similar to: How to get the address of a global variable in LLVM?

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 1000 matches similar to: "How to get the address of a global variable in LLVM?"

2017 Jun 11
2
Force casting a Value*
On 11 June 2017 at 12:05, Tim Northover <t.p.northover at gmail.com> wrote: > On 11 June 2017 at 11:56, Dipanjan Das via llvm-dev > <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > > I can't pass var_value to a function accepting uint64_t. LLVM complains > > about broken function call. > > Well, yes. var_value has type "ConstantInt *", not uint64_t. Assuming
2017 Jun 12
2
Force casting a Value*
On 11 June 2017 at 14:04, don hinton <hintonda at gmail.com> wrote: > Assuming you know it's a 64 bit value, and the function you are calling > takes a uint64_t, try this: > The values from the test program are of type: i32/i32*/i32**. Can't I interpret these as uint64_t some way? > > Value* args[] = {store_inst->getOperand(0)}; > > > On Sun, Jun 11,
2017 Jun 11
2
Force casting a Value*
On 11 June 2017 at 11:32, Nikodemus Siivola <nikodemus at random-state.net> wrote: > On Sun, Jun 11, 2017 at 7:49 PM, Dipanjan Das via llvm-dev < > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > >> >> >> On 11 June 2017 at 07:53, David Blaikie <dblaikie at gmail.com> wrote: >> >>> Sounds like you're looking for reinterpret_cast: http://en.cp
2017 Jun 11
2
Force casting a Value*
I am trying to cast a Value* irrespective of its underlying subclass to uint64 and pass it on to a method as an argument. if (StoreInst *store_inst = dyn_cast<StoreInst>(&I)) { Value* vo = store_inst->getValueOperand(); uint64 value = /* cast vo to unsigned int 64 bit */ func(value); } How can I force
2017 Jun 11
2
Force casting a Value*
On 11 June 2017 at 07:53, David Blaikie <dblaikie at gmail.com> wrote: > Sounds like you're looking for reinterpret_cast: http://en. > cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/reinterpret_cast > I tried cast<ConstInt>(vo), but that failed at run-time. > > On Sun, Jun 11, 2017 at 3:06 AM Dipanjan Das via llvm-dev < > llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: >
2017 Jun 12
4
How to know the sub-class of a Value class?
As a concrete question, I understand 'Value' class is the parent of many concrete sub-classes. Let's say I retrieve a Value* value = store_inst->getValueOperand(). Unless I know what the sub-type is, how can I further use this object? I tried something like this: ================================================= Value* value = store_inst->getValueOperand()
2017 Jun 12
4
How to know the sub-class of a Value class?
On 11 June 2017 at 23:06, Jeremy Lakeman <Jeremy.Lakeman at gmail.com> wrote: > http://llvm.org/docs/ProgrammersManual.html#the-isa-cast-and-dyn-cast- > templates > I understand isa and dyn-cast let you test the type of an object at run-time by leveraging LLVM's custom implementation of RTTI. However, it doesn't make much sense to test out for all possible sub-classes to
2017 Oct 11
2
How to create an alloca variable of type i64 in LLVM IR?
To create a stack based (local) 64 bit integer in LLVM IR, I used: Value *var = builder.CreateAlloca(Type::getInt64Ty(Ctx)); I wish to pass this variable to a function "void foo(unsigned long)". I created the signature of function foo() as follows: Constant *func = M->getOrInsertFunction("foo", Type::getVoidTy(Ctx),Type::getInt64Ty(Ctx), NULL); To pass the newly created
2016 Mar 30
0
LSR/SCEV problem/question
Hi Geoff, Thanks for the detailed reproduction instruction -- they were very helpful, and I can now see the bug. Generally, I think (2) is the better solution. It should be up to SCEVExpander to keep its state consistent. The fact that we're trying to optimize instructions as we insert them makes that trickier, but I still think that is the right invariant to have. I don't see why (2)
2017 Jun 12
2
How to know the sub-class of a Value class?
On 11 June 2017 at 23:03, Craig Topper <craig.topper at gmail.com> wrote: > Try value->dump() assuming you're using a debug build. > > The information displayed is non-uniform. There are two different cases based on my sample program: (1) dump() shows the Type and *some* value which I don't understand what it is (2) dump() shows the instruction that
2015 Jul 13
2
[LLVMdev] Problem with InsertPointGuard ABI?
