Displaying 20 results from an estimated 9000 matches similar to: "[LLVMdev] Dynamically alternating between register allocators"
2007 Sep 05
0
[LLVMdev] Dynamically alternating between register allocators
Hi Fernando,
To do this you would need to change the register allocation pass on
the fly. I don't think this is currently possible. Someone please
correct me if I am wrong.
I would like to see hierarchical pass capability built into pass
manager. This allows us to group live variables, phi lowering, two-
address, lower subreg, live interval analysis, coalescing, allocation,
and
2007 Sep 06
1
[LLVMdev] Dynamically alternating between register allocators
This doesn't necessarily need to be in the passmanager, but I'd like
to see the code generator grow the ability to codegen an entire
function multiple times. Ideally, we'd be able to codegen all the way
to final machineinstrs in multiple configurations and then pick the
best based on some metric. This would allow lots of interesting
experiments and allow people willing to
2006 Aug 20
2
[LLVMdev] Adding register allocator to LLVM
Dear Anton,
you can add your register allocator strait iin the
"lib/CodeGen/Passes.cpp", and then 're-make' it: "makellvm llc", on the
top of lib/CodeGen. It is faster than running make from LLVMOBJDIR. The
problem is that it only add to llc the changes on the lib/CodeGen
directory. If you change other parts, a make from LLVMOBJDIR will
synchronize it.
Try adding
2007 Jun 14
2
[LLVMdev] Moving data between regs
The short answer is this is not currently done. LLVM register
allocator does not currently use a move to a different register class
in lieu of spills. This is definitely something we should do in the
future. Can you file a bugzilla enhancement request?
Thanks,
Evan
On Jun 13, 2007, at 11:09 AM, Chris Lattner wrote:
> On Tue, 12 Jun 2007, Fernando Magno Quintao Pereira wrote:
>>
2007 Nov 23
2
[LLVMdev] global register allocation.
On 11/23/07, Fernando Magno Quintao Pereira <fernando at cs.ucla.edu> wrote:
>
>
> Hi, Sanjiv,
>
> those passes operate on the whole machine function. Each machine
> function contains many basic blocks. If a program has many functions, the
> register allocator will be called as many times, i.e it does not do
> interprocedural allocation.
>
> best,
>
>
2007 Jun 14
0
[LLVMdev] Moving data between regs
Does this depend on vreg subreg support? It sounds as if it could be
vaguely related, but I'm not sure it's necessary.
--
Chris
On Jun 14, 2007, at 12:27 PM, Evan Cheng wrote:
> The short answer is this is not currently done. LLVM register
> allocator does not currently use a move to a different register class
> in lieu of spills. This is definitely something we should do in
2007 Nov 23
0
[LLVMdev] global register allocation.
Hi, again,
I think you can do it in the same way that the other allocators have
been coded, i.e extend RA, register the pass and so forth. I am not sure
about the best way to pass information among a run of RegAlloc to the
other, maybe the other guys in the list could suggest something. Yet, you
can always dump it into a file, and read it again, everytime it is
necessary. Remember that
2007 Nov 25
1
[LLVMdev] global register allocation.
Thanks again. One more question here:
Since the regalloc works once per function, do I stil have access to
the Call graph?
Just saving information between regalloc passes for different
functions may not be enough for my case. I will need to maintain the
regalloc info of various passes in the call graph order.
Anyways thanks for your inputs. I will get back if I need to learn more.
Sanjiv
On Nov
2006 Jul 02
2
[LLVMdev] Inserting move instruction
Dear llvmers,
I am trying to insert a move instruction where both source and
destination registers are physical registers. How is the code for this?
I tried this one here:
void PhiDeconstruction_Fer::add_move (
MachineFunction & mf,
MachineBasicBlock & mbb,
unsigned
2007 Dec 16
3
[LLVMdev] Question about coalescing
Dear guys,
I want to coalesce some copies, and I would like to know if there is
any method that I can call, like JoinCopy from the old (LLVM 1.9)
LiveIntervals class. I found it in SimpleRegisterCoalescing (LLVM 2.1),
but I do not want to call this analysis, as I have my own.
basically, I can determine that two virtuals do not overlap, and I
know that it is safe to join them. In
2020 Feb 22
3
The AnghaBench collection of compilable programs
Hi Florian,
we though about using UIUC, like in LLVM. Do you guys know if that
could be a problem, given that we are mining the functions from
github?
