Displaying 20 results from an estimated 1000 matches similar to: "[LLVMdev] trouble finding symbols"
2008 May 10
0
[LLVMdev] trouble finding symbols
On Fri, May 9, 2008 at 5:35 PM, Ryan M. Lefever <lefever at crhc.uiuc.edu> wrote:
> I am trying to upgrade to the latest version of LLVM from svn. My
> transformations compile correctly, but when I go to run them I get a
> symbol lookup error. In particular, I have 2 libraries that I compile
> for use with opt called libaux.so and libmyxform.so. libaux.so
> implements
2009 Oct 13
2
[LLVMdev] hash extras
I am trying to upgrade my code to use the latest version of llvm from
svn. Whenever I include "llvm/ADT/HashExtras.h", I get error messages
like the following. Does anyone know what is going on? Thanks for any
help.
llvm[1]: Compiling Aux.cpp for Debug build (PIC)
In file included from
/home/lefever/work/memrep/src/compiler/include/Aux.h:4,
from Aux.cpp:1:
2009 Oct 13
0
[LLVMdev] hash extras
So, after digging around in the old llvm/ADT/hash_map, I think I
discovered the problem. Now, if you want to include
llvm/ADT/HashExtras.h, you have to include the hash_map h file from your
system (ext/hash_map in my case) and define HASH_NAMESPACE, before you
include llvm/ADT/HashExtras. It might be good to include some
documentation about that for those using HashExtras.
Regards,
Ryan
2008 Oct 30
4
[LLVMdev] global symbols converted to local symbols
I have a bitcode file x.bc. When I run llmv-nm on x.bc, it shows that a
function f(), that I've written, is defined as a global function (text)
object, i.e., llvm-nm shows it marked with a 'T'. I have converted x.bc
to an executable with the following command: llvm-ld -native -o x.exe
x.bc When I run nm on x.exe, it shows that f is now a local function
(text) object, i.e., nm
2008 Oct 30
0
[LLVMdev] global symbols converted to local symbols
As a follow up, if I first convert x.bc to a c file using llc -march=c
-o x.c x.bc, and then I use normal gcc to convert x.c to an executable,
f() remains a global symbol. Is llvm-nm incorrectly converting the
global symbols to local symbols?
Ryan M. Lefever wrote:
> I have a bitcode file x.bc. When I run llmv-nm on x.bc, it shows that a
> function f(), that I've written, is
2007 Aug 15
3
[LLVMdev] c const
I don't mean to be a pain, but I was thinking about this a bit more.
Does gcc ignore the const keyword? If not, why has LLVM chosen to
deviate from gcc with respect to the const keyword? If so, then why do
we bother using const in LLVM API code? I'm just curious and wanted to
understand the thinking behind not preserving const.
Thanks,
Ryan
Chris Lattner wrote:
> This property
2008 Nov 04
3
[LLVMdev] fPIC
Does llvm-gcc support the -fPIC option? I am using LLVM on both 32 bit
linux and 64 bit linux, if that matters.
Regards,
Ryan
--
Ryan M. Lefever [http://www.crhc.uiuc.edu/~lefever/index.html]
2007 Aug 15
0
[LLVMdev] c const
I don't follow what you mean - gcc doesn't ignore const and llvm
doesn't deviate from gcc nor from the relevant language standards.
Note that if you declare a global as const that we do capture this in
the ir - what specifically do you want? Please provide an example.
-Chris
http://nondot.org/sabre
http://llvm.org
On Aug 14, 2007, at 11:58 PM, "Ryan M. Lefever"
2007 Mar 06
1
[LLVMdev] [Fwd: Re: using dsa]
Forgot to hit "Reply All."
-- John T.
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2007 Apr 10
4
[LLVMdev] cvs opt broken?
I checked out llvm from cvs & llvm-gcc from svn last night and again
tonight. Each time they compiled and installed fine. After installing
them, I recompiled compiler transforms I had written for opt. opt seems
to load the my transform libraries fine, but it complains:
opt: Unknown command line argument '-mytransform'
whenever I try to specify one of my transforms on the opt
2007 Aug 08
0
[LLVMdev] c const
This property isn't preserved on the llvm ir, because const can always
be cast away. If you want mod information, then I suggest using the
aliasanalysis interface to get mod ref info for a call.