Hi, I have problem with IRBuilderBase::InsertPointGuard class that simply does not work in the release build of my project. The class does not restore the IRBuilder's insert point correctly when NDEBUG macro is set. It happens on OSX system only, trunk version of the LLVM built with brew. I suspect it is the ABI problem. InsertPointGuard uses AssertingVT for debug builds. LLDB gets confused
2017 Apr 28
3
How to get the address of a global variable in LLVM?
On 28 April 2017 at 14:32, Jonathan Roelofs via llvm-dev <llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > You need a load instruction since your function takes an i32, not an > i32*.... A global's value in llvm is its address, not the numeric data it > contains. I suspect he actually wants to make his function take an "i8*" and bitcast his pointer to that type before calling it.
2020 Feb 27
3
How to set DebugLoc when using IRBuilder's CreateCall ?
Hi I want to insert some functions into the llvm bitcode ir files. So I use IRBuilder and CreateCall(). But it how error : inlinable function call in a function with debug info must have a !dbg location. I don't know what DebugLoc should I give the new CallInst to setDebugLoc. I Create this CallInst , so this CallInst doesn't hava so-called "DebugLoc" mapping to the source
2017 Apr 28
4
How to pass a StringRef to a function call inserted as instrumentation?
I am wriitng an LLVM pass to insert instrumentation at certain points of the program. I want to pass the `StringRef` obtained from `getName()` as a parameter to a function `func(char* s)`. I can allocate some space on stack using `AllocaInst` to generate an `alloca` instruction. But, how can I copy the `StringRef` to the stack space? -- Thanks & Regards, Dipanjan -------------- next part
2017 Oct 22
2
How to dump broken IR from LLVM backend?
You can also `-disable-verify -o <output-filename> ` which will disable the verify check. On Sat, 21 Oct 2017 at 23:54 Dipanjan Das via llvm-dev < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org> wrote: > > Yes, that definitely works. Wanted to know if there's a switch for file > output or not. > > On 21 October 2017 at 23:45, 陳韋任 <chenwj.cs97g at g2.nctu.edu.tw> wrote: >
2017 Oct 22
2
How to dump broken IR from LLVM backend?
Just use Unix IO redirect? `llc -mllvm -print-after-all &> a.txt` 2017-10-22 14:17 GMT+08:00 Dipanjan Das via llvm-dev < llvm-dev at lists.llvm.org>: > > Seems like "-mllvm -print-after-all" does the trick. Is there any switch > that dumps the output to a file instead of console? > > On 21 October 2017 at 21:33, Dipanjan Das <mail.dipanjan.das at
2020 Jun 03
2
Fwd: I cannot change value of global variable in LLVM IR using IRBuilder
I don't think it's the same problem as you described. By printing I meant calling printf function and passing my global variable as one of the arguments. My code: Instruction* InstructionVisitor::incrementGlobalKey(Instruction* I) { IRBuilder<> Builder(I->getContext()); Builder.SetInsertPoint(I->getNextNode()); GlobalVariable* key =
2018 May 03
0
SCEVExpander and IRBuilder
Hey, Alternatively, expose a SCEVExpander::getInsertPoint? This would proxy the underlying IRbuilder, with no real state sharing, other than the current insert point. This will be less ugly than recieving the expanded SCEV value, casting to an instruction, and feeding this to the IRBuilder. Cheers, siddharth On Thu 3 May, 2018, 15:36 Philip Pfaffe via llvm-dev, < llvm-dev at
2017 Oct 22
2
How to dump broken IR from LLVM backend?
My pass complains and gives up after spitting out: ====================================== Instruction does not dominate all uses! %44 = icmp ne i8** %endptr, null br i1 %44, label %32, label %33 Instruction has bogus parent pointer! ====================================== Is there any way to dump the entire IR even in broken form from the backend so that I can inspect what's going on? --
2015 Mar 10
4
[LLVMdev] noob IR builder question
I am trying to get a handle on IR builder, at least some basics. I ran through a tutorial here: Create a working compiler with the LLVM framework, Part 1 <http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/library/os-createcompilerllvm1/>, and it worked well enough. I have some simple code that creates a hello world IR. I am trying to now bring in some concepts from the Kaleidoscope tutorial, namely