similar to: [LLVMdev] compiling a call to function in compiler

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 300 matches similar to: "[LLVMdev] compiling a call to function in compiler"

2011 Jan 18
0
[LLVMdev] compiling a call to function in compiler
On Jan 17, 2011, at 5:01 PM, Rob Nikander wrote: > Hi, > > I'm trying to follow the advice from this message: > http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvmdev/2008-October/017574.html, > to create a call instruction from a function pointer. But I'm > getting... > > Assertion failed: (isa<X>(Val) && "cast<Ty>() argument of > incompatible
2011 Jan 18
1
[LLVMdev] compiling a call to function in compiler
On Mon, Jan 17, 2011 at 8:36 PM, Eric Christopher <echristo at apple.com> wrote: > >    id testfunc(id a, id b) { ... } >    ... >    FunctionType *fn_type = FunctionType::get(id_type, argtypes, false); >    Value *fn = ConstantExpr::getIntToPtr(ConstantInt::get(int64_type, > reinterpret_cast<int64_t>(testfunc)), fn_type); >    return builder.CreateCall2(fn,
2013 Jan 26
2
[LLVMdev] Code compiling in gcc but not llvm
Hi, This is my first post, sorry if not in the right format. I am stuck at a place where I have a code fragment that runs in normal gcc but fails when I give -fplugin=dragonegg.so extern int *testfunc(); extern __typeof (testfunc) testfunc __asm__ ("" "__GI_testfunc") __attribute__ ((visibility ("hidden"))); extern __typeof(testfunc) __testfunc; extern __typeof
2012 Sep 21
2
Parallel Programming
I am trying to do parallel programming and I tried this library(doSNOW) library(foreach) testfunc<-function(x){ x<-x+1 x } noc<-2 cl <- makeCluster(do.call(rbind,rep(list("localhost"),noc)), type = "SOCK") registerDoSNOW(cl) clusterExport(cl=cl,c("testfunc.r")) testl<-foreach(pp=1:2) %dopar% { testfunc(pp) } And this works but if I try to
2009 Sep 21
3
Basic function output/scope question
Hello Group, I'm trying to learn R and am having a problem getting output from a function I'm trying to write. The problem is clearly one of scope, but I can't find the documentation that tells me how to get around the issue. Here is an example of my problem. testfunc<-function(x) { y<-10 print(y) print(x) } testfunc(4) The variables x and y are accessible during execution
2019 Jun 18
3
Fast way to call an R function from C++?
Hi, I'm looking for a most efficient way to call an R function from C++ in a package. I know there are two functions (`R_forceAndCall` and `Rf_eval`) that can do the "call" part, but both are slow compared to calling the same function in R. I also try to use Rcpp and it is the worse one. Here is my test code: C++ code: ``` // [[Rcpp::export]] SEXP C_test1(SEXP f, SEXP x) { SEXP
2009 Jul 24
2
[LLVMdev] Stack Management in LLVM
On Thu, Jul 23, 2009 at 4:06 PM, Joshua Moore-Oliva<llvm-dev at chatgris.com> wrote: > If I could reduce my requirements to the ability to the following: >    * Ability to know how much stack space a function requires >    * Move the stack pointer arbitrarily (the ability to write my own function > prologue and epilogue, would need to be able to insert assembly/low level >
2002 Aug 06
2
[ and setMethod conflict?
I noticed this oddity about [ and setMethod. First, I define testFunc, which sorts a data frame by the first column and returns the entries that aren't NAs, and testIt, which runs testFunc repeatedly on a random large data frame, each time saving the return into a dummy placeholder (for demonstration's sake). > require(methods) Loading required package: methods [1] TRUE > testFunc
2002 Aug 06
2
[ and setMethod conflict?
I noticed this oddity about [ and setMethod. First, I define testFunc, which sorts a data frame by the first column and returns the entries that aren't NAs, and testIt, which runs testFunc repeatedly on a random large data frame, each time saving the return into a dummy placeholder (for demonstration's sake). > require(methods) Loading required package: methods [1] TRUE > testFunc
2008 Nov 10
6
Variable passed to function not used in function in select=... in subset
Hello! I have the problem that in my function the passed variable is not used, but the variable name of the dataframe itself?- difficult to explain, but an easy example: TestFunc<-function(df, group) { ??? print(names(subset(df, select=group))) } df1<-data.frame(group="G1", visit="V1", value=0.9) TestFunc(df1, c("group", "visit")) Result: [1]
2009 Aug 30
4
[LLVMdev] Perfect forwarding?