-Chris
http://nondot.org/sabre
http://llvm.org
On Aug 8, 2007, at 12:07 AM, "Ryan M. Lefever" <lefever at crhc.uiuc.edu>
wrote:
> How is c's const keyword translated
2007 Aug 08
5
[LLVMdev] c const
How is c's const keyword translated when compiling c into llvm bytecode.
I'm specifically interested in const pointer function arguments.
Consider a function declared as follows in c:
void f(const int* arg);
When I examine f in llvm bytecode, how can I tell that arg is a pointer,
whose contents can only be read, not written.
Regards,
Ryan
2007 Apr 10
0
[LLVMdev] cvs opt broken?
This has been reported.
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=1317
On 4/10/07, Ryan M. Lefever <lefever at crhc.uiuc.edu> wrote:
>
> I checked out llvm from cvs & llvm-gcc from svn last night and again
> tonight. Each time they compiled and installed fine. After installing
> them, I recompiled compiler transforms I had written for opt. opt seems
> to load the my
2007 Aug 22
0
[LLVMdev] llvm-gcc-4.0 compilation erros
On Wed, 22 Aug 2007, Ryan M. Lefever wrote:
> I checked llvm-gcc 4.0 out from svn yesterday and am compiling it on 3
> different machines. I was able to compile it on 2 of the machines, but
> the compilation failed on the third machine with the errors below. The
> machine that the compilation failed on is running Fedora Core 4. The
> processor is a AMD Athlon(tm) 64 Processor
2007 Aug 22
2
[LLVMdev] llvm-gcc-4.0 compilation erros
I checked llvm-gcc 4.0 out from svn yesterday and am compiling it on 3
different machines. I was able to compile it on 2 of the machines, but
the compilation failed on the third machine with the errors below. The
machine that the compilation failed on is running Fedora Core 4. The
processor is a AMD Athlon(tm) 64 Processor 3700+. The version of gcc I
have on the machine is 4.0.2. I tried
2008 Jun 24
2
[LLVMdev] undefined reference to .Llabel
I have been working on a compilation process that involves steps such as
passing an application through transforms that I've written and
combining the application with support code that I've written. When I
compile an application using my compilation process without debugging,
(i.e., "llvm-gcc -g"), everything works fine. However, when I compile
an application using my
2007 Feb 22
1
[LLVMdev] opt -verify
I think I misread the doxygen. verifyFunction & verifyModule return
false if no errors are detected. However, my question now becomes why
does the code produced by my transform pass verification, but it causes
an assertion failure in the byte reader when it (the code produced by my
transform) is passed to another invocation of opt?
Ryan M. Lefever wrote:
> I also tried iterating
2007 Aug 08
2
[LLVMdev] c const
Hi,
I think I found a bug. I don't know if it's in upstream gcc or llvm-gcc4.
int func()
{
const int *arr;
arr[0] = 1;
}
$ llvm-gcc main.c -c; echo $?
0
$ gcc main.c -c
main.c: In function 'func':
main.c:4: error: assignment of read-only location
The difference disappears when arr[0] is replaced by *arr.
(I tried the above with gcc 4.1.2, 3.4.6, 4.0.3. (I don't
2008 Nov 04
0
[LLVMdev] fPIC
Yup!
-bw
On Nov 3, 2008, at 7:39 PM, Ryan M. Lefever wrote:
> Does llvm-gcc support the -fPIC option? I am using LLVM on both 32
> bit
> linux and 64 bit linux, if that matters.
>
> Regards,
> Ryan
>
> --
> Ryan M. Lefever [http://www.crhc.uiuc.edu/~lefever/index.html]
> _______________________________________________
> LLVM Developers mailing list
>
2009 Apr 28
3
[LLVMdev] O3 passes
Can I specify passes that I want run directly to llvm-gcc? I don't want
all of -O3, for example. I tried llvm-gcc -raiseallocs ..., but that
didn't work. I also tried running cc1 directly and it didn't take
-raiseallocs as a parameter either.
Duncan Sands wrote:
> On Tuesday 28 April 2009 04:02:47 am Ryan M. Lefever wrote:
>> I assume that when -O3 (or O2 or O1) is