> Have you thought about integrating the benchmarks as external tests into LLVM’s test-suite? That would make it very easy to play around with.
We did not think about it actually. But we would be happy to do it, if
the community accepts
2007 Apr 12
0
[LLVMdev] Regalloc Refactoring
>> And I have a quite fast algo that I believe is simpler than [Budimlic02]
>> and I can share it with you :)
>
> Do you have a paper on this? I'd be interested in seeing it.
>
Yes, I have a tech report on this page:
http://compilers/fernando/projects/soc/
and I have submitted a paper to SAS, and now I am waiting for the review.
The coalescing algorithm is described in
2007 Jun 13
2
[LLVMdev] Moving data between regs
Dear LLVMers,
I wish someone could help me to clarify a register allocation
question. I will use X86 in this example, but it really does not matter
too much.
Imagine that I have a virtual v stored in register AL, and I am about
to cross a function call, that effectively overwrites AL. Well, I have,
say, register ESI free, but as it happens, ESI is bigger than AL. It
should be
2007 Apr 12
4
[LLVMdev] Regalloc Refactoring
> And I have a quite fast algo that I believe is simpler than [Budimlic02]
> and I can share it with you :)
Do you have a paper on this? I'd be interested in seeing it.
-Tanya
>
> Fernando
> _______________________________________________
> LLVM Developers mailing list
> LLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu
>
2007 Aug 17
2
[LLVMdev] Debugger for Register Allocation
Hi guys,
I have been using a debugger for my register allocator. The debugger
happened to be very useful at catching register assignment errors. I've
put the debugger on-line, if anyone who is working with register
allocation wants to use. The debugger itself has nothing to do with LLVM,
but I've coded a spiller that prints the code in a format that the
debugger can read. The
2007 Feb 22
2
[LLVMdev] Reference to recently created move
Hey, guys, I am creating some move instructions with
MRegisterInfo::copyRegToReg. How do I get a pointer to the instruction
that I just created? Is there a way to do something like:
// mbb is MachineBasicBlock, reg_info is MRegisterInfo
MachineBasicBlock::iterator iter = mbb.getFirstTerminator();
reg_info->copyRegToReg(mbb, iter, dst, src, rc);
iter--; (???)
MachineInstr *
2007 Jul 13
3
[LLVMdev] NO-OP
Guys,
I am in need of a no-op instruction: an instruction that does not do
anything, and has no operands. Does LLVM predefine such an instruction? I
want to transform the program so that there is no empty basic block.
Fernando
2007 Jul 03
2
[LLVMdev] Swaps of FP registers
Dear guys,
what is the best way to implement a swap of floating point registers
in X86? For the integer registers, I am using xchg. Is there a similar
instruction for floating point?
My function to insert swaps is like:
void X86RegisterInfo::swapRegs(
MachineBasicBlock & mbb,
MachineBasicBlock::iterator mi,
unsigned r1,
unsigned r2,
const TargetRegisterClass
2008 May 16
2
[LLVMdev] 64-bit to 32-bit conversion of pointers
Guys, I need advice in how to handle a problem.
The problem:
In X86_64, pointers are 64-bit variables, and are stored into 64-bit
registers. However, some pointers are small enough that they can be
represented as 32-bit values.
Is there some way, in LLVM, to recognize which pointers can be stored
into 32-bit registers, and so modify their class accordingly? Any ideas or
hints would
2007 Sep 25
2
[LLVMdev] Profiling llc
Hey guys, I am trying to speed up some of my LLVM/llc passes. Is there a
way to use something like gprof on llc? If not, do you guys know anything
that I can use to discover which routines of my passes are taking most of
the time?
thanks,
Fernando