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			1307 lines
		
	
	
		
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| <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN"
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|                       "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd">
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| <html>
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| <head>
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|   <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">
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|   <meta encoding="utf8">
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|   <link rel="stylesheet" href="llvm.css" type="text/css">
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|   <title>LLVM 2.8 Release Notes</title>
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| </head>
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| <body>
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| 
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| <div class="doc_title">LLVM 2.8 Release Notes</div>
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| 
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| <img align=right src="http://llvm.org/img/DragonSmall.png"
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|     width="136" height="136" alt="LLVM Dragon Logo">
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| 
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| <ol>
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|   <li><a href="#intro">Introduction</a></li>
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|   <li><a href="#subproj">Sub-project Status Update</a></li>
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|   <li><a href="#externalproj">External Projects Using LLVM 2.8</a></li>
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|   <li><a href="#whatsnew">What's New in LLVM 2.8?</a></li>
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|   <li><a href="GettingStarted.html">Installation Instructions</a></li>
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|   <li><a href="#knownproblems">Known Problems</a></li>
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|   <li><a href="#additionalinfo">Additional Information</a></li>
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| </ol>
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| 
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| <div class="doc_author">
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|   <p>Written by the <a href="http://llvm.org">LLVM Team</a></p>
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| </div>
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| 
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| <!--
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| <h1 style="color:red">These are in-progress notes for the upcoming LLVM 2.8
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| release.<br>
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| You may prefer the
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| <a href="http://llvm.org/releases/2.7/docs/ReleaseNotes.html">LLVM 2.7
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| Release Notes</a>.</h1>
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| -->
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| 
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| <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
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| <div class="doc_section">
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|   <a name="intro">Introduction</a>
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| </div>
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| <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
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| 
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| <div class="doc_text">
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| 
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| <p>This document contains the release notes for the LLVM Compiler
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| Infrastructure, release 2.8.  Here we describe the status of LLVM, including
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| major improvements from the previous release and significant known problems.
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| All LLVM releases may be downloaded from the <a
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| href="http://llvm.org/releases/">LLVM releases web site</a>.</p>
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| 
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| <p>For more information about LLVM, including information about the latest
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| release, please check out the <a href="http://llvm.org/">main LLVM
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| web site</a>.  If you have questions or comments, the <a
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| href="http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev">LLVM Developer's
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| Mailing List</a> is a good place to send them.</p>
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| 
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| <p>Note that if you are reading this file from a Subversion checkout or the
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| main LLVM web page, this document applies to the <i>next</i> release, not the
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| current one.  To see the release notes for a specific release, please see the
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| <a href="http://llvm.org/releases/">releases page</a>.</p>
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| 
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| </div>
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|  
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| 
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| <!--
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| Almost dead code.
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|   include/llvm/Analysis/LiveValues.h => Dan
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|   lib/Transforms/IPO/MergeFunctions.cpp => consider for 2.8.
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|   GEPSplitterPass
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| -->
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|  
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|    
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| <!-- Features that need text if they're finished for 2.9:
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|   combiner-aa?
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|   strong phi elim
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|   loop dependence analysis
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|   TBAA
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|   CorrelatedValuePropagation
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|  -->
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|  
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|  <!-- Announcement, lldb, libc++ -->
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|  
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| 
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| <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
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| <div class="doc_section">
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|   <a name="subproj">Sub-project Status Update</a>
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| </div>
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| <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
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| 
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| <div class="doc_text">
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| <p>
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| The LLVM 2.8 distribution currently consists of code from the core LLVM
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| repository (which roughly includes the LLVM optimizers, code generators
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| and supporting tools), the Clang repository and the llvm-gcc repository.  In
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| addition to this code, the LLVM Project includes other sub-projects that are in
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| development.  Here we include updates on these subprojects.
