similar to: [LLVMdev] Concerning http://llvm.org/ProjectsWithLLVM

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 1000 matches similar to: "[LLVMdev] Concerning http://llvm.org/ProjectsWithLLVM"

2013 May 14
0
[LLVMdev] Concerning http://llvm.org/ProjectsWithLLVM
Thanks for the report. The attached patch removes them from the page. OK? On 8 May 2013 11:34, Kostyrka (External user) Andreas <Andreas.Kostyrka at kapsch.net> wrote: > Not sure, but it seems the page contains a number of out-of-date entries: > > > > Pypy => pypy.org (link stale) plus: there is no llvm backend for pypy at the > moment (although LLVM backends have been
2012 Jul 11
0
[LLVMdev] Introductions to everyone and a call for Python-LLVM enthusiasts
Hi Travis, ... > LLVM is still very relevant to Python because of projects like Numba --- but you > should know that PyPy is no longer using LLVM and Unladen Swallow has not been > worked on for several years. The future of LLVM and Python I think is very > bright --- especially for the scientific and data-analysis user-base. thanks for your interesting email. Do you understand
2012 Jul 11
1
[LLVMdev] Introductions to everyone and a call for Python-LLVM enthusiasts
Hello Duncan, > thanks for your interesting email. Do you understand why PyPy is no longer > using LLVM, and why Unladen Swallow died? Does LLVM need to be improved in > some way? The answers to all these questions are linked: LLVM is not fast enough (for a JIT). Of course this is not the whole story, but it is the LLVM-relevant part. Let's have a look at some random performance
2012 Jul 11
4
[LLVMdev] Introductions to everyone and a call for Python-LLVM enthusiasts
Hi all, First, I just want to say thank you for the excellent LLVM project. I have been playing with LLVM for the first part of this year and have been quite impressed with what I've seen and what is possible. I've been coding for a long time, but haven't had this much fun since I first learned Python. The work you have done has opened the door for a tremendous amount of
2008 Jan 07
2
[LLVMdev] GC infrastructure checked in
On Jan 7, 2008, at 10:54, Carl Friedrich Bolz wrote: > Gordon Henriksen wrote: > >> That said, the PyPy group has llvmgcroot support on a branch; you >> could ask Armin Rigo <arigo at tunes dot org> for details about >> accessing it. >> >> On his benchmarks, Armin saw an 8% speedup vs. a shadow stack. >> Their gcc backend still outperforms
2012 Jul 11
0
[LLVMdev] Introductions to everyone and a call for Python-LLVM enthusiasts
If you didn't catch it, there has been a recent post to the mailing list that seems like it might be relevant to your interests: <http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvmdev/2012-June/051298.html> Direct link to the project page: <http://code.google.com/p/pymothoa/> --Sean Silva On Wed, Jul 11, 2012 at 12:37 AM, Travis Oliphant <travis at continuum.io> wrote: > Hi all,
2008 Jan 08
0
[LLVMdev] GC infrastructure checked in
Gordon Henriksen wrote: >> Hm, summary: >> >> pypy-llvm-backend with llvm's codegen >> < pypy-c-backend with GCC >> < pypy-llvm-backend using llvm's C backend and then GCC > > I wonder what the impact of using llvm-gcc instead of GCC is in this > final pipeline. If that actually works, you could indeed eliminate the > shadow stack
2006 Feb 10
2
[LLVMdev] PyPy sprint announcement: PyCon 2006, Texas, Feb 27st - March 2nd
Hello LLVM-ers, The next sprint of PyPy will be held in Dallas, Texas, at the PyCon conference. Most of you know about the LLVM back-end of PyPy. So far, we use mostly the static compilation features of LLVM, but as we are progressing on the JIT side we are considering starting sometime soon working on just-in-time machine code generation backends. Clearly, LLVM might prove to be a good target
2003 Oct 31
5
[LLVMdev] Re: LLVM and PyPy
On Fri, 31 Oct 2003, Armin Rigo wrote: > Hello Chris, > > We have been investigating your project and the good documentation > and are very impressed. If we understood your goals correctly > this seems like a good match for our ongoing and active PyPy project, > a reimplementation of the Python language in Python. Cool. We are all big fans of Python here. :) > We'll
2005 May 25
2
[LLVMdev] llc -march=ia64 support
Hi, For the PyPy project ( http://codespeak.net/pypy ) I am working on the x64-64 support. I would like to use llc -march=ia64 to generate the assembly but that is not supported at the moment. As a workaround I let llc generate C code that gets compiled, but this unfortunately is not a good way to show the power of llvm. A understood this ia64 support will be worked on soon. First week of july
