am thinking whether i should implement a limited form of point-to alias on the fooBuf pointer in
2015 Jul 16
2
[LLVMdev] Improving loop vectorizer support for loops with a volatile iteration variable
----- Original Message ----- > From: "Chandler Carruth" <chandlerc at google.com> > To: "Hyojin Sung" <hsung at us.ibm.com>, llvmdev at cs.uiuc.edu > Sent: Wednesday, July 15, 2015 7:34:54 PM > Subject: Re: [LLVMdev] Improving loop vectorizer support for loops > with a volatile iteration variable > On Wed, Jul 15, 2015 at 12:55 PM Hyojin Sung
2019 Aug 26
2
SCEV related question
Here is original C code: void topup(int a[], unsigned long i) { for (; i < 16; i++) { a[i] = 1; } } Here is the IR before the pass where I expect SCEV to return trip-count value ; Function Attrs: nofree norecurse nounwind uwtable writeonly define dso_local void @topup(i32* nocapture %a, i64 %i) local_unnamed_addr #0 { entry: %cmp3 = icmp ult i64 %i, 16 br i1
2015 Sep 10
2
[RFC] New pass: LoopExitValues
Which cases does this pass handle which aren't otherwise optimized out by passes like GlobalValueNumbering or DeadCodeElimination? Thanks, Jake VanAdrighem On Thu, Sep 10, 2015 at 2:35 PM, Steve King <steve at metrokings.com> wrote: > Hello LLVM, > It seems this thread has gone cold. Is there some low risk way for > the community to take the new pass for a test drive? >
2015 Aug 13
2
[LLVMdev] Improving loop vectorizer support for loops with a volatile iteration variable
Hi Gerolf, I think we have several (perhaps separable) issues here: 1. Do we have a canonical form for loops, preserved through the optimizer, that allows naturally-constructed loop nests to remain separable? 2. Do we forbid non-lowering transformations that turn vectorizable loops into non-vectorizable loops? 3. How do we detect cases where transformations cause a negative answer to either
2015 Sep 03
2
[RFC] New pass: LoopExitValues
On Wed, Sep 2, 2015 at 5:36 AM, James Molloy <james at jamesmolloy.co.uk> wrote: > Hi, > > Coremark really isn't a good enough test - have you run the LLVM test suite > with this patch, and what were the performance differences? For the test suite single source benches, the 235 tests improved performance, 2 regressed and 705 were unchanged. That seems very optimistic.
2004 May 05
0
[LLVMdev] Not allowed to reuse variables?
On Wed, May 05, 2004 at 03:35:46PM +0200, Anders Alexandersson wrote: > %tmpFunction = load int ()** %puts_kernelPTR > ... > %tmpFunction = load int ()** %puts_kernelPTR > > generates > > Redefinition of value named 'tmpFunction' in the 'int () *' type plane! > > Is it not allowed to reuse variables? Is there some way to do it? LLVM uses the Static