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| </p>
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| 
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| </div>
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| 
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| 
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| <!--=========================================================================-->
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| <div class="doc_subsection">
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| <a name="clang">Clang: C/C++/Objective-C Frontend Toolkit</a>
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| </div>
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| 
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| <div class="doc_text">
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| 
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| <p><a href="http://clang.llvm.org/">Clang</a> is an LLVM front end for the C,
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| C++, and Objective-C languages. Clang aims to provide a better user experience
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| through expressive diagnostics, a high level of conformance to language
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| standards, fast compilation, and low memory use. Like LLVM, Clang provides a
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| modular, library-based architecture that makes it suitable for creating or
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| integrating with other development tools. Clang is considered a
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| production-quality compiler for C, Objective-C, C++ and Objective-C++ on x86
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| (32- and 64-bit), and for darwin-arm targets.</p>
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| 
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| <p>In the LLVM 2.8 time-frame, the Clang team has made many improvements:</p>
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| 
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|   <ul>
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|     <li>Clang C++ is now feature-complete with respect to the ISO C++ 1998 and 2003 standards.</li>
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|     <li>Added support for Objective-C++.</li>
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|     <li>Clang now uses LLVM-MC to directly generate object code and to parse inline assembly (on Darwin).</li>
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|     <li>Introduced many new warnings, including <code>-Wmissing-field-initializers</code>, <code>-Wshadow</code>, <code>-Wno-protocol</code>, <code>-Wtautological-compare</code>, <code>-Wstrict-selector-match</code>, <code>-Wcast-align</code>, <code>-Wunused</code> improvements, and greatly improved format-string checking.</li>
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|     <li>Introduced the "libclang" library, a C interface to Clang intended to support IDE clients.</li>
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|     <li>Added support for <code>#pragma GCC visibility</code>, <code>#pragma align</code>, and others.</li>
 | |
|     <li>Added support for SSE, AVX, ARM NEON, and AltiVec.</li>
 | |
|     <li>Improved support for many Microsoft extensions.</li>
 | |
|     <li>Implemented support for blocks in C++.</li>
 | |
|     <li>Implemented precompiled headers for C++.</li>
 | |
|     <li>Improved abstract syntax trees to retain more accurate source information.</li>
 | |
|     <li>Added driver support for handling LLVM IR and bitcode files directly.</li>
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|     <li>Major improvements to compiler correctness for exception handling.</li>
 | |
|     <li>Improved generated code quality in some areas:
 | |
|       <ul>
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|         <li>Good code generation for X86-32 and X86-64 ABI handling.</li>
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|         <li>Improved code generation for bit-fields, although important work remains.</li>
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|       </ul>
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|     </li>
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|   </ul>
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| </div>
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| 
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| <!--=========================================================================-->
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| <div class="doc_subsection">
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| <a name="clangsa">Clang Static Analyzer</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>The <a href="http://clang-analyzer.llvm.org/">Clang Static Analyzer</a>
 | |
|    project is an effort to use static source code analysis techniques to
 | |
|    automatically find bugs in C and Objective-C programs (and hopefully <a
 | |
|    href="http://clang-analyzer.llvm.org/dev_cxx.html">C++ in the
 | |
|    future</a>!).  The tool is very good at finding bugs that occur on specific
 | |
|    paths through code, such as on error conditions.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>The LLVM 2.8 release fixes a number of bugs and slightly improves precision
 | |
|    over 2.7, but there are no major new features in the release. 
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| </p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
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| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
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| <div class="doc_subsection">
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| <a name="dragonegg">DragonEgg: llvm-gcc ported to gcc-4.5</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
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| <p>
 | |
| <a href="http://dragonegg.llvm.org/">DragonEgg</a> is a port of llvm-gcc to
 | |
| gcc-4.5.  Unlike llvm-gcc, dragonegg in theory does not require any gcc-4.5
 | |
| modifications whatsoever (currently one small patch is needed) thanks to the
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| new <a href="http://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/plugins">gcc plugin architecture</a>.