2008 Jan 07
0
[LLVMdev] GC infrastructure checked in
Gordon Henriksen wrote: > On 2008-01-07, at 05:29, Jon Harrop wrote: > >> On Monday 07 January 2008 02:32:47 Gordon Henriksen wrote: >> >>> Everything described in GarbageCollection.html should now be live. >>> Phew! >>> >> This is wonderful news! Are there any example programs using these >> GCs? > > The division of labor is
2019 Apr 12
2
integrate over an infinite region produces wrong results depending on scaling
Dear all, This is the first time I am posting to the r-devel list. On StackOverflow, they suggested that the strange behaviour of integrate() was more bug-like. I am providing a short version of the question (full one with plots: https://stackoverflow.com/q/55639401). Suppose one wants integrate a function that is just a product of two density functions (like gamma). The support of the
2018 Mar 07
0
Entry for RetDec in http://llvm.org/ProjectsWithLLVM/
Hi, I wanted to propose another project that is based on LLVM for inclusion on the http://llvm.org/ProjectsWithLLVM/ page. Hope it qualifies and can be included. Below description is copied verbatim from their website. I formatted it to follow the format of entries on aforementioned page: > RetDec > > by Avast > > RetDec is an open-source machine-code decompiler based on LLVM.
2016 Jun 30
1
Entry for llvm.org/ProjectsWithLLVM - Terra programming language
Terra: A low-level counterpart to Lua By Zach DeVito (http://cs.stanford.edu/~zdevito) Terra (http://terralang.org/) is a system programming language that is embedded in and meta-programmed by Lua, which handles details like conditional compilation, type systems, namespaces, and templating/function specialization that are normally special constructs in other languages. Terra code shares
2005 May 25
0
[LLVMdev] llc -march=ia64 support
Hi there, The IA64 architecture, which had its 'official' name changed to the "Itanium Processor Architecture", *is* supported by llc. I am pretty sure you are talking about the x86-64 architecture, which has also had its share of unfortunate name changes and is also known as "AMD64", "EM64T" and all sorts of things in between. x86-64 is *not* currently
2017 Jul 18
2
LNT on pypy and documentation build
Hi, working on the LNT documentation I am wondering about a few things: - LNT documentation recommends to do `easy_install lnt==0.4.2dev` (in the install box on the left side of the title page). The last available version of LNT on pypy is version 0.4.0 from 2012. Are there plans to keep this up to date or should we better remove the entry and not mention pypy packages anymore? - Building the
2008 Jan 07
2
[LLVMdev] GC infrastructure checked in
On 2008-01-07, at 05:29, Jon Harrop wrote: > On Monday 07 January 2008 02:32:47 Gordon Henriksen wrote: > >> Everything described in GarbageCollection.html should now be live. >> Phew! >> > > This is wonderful news! Are there any example programs using these > GCs? The division of labor is such that the user program must provide the stack walker (in
2017 Jul 18
2
LNT on pypy and documentation build
I'd be fine pulling the pypi (sic) entry, shall I make it so? - Daniel On Tue, Jul 18, 2017 at 11:06 AM Chris Matthews <chris.matthews at apple.com> wrote: > Yep, we should pull that package down, or start to update it. > > The docs builds work for me. Is it possible that is not in your venv or > something like that? > > > On Jul 18, 2017, at 10:48 AM, Matthias
2017 Jul 18
2
LNT on pypy and documentation build
I updated the docs to show a pip/svn install like this: pip install svn+http://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/lnt/trunk <svn+http://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/lnt/trunk> > On Jul 18, 2017, at 11:24 AM, Kristof Beyls <kristof.beyls at arm.com> wrote: > > >> On 18 Jul 2017, at 20:21, Daniel Dunbar <daniel at zuster.org <mailto:daniel at zuster.org>> wrote:
2005 Oct 28
1
[LLVMdev] python & llvm
Hi, I'd like to use llvm from python to generate dynamically: 1) llvm functions from python expressions, eg. an "apply" operation on a c-array of floats 2) callback functions 3) calls to an external dynamic loaded c-library I've looked at the llvm python wrappers but the size of the .so module is just too massive (120Mb). However, I don't think it is actually necessary for