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			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
| Date: Tue, 13 Feb 2001 18:25:42 -0600
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| From: Vikram S. Adve <vadve@cs.uiuc.edu>
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| To: Chris Lattner <sabre@nondot.org>
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| Subject: RE: LLVM Concerns...
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| 
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| > 1. Reference types
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| >    Right now, I've spec'd out the language to have a pointer type, which
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| >    works fine for lots of stuff... except that Java really has
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| >    references: constrained pointers that cannot be manipulated: added and
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| >    subtracted, moved, etc... Do we want to have a type like this?  It
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| >    could be very nice for analysis (pointer always points to the start of
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| >    an object, etc...) and more closely matches Java semantics.  The
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| >    pointer type would be kept for C++ like semantics.  Through analysis,
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| >    C++ pointers could be promoted to references in the LLVM
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| >    representation.
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| 
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| 
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| You're right, having references would be useful.  Even for C++ the *static*
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| compiler could generate references instead of pointers with fairly
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| straightforward analysis.  Let's include a reference type for now.  But I'm
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| also really concerned that LLVM is becoming big and complex and (perhaps)
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| too high-level.  After we get some initial performance results, we may have
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| a clearer idea of what our goals should be and we should revisit this
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| question then.
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| 
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| > 2. Our "implicit" memory references in assembly language:
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| >    After thinking about it, this model has two problems:
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| >       A. If you do pointer analysis and realize that two stores are
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| >          independent and can share the same memory source object,
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| 
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| not sure what you meant by "share the same memory source object"
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| 
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| > there is
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| >          no way to represent this in either the bytecode or assembly.
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| >       B. When parsing assembly/bytecode, we effectively have to do a full
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| >          SSA generation/PHI node insertion pass to build the dependencies
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| >          when we don't want the "pinned" representation.  This is not
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| >          cool.
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| 
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| I understand the concern.  But again, let's focus on the performance first
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| and then look at the language design issues.  E.g., it would be good to know
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| how big the bytecode files are before expanding them further.  I am pretty
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| keen to explore the implications of LLVM for mobile devices.  Both bytecode
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| size and power consumption are important to consider there.
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| 
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| --Vikram
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| 
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