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| DragonEgg is a gcc plugin that makes gcc-4.5 use the LLVM optimizers and code
 | |
| generators instead of gcc's, just like with llvm-gcc.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| DragonEgg is still a work in progress, but it is able to compile a lot of code,
 | |
| for example all of gcc, LLVM and clang.  Currently Ada, C, C++ and Fortran work
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| well, while all other languages either don't work at all or only work poorly.
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| For the moment only the x86-32 and x86-64 targets are supported, and only on
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| linux and darwin (darwin may need additional gcc patches).
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| The 2.8 release has the following notable changes:
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li>The plugin loads faster due to exporting fewer symbols.</li>
 | |
| <li>Additional vector operations such as addps256 are now supported.</li>
 | |
| <li>Ada global variables with no initial value are no longer zero initialized,
 | |
| resulting in better optimization.</li>
 | |
| <li>The '-fplugin-arg-dragonegg-enable-gcc-optzns' flag now runs all gcc
 | |
| optimizers, rather than just a handful.</li>
 | |
| <li>Fortran programs using common variables now link correctly.</li>
 | |
| <li>GNU OMP constructs no longer crash the compiler.</li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="vmkit">VMKit: JVM/CLI Virtual Machine Implementation</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| The <a href="http://vmkit.llvm.org/">VMKit project</a> is an implementation of
 | |
| a Java Virtual Machine (Java VM or JVM) that uses LLVM for static and
 | |
| just-in-time compilation.  As of LLVM 2.8, VMKit now supports copying garbage
 | |
| collectors, and can be configured to use MMTk's copy mark-sweep garbage
 | |
| collector.  In LLVM 2.8, the VMKit .NET VM is no longer being maintained.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="compiler-rt">compiler-rt: Compiler Runtime Library</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| The new LLVM <a href="http://compiler-rt.llvm.org/">compiler-rt project</a>
 | |
| is a simple library that provides an implementation of the low-level
 | |
| target-specific hooks required by code generation and other runtime components.
 | |
| For example, when compiling for a 32-bit target, converting a double to a 64-bit
 | |
| unsigned integer is compiled into a runtime call to the "__fixunsdfdi"
 | |
| function. The compiler-rt library provides highly optimized implementations of
 | |
| this and other low-level routines (some are 3x faster than the equivalent
 | |
| libgcc routines).</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| All of the code in the compiler-rt project is available under the standard LLVM
 | |
| License, a "BSD-style" license.  New in LLVM 2.8, compiler_rt now supports 
 | |
| soft floating point (for targets that don't have a real floating point unit),
 | |
| and includes an extensive testsuite for the "blocks" language feature and the
 | |
| blocks runtime included in compiler_rt.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="lldb">LLDB: Low Level Debugger</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| <a href="http://lldb.llvm.org/">LLDB</a> is a brand new member of the LLVM
 | |
| umbrella of projects. LLDB is a next generation, high-performance debugger. It
 | |
| is built as a set of reusable components which highly leverage existing
 | |
| libraries in the larger LLVM Project, such as the Clang expression parser, the
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| LLVM disassembler and the LLVM JIT.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| LLDB is in early development and not included as part of the LLVM 2.8 release,
 | |
| but is mature enough to support basic debugging scenarios on Mac OS X in C,
 | |
| Objective-C and C++.  We'd really like help extending and expanding LLDB to 
 | |
| support new platforms, new languages, new architectures, and new features.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="libc++">libc++: C++ Standard Library</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| <a href="http://libcxx.llvm.org/">libc++</a> is another new member of the LLVM
 | |
| family.  It is an implementation of the C++ standard library, written from the
 | |
| ground up to specifically target the forthcoming C++'0X standard and focus on
 | |
