Displaying 20 results from an estimated 7000 matches similar to: "[LLVMdev] Official git mirroring of llvm, clang, lldb, test-suite, etc.?"
2011 Jan 29
0
[LLVMdev] Official git mirroring of llvm, clang, lldb, test-suite, etc.?
Le 29 janv. 2011 à 09:33, Mark Lacey a écrit :
> I know this comes up periodically, but it looks like it has been a few months since there was any posting indicating that having an official git mirror for LLVM, et al. was still in the works.
>
> I am wondering if there is a timeline or resources lined up to do this mirroring.
>
> The distributed nature of git fits very well with
2011 Jan 30
2
[LLVMdev] Official git mirroring of llvm, clang, lldb, test-suite, etc.?
Jean-Daniel Dupas <devlists at shadowlab.org> writes:
> Le 29 janv. 2011 à 09:33, Mark Lacey a écrit :
>
>> I know this comes up periodically, but it looks like it has been a few months since there was any posting indicating that having an official git mirror for LLVM, et al. was still in the works.
>>
>> I am wondering if there is a timeline or resources lined up
2011 Jan 30
0
[LLVMdev] Official git mirroring of llvm, clang, lldb, test-suite, etc.?
greened at obbligato.org (David A. Greene) writes:
> Jean-Daniel Dupas <devlists at shadowlab.org> writes:
>
>> Le 29 janv. 2011 à 09:33, Mark Lacey a écrit :
>>
>>> I know this comes up periodically, but it looks like it has been a
>>> few months since there was any posting indicating that having an
>>> official git mirror for LLVM, et al. was
2011 Jan 31
0
[LLVMdev] Official git mirroring of llvm, clang, lldb, test-suite, etc.?
greened at obbligato.org (David A. Greene) writes:
>>> git-svn often doesn't work, especially if the other side also needs
>>> git-svn.
>>
>> The git mirror would be read-only, so if you want to contribute changes
>> to LLVM using git you need git-svn anyways.
>
> I pull down changes from upstream much more frequently than I send
> changes up. To
2011 Feb 01
0
[LLVMdev] Official git mirroring of llvm, clang, lldb, test-suite, etc.?
lol
On Feb 1, 2011, at 0:00, Chris Lattner wrote:
>
> On Jan 31, 2011, at 7:27 PM, Óscar Fuentes wrote:
>
>>>
>>> If one is not supposed to use svn (the official blessed
>>> LLVM SCM) on "our side," pray tell, what _are_ we supposed to use?
>>
>> Because LLVM chose to use svn at some point on the past (when
>> distributed tools
2011 Feb 01
0
[LLVMdev] Official git mirroring of llvm, clang, lldb, test-suite, etc.?
On 2011-02-01 19:40, David A. Greene wrote:
> Again, the problem is that there is no convenient solution. Everything
> involves manual diff+patch at some point. This is entirely because svn
> is not a distributed SCM.
FWIW I used "svk" for a little while, to be able to make local commits
on a SVN repository. It was certainly better than manually patching stuff.
I think I used
2011 Jan 31
2
[LLVMdev] Official git mirroring of llvm, clang, lldb, test-suite, etc.?
Óscar Fuentes <ofv at wanadoo.es> writes:
>> git-svn often doesn't work, especially if the other side also needs
>> git-svn.
>
> The git mirror would be read-only, so if you want to contribute changes
> to LLVM using git you need git-svn anyways.
I pull down changes from upstream much more frequently than I send
changes up. To send changes up, diff+patch+svn,
2011 Feb 01
3
[LLVMdev] Official git mirroring of llvm, clang, lldb, test-suite, etc.?
On Jan 31, 2011, at 7:27 PM, Óscar Fuentes wrote:
>>
>> If one is not supposed to use svn (the official blessed
>> LLVM SCM) on "our side," pray tell, what _are_ we supposed to use?
>
> Because LLVM chose to use svn at some point on the past (when
> distributed tools were not so mature and undestood as they are now) and
> because there is no enough
2011 Jan 31
0
[LLVMdev] Official git mirroring of llvm, clang, lldb, test-suite, etc.?
greened at obbligato.org (David A. Greene) writes:
> I can't use git-svn to pull because we use svn on our end. One can't do
> this:
>
> (Upstream) svn <--> git-svn <--> git <--> git-svn <--> svn (Downstream)
>
> because the revisions in the two svn repositories don't have anything to
> do with each other.
That's what you deserve, for
2011 Feb 01
2
[LLVMdev] Official git mirroring of llvm, clang, lldb, test-suite, etc.?
Óscar Fuentes <ofv at wanadoo.es> writes:
>> I asked about both to the git guys. They said it isn't supported.
