similar to: [LLVMdev] Address of an instruction (or a label?)

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 50000 matches similar to: "[LLVMdev] Address of an instruction (or a label?)"

2007 Mar 12
0
[LLVMdev] Address of an instruction (or a label?)
Hi Anton, Anton Korobeynikov wrote: > Maybe it's worth to use llvm.dbg.stoppoint? > > Do you have an example on how to use this intrinsic with the JIT? How can I get at compile time the address of the stoppoint? Thx, Nicolas
2009 Jan 23
1
[LLVMdev] Getting address of label in jitted code[MESSAGE NOT SCANNED]
Gordon Henriksen wrote: > On Jan 23, 2009, at 06:23, Mark Shannon wrote: > >>> On Jan 22, 2009, at 3:45 AM, Mark Shannon wrote: >>> >>>> I need to get the address of a label in jitted code. (This is so >>>> that I can insert a jump into the machine code to resume >>>> interpretation from compiled code) >>> What's your
2007 Apr 05
4
[LLVMdev] Integrating LLVM in an existing project
Hi everyone, After some time hacking on llvm, let me introduce myself :) I'm a PhD student at the French university Pierre et Marie Curie in Paris. I work on a project called the "Virtual Virtual Machine" project. You can find some (dated) information on the website http://vvm.lip6.fr. Basically it's a "low level virtual machine" :) with a just in time compiler
2009 Sep 10
10
[LLVMdev] [PROPOSAL] Attach debugging information with LLVM instruction
Hi All, Today, debugging information is encoded in LLVM IR using various llvm.dbg intrinsics, such as llvm.dbg.stoppoint. For exmaple, !1 = metadata !{i32 458769, i32 0, i32 12, metadata !"foo.c", metadata !"/tmp", metadata !"clang 1.0", i1 true, i1 false, metadata !"", i32 0} ... call void @llvm.dbg.stoppoint(i32 5, i32 5, metadata !1) store i32
2007 Apr 05
1
[LLVMdev] Integrating LLVM in an existing project
Hi Reid Reid Spencer wrote: > > Interesting project. I wish you could talk about it at the Developer's > Meeting (http://llvm.org/DevMtgMay2007.html :) > > I wish I could! Unfortunately there is very little chance I get the fundings to go to the US in May. > > I have signed up to implemented this (PR1269) just as Chris' note > states. HLVM needs it for much
2009 May 08
2
[LLVMdev] Some questions on the output formats of AliasSetTracker
Dear Staff, Here are some questions on the output formats of AliasSetTracker. The code is as below: int G1 = 9; int G2 = 5; int main() { int * XX; int * YY; XX = &G1; YY = XX; YY = &G2; XX = &G2; } The output for -anders-aa is: Alias Set Tracker: 5 alias sets for 4 pointer values. AliasSet[0xea6fb0,0] may alias, Mod/Ref 10 Call Sites: void ({ }*)*
2009 Jan 23
0
[LLVMdev] Getting address of label in jitted code[MESSAGE NOT SCANNED]
On Jan 23, 2009, at 10:06 AM, Mark Shannon wrote: > Dan Gohman wrote: >> >> LLVM doesn't support taking the real address of a label. It may >> some day, but that won't by itself make it safe to jump into >> compiled code from separately-compiled code. To do that, you'd >> need to arrange some stable set of assumptions about the state >> of the
2009 May 08
1
[LLVMdev] Some questions on the output formats of AliasSetTracker
Quoting Eli Friedman <eli.friedman at gmail.com>: Dear Eli, Thanks very much for your reply. I have modified the XX and YY to be global variables, but the output of AliasSetTracker are still MUST alias: Alias Set Tracker: 5 alias sets for 4 pointer values. AliasSet[0xea55d0,0] may alias, Mod/Ref 8 Call Sites: void ({ }*)* @llvm.dbg.func.start, void (i32, i32, { }*)*
2009 Jan 23
2
[LLVMdev] Getting address of label in jitted code[MESSAGE NOT SCANNED]
Dan Gohman wrote: > On Jan 23, 2009, at 3:23 AM, Mark Shannon wrote: > >> Dan, >> >>> On Jan 22, 2009, at 3:45 AM, Mark Shannon wrote: >>> >>>> Hi, >>>> >>>> I need to get the address of a label in jitted code. >>>> (This is so that I can insert a jump into the machine code to resume >>>>
2009 Sep 30
2
[LLVMdev] Internalize pass
I'm playing around with different combinations of LTO passes, and I've run into a strange problem: I have a 'main' function that looks like this: define i32 @"main(tart.core.Array[tart.core.String])->int"(%"tart.core.Array[tart.core.String]"* %args) { entry: call void @llvm.dbg.func.start(metadata !0) call void @llvm.dbg.stoppoint(i32 2, i32 19, metadata
2009 Oct 03
2
[LLVMdev] Internalize pass