| delivering great performance.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| As of the LLVM 2.8 release, libc++ is virtually feature complete, but would
 | |
| benefit from more testing and better integration with Clang++.  It is also
 | |
| looking forward to the C++ committee finalizing the C++'0x standard.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="klee">KLEE: A Symbolic Execution Virtual Machine</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| <a href="http://klee.llvm.org/">KLEE</a> is a symbolic execution framework for
 | |
| programs in LLVM bitcode form. KLEE tries to symbolically evaluate "all" paths
 | |
| through the application and records state transitions that lead to fault
 | |
| states. This allows it to construct testcases that lead to faults and can even
 | |
| be used to verify some algorithms.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>Although KLEE does not have any major new features as of 2.8, we have made
 | |
| various minor improvements, particular to ease development:</p>
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
|   <li>Added support for LLVM 2.8. KLEE currently maintains compatibility with
 | |
|     LLVM 2.6, 2.7, and 2.8.</li>
 | |
|   <li>Added a buildbot for 2.6, 2.7, and trunk. A 2.8 buildbot will be coming
 | |
|     soon following release.</li>
 | |
|   <li>Fixed many C++ code issues to allow building with Clang++. Mostly
 | |
|     complete, except for the version of MiniSAT which is inside the KLEE STP
 | |
|     version.</li>
 | |
|   <li>Improved support for building with separate source and build
 | |
|     directories.</li>
 | |
|   <li>Added support for "long double" on x86.</li>
 | |
|   <li>Initial work on KLEE support for using 'lit' test runner instead of
 | |
|     DejaGNU.</li>
 | |
|   <li>Added <tt>configure</tt> support for using an external version of
 | |
|     STP.</li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
 | |
| <div class="doc_section">
 | |
|   <a name="externalproj">External Open Source Projects Using LLVM 2.8</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>An exciting aspect of LLVM is that it is used as an enabling technology for
 | |
|    a lot of other language and tools projects.  This section lists some of the
 | |
|    projects that have already been updated to work with LLVM 2.8.</p>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="tce">TTA-based Codesign Environment (TCE)</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| <a href="http://tce.cs.tut.fi/">TCE</a> is a toolset for designing
 | |
| application-specific processors (ASP) based on the Transport triggered
 | |
| architecture (TTA). The toolset provides a complete co-design flow from C/C++
 | |
| programs down to synthesizable VHDL and parallel program binaries. Processor
 | |
| customization points include the register files, function units, supported
 | |
| operations, and the interconnection network.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>TCE uses llvm-gcc/Clang and LLVM for C/C++ language support, target
 | |
| independent optimizations and also for parts of code generation. It generates
 | |
| new LLVM-based code generators "on the fly" for the designed TTA processors and
 | |
| loads them in to the compiler backend as runtime libraries to avoid per-target
 | |
| recompilation of larger parts of the compiler chain.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="Horizon">Horizon Bytecode Compiler</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| <a href="http://www.quokforge.org/projects/horizon">Horizon</a> is a bytecode
 | |
| language and compiler written on top of LLVM, intended for producing
 | |
| single-address-space managed code operating systems that
 | |
| run faster than the equivalent multiple-address-space C systems.
 | |
| More in-depth blurb is available on the <a 
 | |
| href="http://www.quokforge.org/projects/horizon/wiki/Wiki">wiki</a>.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="clamav">Clam AntiVirus</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| <a href="http://www.clamav.net">Clam AntiVirus</a> is an open source (GPL)
 | |
| anti-virus toolkit for UNIX, designed especially for e-mail scanning on mail
 | |
| gateways.  Since version 0.96 it has <a
 | |
| href="http://vrt-sourcefire.blogspot.com/2010/09/introduction-to-clamavs-low-level.html">bytecode
 | |
| signatures</a> that allow writing detections for complex malware. It
 | |
| uses LLVM's JIT to speed up the execution of bytecode on
 | |
| X86, X86-64, PPC32/64, falling back to its own interpreter otherwise.