BLAST! LLVM mailing list headers are still royally screwed up... My message is below... On Sun, Aug 30, 2009 at 2:20 PM, Talin<viridia at gmail.com> wrote: > Hey all, it's been a while since I have posted on this list, but I've > been continuing my work with LLVM and getting lots done :) > > One question I wanted to ask is whether anyone had any advice on how to >
2009 Aug 05
0
[LLVMdev] Stack Management in LLVM
First off, thanks for the help so far. >From what I have been able to tell, emitPrologue kicks in after the arguments for the function have been copied. For example, consider the function int testfunc( int foo, int bar ); Emitting assembly code from the llvm-gcc frontend in a small test program gives the following for the call to testfunc movl $1338, (%esp) movl $1339, 4(%esp) call
2017 Apr 05
2
Deopt operand bundle behavior
Hi! We have started to use deopt operand bundle to make our native stacktrace deoptimizable and garbage collectable. We stumbled upon an issue and we don't know if it is really an issue on our side or really a problem within LLVM. For example, for this input: declare { i8*, i8* } @getCode() define void @testFunc() { entry: %0 = call { i8*, i8* } @getCode() %1 = extractvalue { i8*, i8* }
2009 Nov 23
2
categorisation of continuous variables in R
Dear all, I'm looking for a function comparable to switch, to categorize a continuous variable in a few levels. Off course that can be done with a series of ifelse statements, but that looks rather clumsy. I looked at switch, but couldn't figure out how to use it for this. I guess that's not possible, as it only works with characters or integers, not with intervals. Basically,
2008 Nov 04
1
Help needed using 3rd party C library/functions from within R (Nvidia CUDA)
Hello, I'm trying to combine the parallel computing power available through NVIDIA CUDA (www.nvidia.com/cuda) from within R. CUDA is an extension to the C language, so I thought it would be possible to do this. If I have a C file with an empty function which includes a needed CUDA library (cutil.h) and compile this to an .so file using a NVIDIA compiler (nvcc), called 'myFunc.so' I
2002 Nov 07
5
From RISKS: secret scrubbing code removed by optimizers
This showed up in RISKS and no one has mentioned it here yet, so.. OpenSSH contains lots of code like: char *password = read_passphrase(prompt, 0); [do stuff] memset(password, 0, strlen(password));
2012 Jan 30
2
ode() tries to allocate an absurd amount of memory
Hi there R-helpers: I'm having problems with the function ode() found in the package deSolve. It seems that when my state variables are too numerous (>33000 elements), the function throws the following error: Error in vode(y, times, func, parms, ...) : cannot allocate memory block of size 137438953456.0 Gb In addition: Warning message: In vode(y, times, func, parms, ...) : NAs
2019 Jun 18
2
Fast way to call an R function from C++?
For reference, your benchmark using UNWIND_PROTECT: > system.time(test(testFunc, evn$x)) user system elapsed 0.331 0.000 0.331 > system.time(test(C_test1, testFunc, evn$x)) user system elapsed 2.029 0.000 2.036 > system.time(test(C_test2, expr, evn)) user system elapsed 2.307 0.000 2.313 > system.time(test(C_test3, testFunc, evn$x)) user system
2010 Oct 15
1
specify data frame by name
I'd like to be able to specify a data frame by name in a function call. Any ideas how this can be done? dfm <- data.frame(x=1:10) testfunc <- function(data="dfm") { dat <- data sum(dat$x) } print(testfunc()) -- View this message in context: http://r.789695.n4.nabble.com/specify-data-frame-by-name-tp2996534p2996534.html Sent from the R help mailing list archive at
2004 Mar 10
1
Question concerning library function "nlme" and lexical scoping
I am running into problems calling the library function nlme from within another function. Basically,the following function (with v a list containing data and initialization values) > testfunc function(dat=v) { test<-nlsList(result~a+(b-a)/(1+(conc/(c+z*cdiff))^d) |rep,start=dat$init,data=dat$mixeddat) return(nlme(test,random=b~1)) } produces the error message Error in eval(expr, envir,