>> Double-ended git-svn just won't work, period. You can't do it because a
>> git branch is still tied to the revision numbering of the first git-svn
>> gateway created. Git branches still must relate to each other, they
>> can't run
2011 Jan 31
2
[LLVMdev] Official git mirroring of llvm, clang, lldb, test-suite, etc.?
Óscar Fuentes <ofv at wanadoo.es> writes:
> Are you saying that git-svn is slow at pulling changes? It is quite okay
> in my experience, unless you pull once every other month. But I can't
> relate that to your original assertion quoted above.
I can't use git-svn to pull because we use svn on our end. One can't do
this:
(Upstream) svn <--> git-svn <-->
2011 Feb 01
0
[LLVMdev] Official git mirroring of llvm, clang, lldb, test-suite, etc.?
greened at obbligato.org (David A. Greene) writes:
>> (Upstream) svn <--> git-svn <--> git-svn <--> svn (Downstream)
>
> I asked about both to the git guys. They said it isn't supported.
> Double-ended git-svn just won't work, period. You can't do it because a
> git branch is still tied to the revision numbering of the first git-svn
> gateway
2011 Jan 31
3
[LLVMdev] Official git mirroring of llvm, clang, lldb, test-suite, etc.?
Óscar Fuentes <ofv at wanadoo.es> writes:
> greened at obbligato.org (David A. Greene) writes:
>
>> I can't use git-svn to pull because we use svn on our end. One can't do
>> this:
>>
>> (Upstream) svn <--> git-svn <--> git <--> git-svn <--> svn (Downstream)
>>
>> because the revisions in the two svn repositories
2012 Jan 20
2
[LLVMdev] Implementation of builtins/intrinsics
Hi,
Lately, I have been wondering how a compiler like GCC or Clang implements
builtin functions like sqrt, sin, and also more bit-specific things like
bcmp and ffs. Originially, these were all deferred to the C library where
they might still have a "backup implementation", but I don't understand why
a compiler would choose the non-builtin version, as it should know its
version is
2012 Jan 20
0
[LLVMdev] Implementation of builtins/intrinsics
Le 20 janv. 2012 à 14:38, Ruben Van Boxem a écrit :
> Hi,
>
> Lately, I have been wondering how a compiler like GCC or Clang implements builtin functions like sqrt, sin, and also more bit-specific things like bcmp and ffs. Originially, these were all deferred to the C library where they might still have a "backup implementation", but I don't understand why a compiler would
2011 Jul 28
4
[LLVMdev] git
>
>
> Besides, the git-svn readonly bridge is a great solution for those who want
> to use git
>
It seems to be a reasonable solution for those individuals who want to use
git, but in my experience not for organizations that want to use git, e.g.
have a local server with local branches, with many people banging on that
while at the same time continuously merging the LLVM mainline
2013 Jan 22
4
[LLVMdev] Using 'llvm-build' for out-of-tree projects
On 22 Jan 2013, at 12:04, Duncan Sands wrote:
> for an out-of-tree build you can use llvm-config to get include paths and so on.
> I don't think there is any point bothering with llvm-build for this case.
CMake works nicely for out-of-tree projects. I have an optimiser plugin that builds this way. I'm not sure if it's fixed now, but the autoconf builds used to not install the
2011 Jul 28
0
[LLVMdev] git
On Wed, Jul 27, 2011 at 8:59 PM, Mark Lacey <641 at rudkx.com> wrote:
>
>> Besides, the git-svn readonly bridge is a great solution for those who
>> want to use git
>>
>
> It seems to be a reasonable solution for those individuals who want to use
> git, but in my experience not for organizations that want to use git, e.g.
> have a local server with local
2013 Jan 06
2
[LLVMdev] ASan and UBSan Test Failures
I also encounter this issue and solved it locally by implementing this 2 functions.
- The linux version of StartSymbolizerSubprocess uses only POSIX function and can be reused as is on OS X (maybe we should move it in a new sanitizer_symbolizer_posix.cc file)
- I have a simple implementation of GetListOfModules (see the attached file) but it required 10.6 at least.
That said, implementing this
2010 Aug 17
1
[LLVMdev] Where can I find an explanation of $src1, $src2, $in, $ptr, etc.?
On Mon, Aug 16, 2010 at 7:42 PM, Bob Wilson <bob.wilson at apple.com> wrote:
>
> On Aug 16, 2010, at 7:24 PM, Mark Lacey wrote:
>
> > I have read through the TableGen Fundamentals documentation and been
> browsing various .td files. One thing that is not clear to me is where
> things like $src1 (as in GR32:$src1) are defined, and what they mean. The
> TableGen