 | |
| The git version was updated to work with LLVM 2.8.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>The <a
 | |
| href="http://git.clamav.net/gitweb?p=clamav-bytecode-compiler.git;a=blob_plain;f=docs/user/clambc-user.pdf">
 | |
| ClamAV bytecode compiler</a> uses Clang and LLVM to compile a C-like
 | |
| language, insert runtime checks, and generate ClamAV bytecode.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="pure">Pure</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| <a href="http://pure-lang.googlecode.com/">Pure</a>
 | |
| is an algebraic/functional
 | |
| programming language based on term rewriting. Programs are collections
 | |
| of equations which are used to evaluate expressions in a symbolic
 | |
| fashion. Pure offers dynamic typing, eager and lazy evaluation, lexical
 | |
| closures, a hygienic macro system (also based on term rewriting),
 | |
| built-in list and matrix support (including list and matrix
 | |
| comprehensions) and an easy-to-use C interface. The interpreter uses
 | |
| LLVM as a backend to JIT-compile Pure programs to fast native code.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>Pure versions 0.44 and later have been tested and are known to work with
 | |
| LLVM 2.8 (and continue to work with older LLVM releases >= 2.5).</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="GHC">Glasgow Haskell Compiler (GHC)</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| <a href="http://www.haskell.org/ghc/">GHC</a> is an open source,
 | |
| state-of-the-art programming suite for
 | |
| Haskell, a standard lazy functional programming language. It includes
 | |
| an optimizing static compiler generating good code for a variety of
 | |
| platforms, together with an interactive system for convenient, quick
 | |
| development.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>In addition to the existing C and native code generators, GHC 7.0 now
 | |
| supports an <a
 | |
| href="http://hackage.haskell.org/trac/ghc/wiki/Commentary/Compiler/Backends/LLVM">LLVM
 | |
| code generator</a>. GHC supports LLVM 2.7 and later.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="Clay">Clay Programming Language</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| <a href="http://tachyon.in/clay/">Clay</a> is a new systems programming
 | |
| language that is specifically designed for generic programming. It makes
 | |
| generic programming very concise thanks to whole program type propagation. It
 | |
| uses LLVM as its backend.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="llvm-py">llvm-py Python Bindings for LLVM</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| <a href="http://www.mdevan.org/llvm-py/">llvm-py</a> has been updated to work
 | |
| with LLVM 2.8.  llvm-py provides Python bindings for LLVM, allowing you to write a
 | |
| compiler backend or a VM in Python.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="FAUST">FAUST Real-Time Audio Signal Processing Language</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| <a href="http://faust.grame.fr">FAUST</a> is a compiled language for real-time
 | |
| audio signal processing. The name FAUST stands for Functional AUdio STream. Its
 | |
| programming model combines two approaches: functional programming and block
 | |
| diagram composition. In addition with the C, C++, JAVA output formats, the
 | |
| Faust compiler can now generate LLVM bitcode, and works with LLVM 2.7 and
 | |
| 2.8.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="jade">Jade Just-in-time Adaptive Decoder Engine</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| <p><a 
 | |
| href="http://sourceforge.net/apps/trac/orcc/wiki/JadeDocumentation">Jade</a>
 | |
| (Just-in-time Adaptive Decoder Engine) is a generic video decoder engine using
 | |
| LLVM for just-in-time compilation of video decoder configurations. Those
 | |
| configurations are designed by MPEG Reconfigurable Video Coding (RVC) committee.
 | |
| MPEG RVC standard is built on a stream-based dataflow representation of
 | |
| decoders. It is composed of a standard library of coding tools written in
 | |
| RVC-CAL language and a dataflow configuration — block diagram —
 | |
| of a decoder.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>Jade project is hosted as part of the <a href="http://orcc.sf.net">Open 
 | |
| RVC-CAL Compiler</a> and requires it to translate the RVC-CAL standard library
 | |
| of video coding tools into an LLVM assembly code.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="neko_llvm_jit">LLVM JIT for Neko VM</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| <p><a href="http://github.com/vava/neko_llvm_jit">Neko LLVM JIT</a>
 | |
| replaces the standard Neko JIT with an LLVM-based implementation.  While not
 | |
| fully complete, it is already providing a 1.5x speedup on 64-bit systems.