Well, after some investigation I have a few more clues as to what is going on. I have a module which contains a call to an external native function. This native function lives in a static library, and there is an external declaration for it in the module. I find that I can run "llvm-ld -disable-opts -native -l mylibrary test.bc" and it works fine. That is, llvm-ld is able to
2009 Sep 30
0
[LLVMdev] Internalize pass
On Sep 30, 2009, at 12:06 AM, Talin wrote: > I'm playing around with different combinations of LTO passes, and > I've run into a strange problem: > > I have a 'main' function that looks like this: > > define i32 @"main(tart.core.Array[tart.core.String])- > >int"(%"tart.core.Array[tart.core.String]"* %args) { > entry: > call
2009 Nov 17
2
[LLVMdev] llvm-gcc: missing dbg.declare/dbg.stoppoint at optimization level > O0
Hi Devang, >> I use llvm and llvm-gcc as a C-to-C transformation tool using a >> modified version of the c backend, and rely on llvm debug instructions >> to link back to the original source code. >> >> Does anyone know how to get detailed line number and variable debug >> information at optimization levels beyond O0? >> >> Currently, I extract this
2009 Oct 03
0
[LLVMdev] Internalize pass
Sounds like LLVM thinks the calling conventions or declarations are mismatched. See: http://llvm.org/docs/FAQ.html#callconvwrong Reid On Sat, Oct 3, 2009 at 1:16 AM, Talin <viridia at gmail.com> wrote: > Well, after some investigation I have a few more clues as to what is > going on. > > I have a module which contains a call to an external native function. > This native
2004 Oct 14
1
[LLVMdev] debug stoppoints and control flow
Hi, I'm just getting back to working on the cfe debug info after a brief hiatus. It appears that the appropriate place to be inserting stoppoints is starting in llvm_expand_stmt, using STMT_LINENO(t) . If that's not the best place, comments would be appreciated. Using the debug_hooks seems to be a non-starter, because they're called during rtl generation, which apparently isn't
2009 Nov 17
0
[LLVMdev] llvm-gcc: missing dbg.declare/dbg.stoppoint at optimization level > O0
Hi Martijn, On Tue, Nov 17, 2009 at 3:25 AM, Martijn <martijn at martijnrutten.com> wrote: >> >> Without mem2reg pass, you're unlikely to get much optimization done on your IR. > > Clear, thanks! I presume the mem2reg pass is also essential in the > CLang frontend, so CLang is not an alternative to llvm-gcc to keep > more debug information? Yes. > For the
2009 Oct 21
1
[LLVMdev] A few more questions about DIFactory and source-level debugging.
Well, I am much happier now that I understand about dsymutil, and can actually step through my program in gdb. However, there are still some issues that are puzzling me. 1) First off, the debugger appears to stop at odd points. The IR for my main function looks correct to me: define i32 @"main(tart.core.Array[tart.core.String])->int"(%"tart.core.Array[tart.core.String]"*
2009 Apr 08
2
[LLVMdev] debug stoppoint nodes with -fast option
Thanks for the info regarding DebugLoc field. Another related question that I have is regarding debug info for local variables. With -fast option, ISD::DECLARE nodes are created in DAG for debug info of local variables. I am planning to custom handle these nodes, get the required info from llvm.dbg.variable global address and emit it in ISel. But without -fast option ISD::DECLARE nodes
2009 Nov 13
2
[LLVMdev] llvm-gcc: missing dbg.declare/dbg.stoppoint at optimization level > O0
Hello, I use llvm and llvm-gcc as a C-to-C transformation tool using a modified version of the c backend, and rely on llvm debug instructions to link back to the original source code. Does anyone know how to get detailed line number and variable debug information at optimization levels beyond O0? Currently, I extract this debug information by compiling with -g. This works fine with
2009 Nov 16
0
[LLVMdev] llvm-gcc: missing dbg.declare/dbg.stoppoint at optimization level > O0
Hi Martijn On Fri, Nov 13, 2009 at 4:52 AM, Martijn <martijn at martijnrutten.com> wrote: > Hello, > > I use llvm and llvm-gcc as a C-to-C transformation tool using a > modified version of the c backend, and rely on llvm debug instructions > to link back to the original source code. > > Does anyone know how to get detailed line number and variable debug > information