Displaying 20 results from an estimated 10000 matches similar to: "[LLVMdev] Forward: Discussion about custom memory allocators for STL"
2008 May 18
4
[LLVMdev] Forward: Discussion about custom memory allocators for STL
Hi Chris,
Thanks a lot for a detailed opinion and explanation!
It really answers the original question, without going to far
into political discussions about boost and generic allocators
pros/cons aspects.
----- Ursprüngliche Mail ----
> Von: Chris Lattner <sabre at nondot.org>
> An: LLVM Developers Mailing List <llvmdev at cs.uiuc.edu>
> Gesendet: Sonntag, den 18. Mai
2008 May 18
0
[LLVMdev] Forward: Discussion about custom memory allocators for STL
Roman Levenstein wrote:
> - possibility of using 3rd party libs like Boost (or their parts) in LLVM
>
There is a thread elsewhere on this mailing list illustrating how
important it is for the maintainers of LLVM to keep LLVM usable in a
commercial environment. As such, I would strongly recommend avoiding
Boost as it has a bad name in some quarters, regardless of its license,
for
2008 May 18
3
[LLVMdev] Forward: Discussion about custom memory allocators for STL
On Sat, May 17, 2008 at 9:28 PM, Dominic Hamon <dom.hamon at gmail.com> wrote:
> There is a thread elsewhere on this mailing list illustrating how
> important it is for the maintainers of LLVM to keep LLVM usable in a
> commercial environment. As such, I would strongly recommend avoiding
> Boost as it has a bad name in some quarters, regardless of its license,
> for including
2008 May 18
0
[LLVMdev] Forward: Discussion about custom memory allocators for STL
me22 wrote:
> On Sat, May 17, 2008 at 9:28 PM, Dominic Hamon <dom.hamon at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> There is a thread elsewhere on this mailing list illustrating how
>> important it is for the maintainers of LLVM to keep LLVM usable in a
>> commercial environment. As such, I would strongly recommend avoiding
>> Boost as it has a bad name in some quarters,
2008 May 19
2
[LLVMdev] Forward: Discussion about custom memory allocators for STL
On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 7:59 PM, Dominic Hamon <dom.hamon at gmail.com> wrote:
> It has also been mentioned that it is also true for LLVM itself, and it
> is. However, the amount of code in LLVM, and the specific nature of its
> usage and what it is for lends itself to better contribution tracking
> immediately. Boost is a nebulous piece of software with a wide range of
>
2008 May 18
0
[LLVMdev] Forward: Discussion about custom memory allocators for STL
On 2008-05-18, at 04:36, Roman Levenstein wrote:
> Chris Lattner wrote:
>
>> We have already imported pieces of boost.
>
> BTW, which ones?
>
>> The general rule is that it is ok to use specific pieces,
>
> Totally agree with you.
>
>> but they have to be converted to the LLVM style and way of doing
>> things. Also, things with huge chains of
2008 May 18
1
[LLVMdev] Forward: Discussion about custom memory allocators for STL
Dominic Hamon <dom.hamon at gmail.com> writes:
[snip]
> Boost as it has a bad name in some quarters, regardless of its license,
> for including work that is not safe for commercial users to take on. Ie,
> there are so many contributors, and their contribution tracking has been
> poor in the past, that business affairs departments in commercial
> companies, and their
2014 Feb 14
2
[LLVMdev] Custom allocators for MachineBasicBlocks and STL containers
Hello,
I was looking at how the memory for MachineBasicBlocks is managed and
something seems strange.
On one hand, a MachineFunction uses a recycling allocator to create and
destroy MBBs without costly heap allocation (the same is done for
MachineInstrs, MachineOperands, etc.).
On the other hand, each MBB also has a number of STL vectors within it. For
example, for Predecessors, Successors,
2006 Jan 05
3
Using STL containers in R/C++
Hi All,
I am in the process of writing an R extension in c++ and am using several
STL containers (e.g., vector<double>, map<int, double>, multimap<int,
double>). I make sure to clear all these containers at the end of the
.Call. Everything compiles and runs just fine, but I'm a bit worried
since I haven't found any other packages that use STL.