 | |
| Neko LLVM JIT requires LLVM 2.8 or later.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="crack">Crack Scripting Language</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| <a href="http://code.google.com/p/crack-language/">Crack</a> aims to provide
 | |
| the ease of development of a scripting language with the performance of a
 | |
| compiled language. The language derives concepts from C++, Java and Python,
 | |
| incorporating object-oriented programming, operator overloading and strong
 | |
| typing.  Crack 0.2 works with LLVM 2.7, and the forthcoming Crack 0.2.1 release
 | |
| builds on LLVM 2.8.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="DresdenTM">Dresden TM Compiler (DTMC)</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| <a href="http://tm.inf.tu-dresden.de">DTMC</a> provides support for 
 | |
| Transactional Memory, which is an easy-to-use and efficient way to synchronize 
 | |
| accesses to shared memory. Transactions can contain normal C/C++ code (e.g., 
 | |
| <code>__transaction { list.remove(x); x.refCount--; }</code>) and will be executed 
 | |
| virtually atomically and isolated from other transactions.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="Kai">Kai Programming Language</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| <a href="http://www.oriontransfer.co.nz/research/kai">Kai</a> (Japanese 会 for
 | |
| meeting/gathering) is an experimental interpreter that provides a highly
 | |
| extensible runtime environment and explicit control over the compilation
 | |
| process. Programs are defined using nested symbolic expressions, which are all
 | |
| parsed into first-class values with minimal intrinsic semantics. Kai can
 | |
| generate optimised code at run-time (using LLVM) in order to exploit the nature
 | |
| of the underlying hardware and to integrate with external software libraries.
 | |
| It is a unique exploration into world of dynamic code compilation, and the
 | |
| interaction between high level and low level semantics.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="OSL">OSL: Open Shading Language</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| <a href="http://code.google.com/p/openshadinglanguage/">OSL</a> is a shading
 | |
| language designed for use in physically based renderers and in particular
 | |
| production rendering. By using LLVM instead of the interpreter, it was able to
 | |
| meet its performance goals (>= C-code) while retaining the benefits of
 | |
| runtime specialization and a portable high-level language.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
 | |
| <div class="doc_section">
 | |
|   <a name="whatsnew">What's New in LLVM 2.8?</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>This release includes a huge number of bug fixes, performance tweaks and
 | |
| minor improvements.  Some of the major improvements and new features are listed
 | |
| in this section.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="majorfeatures">Major New Features</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>LLVM 2.8 includes several major new capabilities:</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li>As mentioned above, <a href="#libc++">libc++</a> and <a 
 | |
|    href="#lldb">LLDB</a> are major new additions to the LLVM collective.</li>
 | |
| <li>LLVM 2.8 now has pretty decent support for debugging optimized code.  You
 | |
|     should be able to reliably get debug info for function arguments, assuming
 | |
|     that the value is actually available where you have stopped.</li>
 | |
| <li>A new 'llvm-diff' tool is available that does a semantic diff of .ll
 | |
|     files.</li>
 | |
| <li>The <a href="#mc">MC subproject</a> has made major progress in this release.
 | |
|     Direct .o file writing support for darwin/x86[-64] is now reliable and
 | |
|     support for other targets and object file formats are in progress.</li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="coreimprovements">LLVM IR and Core Improvements</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| <p>LLVM IR has several new features for better support of new targets and that
 | |
| expose new optimization opportunities:</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li>The <a href="LangRef.html#int_libc">memcpy, memmove, and memset</a>
 | |
|   intrinsics now take address space qualified pointers and a bit to indicate
 | |
|   whether the transfer is "<a href="LangRef.html#volatile">volatile</a>" or not.
