similar to: [LLVMdev] Windows x64 JIT usability

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 4000 matches similar to: "[LLVMdev] Windows x64 JIT usability"

2009 Jun 04
0
[LLVMdev] Windows x64 JIT usability
On Wed, Jun 3, 2009 at 6:29 PM, Jonathan Ragan-Kelley<jrk at csail.mit.edu> wrote: > What is the current state of the JIT on Windows x64? Broken; at the very least, there's http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=3739 . -Eli
2012 Sep 14
4
[LLVMdev] Atomic ops cannot be built from C/OCaml bindings
Forgive me if I'm missing something obvious, but it seems that a number of core instructions—I'm specifically running in to `atomicrmw`, `fence`, and `cmpxchg` at the moment—cannot be constructed from the C bindings, and are therefore also inaccessible to the OCaml bindings. There are opcodes for each of these in the llvm-c/Core.h, but there seems to be no way to construct them. Is there
2012 Oct 05
2
[LLVMdev] Atomic ops cannot be built from C/OCaml bindings
How soon would I need to submit a patch for this for it to have a comfortable shot at making it into the 3.2 release? On Sep 14, 2012, at 8:05 PM, Eric Christopher <echristo at apple.com> wrote: > > On Sep 14, 2012, at 4:53 PM, Jonathan Ragan-Kelley <jrk at csail.mit.edu> wrote: > >> Is there a reason these should be omitted? > > Not in particular. Things are
2012 Oct 24
0
[LLVMdev] Atomic ops cannot be built from C/OCaml bindings
I finally got around to adding these. The patch is posted in a pull request on my copy of llvm.git: https://github.com/jrk/llvm/pull/3 and a simple test with OCaml is here: https://gist.github.com/3948460 Feedback welcome. On Sep 14, 2012, at 7:53 PM, Jonathan Ragan-Kelley <jrk at csail.mit.edu> wrote: > Forgive me if I'm missing something obvious, but it seems that a >
2011 May 13
2
[LLVMdev] Does the OCaml binding include intrinsic support?
I can't seem to find reference to intrinsics, beyond the is_intrinsic function. I am building a backend which needs to perform some target-specific code-generation (for SSE, AVX, and NEON), and intrinsics are the standard path in the C++ API.
2015 Jan 13
2
[LLVMdev] Emitting IR in older formats (for NVVM)
Thanks, all. I didn’t realize a 7.0 RC was public and changed to 3.4—I will go down that road for now, though I’ll probably also look into integrating variants of the SPIR converter in the future. Another possibility is to skip libnvvm altogether and use LLVM's NVPTX target.  This is of course harder since you have to configure the passes yourself instead of just calling a few C
2011 May 14
0
[LLVMdev] Does the OCaml binding include intrinsic support?
On Fri, May 13, 2011 at 5:18 PM, Jonathan Ragan-Kelley <jrk at csail.mit.edu>wrote: > I can't seem to find reference to intrinsics, beyond the is_intrinsic > function. > > I am building a backend which needs to perform some target-specific > code-generation (for SSE, AVX, and NEON), and intrinsics are the > standard path in the C++ API. > What happens if you just
2012 Sep 15
0
[LLVMdev] Atomic ops cannot be built from C/OCaml bindings
On Sep 14, 2012, at 4:53 PM, Jonathan Ragan-Kelley <jrk at csail.mit.edu> wrote: > Is there a reason these should be omitted? Not in particular. Things are added to the C API as needed and usually on demand. -eric
2015 Jan 12
3
[LLVMdev] Emitting IR in older formats (for NVVM)
This question is specifically motivated by the practical constraints of NVVM, but I don't know anywhere better to ask (hopefully, e.g., @jholewinski is still following), and I believe it concerns general LLVM issues: NVIDIA's libNVVM is built on LLVM 3.2. This means its bitcode and LL text parsers are from that generation. It's interface calls for adding modules as either bitcode
2012 Jan 10
1
[LLVMdev] truncstore fails in PTX backend
From what I can tell, the truncstore paths all fail instruction selection in the current PTX backend. This is easy to work around for int types >= 16 bits by setting the truncstore action to expand in PTXISelLowering.cpp, but this cannot handle i8 values, since the PTX backend has no register representation for i8s. As a result of all this, it is not possible to store to i8 pointers at all.