So, my question: is it
2008 May 19
0
[LLVMdev] Forward: Discussion about custom memory allocators for STL
Am Sonntag, den 18.05.2008, 20:39 -0400 schrieb me22:
> On Sun, May 18, 2008 at 7:59 PM, Dominic Hamon <dom.hamon at gmail.com> wrote:
> > It has also been mentioned that it is also true for LLVM itself, and it
> > is. However, the amount of code in LLVM, and the specific nature of its
> > usage and what it is for lends itself to better contribution tracking
> >
2008 May 20
1
[LLVMdev] Forward: Discussion about custom memory allocators for STL
On Sunday 18 May 2008 09:02, Gordon Henriksen wrote:
> As for the 340, for an highly replaceable library comprising 1% of our
> LOC to bloat the source file count in our tree by 20%—after using a
> script to extract a perfect transitive dependency closure—well, I was
> on the verge of tossing it overboard. I can't blame Chris for his
> reticence to add such nonsense to LLVM, as
2008 Apr 02
4
[LLVMdev] Comparison mismatch causes assert using VStudio STL
Hola LLVMers,
We saw a problem with some code in LiveIntervalAnalysis.h/.c which we've
fixed locally. We'd like to get a patch to the mainline and want to
know how you'd like it fixed. A couple of things come together to cause
the problem:
struct Idx2MBBCompare {
bool operator()(const IdxMBBPair &LHS, const IdxMBBPair &RHS) const
{
return LHS.first <
2003 Oct 22
1
Help with STL function in R compared to S-Plus
I am trying to understand the nuances of STL (seasonal trend
decomposition with loess) based on William Cleveland's (and others?)
original development. I do not understand the specification or use of
"frequency components" or equivalent "low-pass filter" components in
the stl() function.
I have run the stl() function on a standard example data (co2) in both
S-Plus and
2010 Oct 12
1
Help with STL function to decompose
Hi everyone.
I'm having some troubles with STL function to decompose some data.
My issue is that I have monthly data from September 2005 up to August 2010
i. e. 60 observations.
I define it in the following way:
*u<-read.csv("C:/CELEBREX.csv",header = TRUE)
u.ts<-ts(u, start=c(2005,9), frequency=12)
*
The issue is that when I try to use
stl(u.ts, 'per')
Then the
2006 Apr 26
1
stl function
Hi,
I have a monthly time series with missing values and I would use stl function to identify seasonality.
I tried all settings of na.action but the result is the same:
stl(tm245,s.window=11, na.action=na.pass)
Error in stl(tm245, s.window = 11, na.action = na.pass) :
NA/NaN/Inf in foreign function call (arg 1)
Can you help me?
Thanks
Andrea Toreti
[[alternative HTML version
2001 May 16
1
stl in library(ts)
I am running R 1.2.2 under Linux. When using the function stl in
the ts library, how can I save the seasonal component? What I
would like was something like:
library(ts)
data(nottem)
data.stl <- stl(nottem, "per")
x <- data.stl$sea
This what I get:
> x
NULL
I would, however, like to store in x the seasonal component.
Thanks in advance. Francisco.
--
Francisco
2008 Sep 02
2
More help with stl?
I don't understand the output of stl. As a simple example:
y <- numeric(1:365)
y[250] = 1
stl <- stl(ts(y, frequency=7), s.window="periodic")
This returns without error but the results are puzzling to me. If you plot the results it is probably easiest to visualize what I mean.
plot(stl)
This shows the original data (a single spike at 250). A trend (which also shows a bump
2009 Oct 23
0
[LLVMdev] JIT and security
2009/10/18 Oleg Knut <oleg77 at gmail.com>:
> Maybe some of you can guide me on how to do following operations:
> 1) prevent system calls
> 2) memory allocation management (set some limits that can't be used
> by JIT)
> 3) CPU power limiting
Hi Oleg,
This is totally system dependent, it'd be *very* hard to do it
multi-platform. On Unix, a good part of it is
2011 May 18
1
Multiple plots on one device using stl
G'day,
I am looking at monthly reports, and have three series of monthly data from 2007 to 2009. I would like to show the season decomposition of these two series side by side on the one device, however using plot doesn't seem to respect any use of layout(matrix(1:3, ncol=3)) or par(mfcol=c(1,3)).
I'm guessing that this means that the plot(stl) perhaps uses them, but I can't find
2005 Jul 18
2
how to change bar colours in plot.stl
Dear helpeRs,
Is it possible to change the shading colour of the range bars in the plot
generated by plot.stl? By default they are grey, but I would prefer them
white (I am preparing some graphics for a powerpoint presentation so I'm
inverting all colours).
As far as I can see plot.stl allows you to turn off the range bars, but
nothing about the shading colour. I tried to look at the