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>Per-instruction debug info metadata is much faster and uses less memory by
 | |
|     using the new DebugLoc class.</li>
 | |
| <li>LLVM IR now has a more formalized concept of "<a
 | |
|     href="LangRef.html#trapvalues">trap values</a>", which allow the optimizer
 | |
|     to optimize more aggressively in the presence of undefined behavior, while
 | |
|     still producing predictable results.</li>
 | |
| <li>LLVM IR now supports two new <a href="LangRef.html#linkage">linkage
 | |
|     types</a> (linker_private_weak and linker_private_weak_def_auto) which map
 | |
|     onto some obscure MachO concepts.</li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="optimizer">Optimizer Improvements</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>In addition to a large array of minor performance tweaks and bug fixes, this
 | |
| release includes a few major enhancements and additions to the optimizers:</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li>As mentioned above, the optimizer now has support for updating debug
 | |
|    information as it goes.  A key aspect of this is the new <a
 | |
|    href="SourceLevelDebugging.html#format_common_value">llvm.dbg.value</a>
 | |
|    intrinsic.  This intrinsic represents debug info for variables that are
 | |
|    promoted to SSA values (typically by mem2reg or the -scalarrepl passes).</li>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <li>The JumpThreading pass is now much more aggressive about implied value
 | |
|     relations, allowing it to thread conditions like "a == 4" when a is known to
 | |
|     be 13 in one of the predecessors of a block.  It does this in conjunction
 | |
|     with the new LazyValueInfo analysis pass.</li>
 | |
| <li>The new RegionInfo analysis pass identifies single-entry single-exit regions
 | |
|     in the CFG.  You can play with it with the "opt -regions -analyze" or
 | |
|     "opt -view-regions" commands.</li>
 | |
| <li>The loop optimizer has significantly improved strength reduction and analysis
 | |
|   capabilities.  Notably it is able to build on the trap value and signed
 | |
|   integer overflow information to optimize <= and >= loops.</li>
 | |
| <li>The CallGraphSCCPassManager now has some basic support for iterating within
 | |
|     an SCC when a optimizer devirtualizes a function call.  This allows inlining
 | |
|     through indirect call sites that are devirtualized by store-load forwarding
 | |
|     and other optimizations.</li>
 | |
| <li>The new <A href="Passes.html#loweratomic">-loweratomic</a> pass is available
 | |
|     to lower atomic instructions into their non-atomic form.  This can be useful
 | |
|     to optimize generic code that expects to run in a single-threaded
 | |
|     environment.</li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--
 | |
| <p>In addition to these features that are done in 2.8, there is preliminary
 | |
|    support in the release for Type Based Alias Analysis 
 | |
|   Preliminary work on TBAA but not usable in 2.8.
 | |
|   New CorrelatedValuePropagation pass, not on by default in 2.8 yet.
 | |
| -->
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="mc">MC Level Improvements</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| <p>
 | |
| The LLVM Machine Code (aka MC) subsystem was created to solve a number
 | |
| of problems in the realm of assembly, disassembly, object file format handling,
 | |
| and a number of other related areas that CPU instruction-set level tools work
 | |
| in.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>The MC subproject has made great leaps in LLVM 2.8.  For example, support for
 | |
|    directly writing .o files from LLC (and clang) now works reliably for
 | |
|    darwin/x86[-64] (including inline assembly support) and the integrated
 | |
|    assembler is turned on by default in Clang for these targets.  This provides
 | |
|    improved compile times among other things.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li>The entire compiler has converted over to using the MCStreamer assembler API
 | |
|     instead of writing out a .s file textually.</li>
 | |
| <li>The "assembler parser" is far more mature than in 2.7, supporting a full
 | |
|     complement of directives, now supports assembler macros, etc.</li>
 | |
| <li>The "assembler backend" has been completed, including support for relaxation
 | |
|     relocation processing and all the other things that an assembler does.</li>
 | |
| <li>The MachO file format support is now fully functional and works.</li>
 | |
| <li>The MC disassembler now fully supports ARM and Thumb.  ARM assembler support
 | |
|     is still in early development though.</li>
 | |
| <li>The X86 MC assembler now supports the X86 AES and AVX instruction set.</li>
 | |
| <li>Work on ELF and COFF object files and ARM target support is well underway,
 | |
|     but isn't useful yet in LLVM 2.8.  Please contact the llvmdev mailing list
 | |
|     if you're interested in this.</li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>For more information, please see the <a
 | |
| href="http://blog.llvm.org/2010/04/intro-to-llvm-mc-project.html">Intro to the
 | |
| LLVM MC Project Blog Post</a>.