2011 Oct 31
2
[LLVMdev] PTX backend support for atomics
I notice that there is not currently any intrinsic support for atomics in the PTX backend. Is this on the roadmap? Should it be as easy to add as it seems (plumbing through just like the thread ID instructions, &c.)? The obvious difference is that these ops have side effects. -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: smime.p7s Type:
2012 Jan 16
1
[LLVMdev] PTX backend fails instruction selection for load of sext
Loads (on ptx64) with an sext of a computed index operand fail instruction selection: LLVM ERROR: Cannot select: 0x7ff01401c210: i64,ch = load 0x10580e820, 0x7ff01401b510, 0x7ff01401b910<LD4[%memref1], sext from i32> [ID=8] 0x7ff01401b510: i64 = PTXISD::LOAD_PARAM 0x10580e820, 0x7ff01401b410 [ORD=2] [ID=6] 0x7ff01401b910: i64 = undef [ORD=4] [ID=3] This is for code of the form: %ptr
2011 Nov 19
1
[LLVMdev] PTX backend support for atomics
Looking further during down time at the dev meeting today, it actually seems that PTX atom.* and red.* intrinsics map extremely naturally onto the LLVM atomicrmw and cmpxchg instructions. The biggest issue is that a subset of things expressible with these LLVM instructions do not trivially map to PTX, and the range of things naturally supported depends on the features of a given target. With
2011 Dec 28
1
[LLVMdev] Fix for OCaml bindings
The OCaml bindings have been broken in trunk for a while. I chased it down to the addition of the Half type (rev 146786) not being reflected in the OCaml enums, causing mysterious type checking to break in the middle of the LLVM stack when using code generated from OCaml. The fix was trivial: https://github.com/jrk/llvm/pull/1/files -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment
2009 May 29
3
[LLVMdev] RFC: Atomics.h
On May 28, 2009, at 6:03 PM, Jonathan Ragan-Kelley wrote: > In the current trunk, System/Atomic.[h,cpp] define void > llvm::sys::MemoryFence(). This conflicts with the MemoryFence macro in > <windows.h> and (since it's a preprocessor macro, and not a scoped > function definition) causes the sys::MemoryFence definition on > Atomic.cpp:23 to explode, as it's
2009 Jun 02
0
[LLVMdev] RFC: Atomics.h
Yes, indeed. On May 28, 10:41 pm, Owen Anderson <resis... at mac.com> wrote: > > Wait, it defines MemoryFence() AND MemoryBarrier()?? > > Sheesh, they had to take all the reasonable names.  :-/
2011 Mar 22
2
[LLVMdev] Xcode 4 autocomplete of LLVM includes
Slightly off-topic, but I imagine this crowd must have some experience using Xcode 4 for projects linking to LLVM. I've actually started using Xcode 4 as an IDE for C/C++ development thanks to the vastly improved code analysis-based tools it's inherited largely thanks to LLVM. But, ironically, I am particularly struggling to get the tools to parse and analyze LLVM (as a client, not for
2009 Jun 02
1
[LLVMdev] RFC: Atomics.h
On Jun 1, 2009, at 11:17 PM, Jonathan Ragan-Kelley wrote: > Yes, indeed. Are they macros or functions? If macros, why not just #undef them at the top of Atomics.h? -Chris > > > On May 28, 10:41 pm, Owen Anderson <resis... at mac.com> wrote: >> >> Wait, it defines MemoryFence() AND MemoryBarrier()?? >> >> Sheesh, they had to take all the reasonable
2011 Apr 17
0
[LLVMdev] Xcode 4 autocomplete of LLVM includes
Jonathan Ragan-Kelley <katokop1 <at> gmail.com> writes: > > Slightly off-topic, but I imagine this crowd must have some experience > using Xcode 4 for projects linking to LLVM. I've actually started > using Xcode 4 as an IDE for C/C++ development thanks to the vastly > improved code analysis-based tools it's inherited largely thanks to > LLVM. But,
2011 Dec 28
2
[LLVMdev] Linkage warning in current trunk
Building on OS X 10.7.1 with the standard toolchain, I have seen the following linker warnings going back a number of versions in trunk whenever I build an executable linked with LLVM: ld: warning: direct access in llvm::fouts() to global weak symbol llvm::formatted_raw_ostream::~formatted_raw_ostream() means the weak symbol cannot be overridden at runtime. This was likely caused by