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>	
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="codegen">Target Independent Code Generator Improvements</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>We have put a significant amount of work into the code generator
 | |
| infrastructure, which allows us to implement more aggressive algorithms and make
 | |
| it run faster:</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li>The clang/gcc -momit-leaf-frame-pointer argument is now supported.</li>
 | |
| <li>The clang/gcc -ffunction-sections and -fdata-sections arguments are now
 | |
|     supported on ELF targets (like GCC).</li>
 | |
| <li>The MachineCSE pass is now tuned and on by default.  It eliminates common
 | |
|     subexpressions that are exposed when lowering to machine instructions.</li>
 | |
| <li>The "local" register allocator was replaced by a new "fast" register
 | |
|     allocator.  This new allocator (which is often used at -O0) is substantially
 | |
|     faster and produces better code than the old local register allocator.</li>
 | |
| <li>A new LLC "-regalloc=default" option is available, which automatically
 | |
|     chooses a register allocator based on the -O optimization level.</li>
 | |
| <li>The common code generator code was modified to promote illegal argument and
 | |
|     return value vectors to wider ones when possible instead of scalarizing
 | |
|     them.  For example, <3 x float> will now pass in one SSE register
 | |
|     instead of 3 on X86.  This generates substantially better code since the
 | |
|     rest of the code generator was already expecting this.</li>
 | |
| <li>The code generator uses a new "COPY" machine instruction.  This speeds up
 | |
|     the code generator and eliminates the need for targets to implement the 
 | |
|     isMoveInstr hook.  Also, the copyRegToReg hook was renamed to copyPhysReg
 | |
|     and simplified.</li>
 | |
| <li>The code generator now has a "LocalStackSlotPass", which optimizes stack
 | |
|     slot access for targets (like ARM) that have limited stack displacement
 | |
|     addressing.</li>
 | |
| <li>A new "PeepholeOptimizer" is available, which eliminates sign and zero
 | |
|     extends, and optimizes away compare instructions when the condition result
 | |
|     is available from a previous instruction.</li>
 | |
| <li>Atomic operations now get legalized into simpler atomic operations if not
 | |
|     natively supported, easing the implementation burden on targets.</li>
 | |
| <li>We have added two new bottom-up pre-allocation register pressure aware schedulers:
 | |
| <ol>
 | |
| <li>The hybrid scheduler schedules aggressively to minimize schedule length when registers are available and avoid overscheduling in high pressure situations.</li>
 | |
| <li>The instruction-level-parallelism scheduler schedules for maximum ILP when registers are available and avoid overscheduling in high pressure situations.</li>
 | |
| </ol></li>
 | |
| <li>The tblgen type inference algorithm was rewritten to be more consistent and
 | |
|      diagnose more target bugs.  If you have an out-of-tree backend, you may
 | |
|      find that it finds bugs in your target description.  This support also
 | |
|      allows limited support for writing patterns for instructions that return
 | |
|      multiple results (e.g. a virtual register and a flag result).  The 
 | |
|      'parallel' modifier in tblgen was removed, you should use the new support
 | |
|      for multiple results instead.</li>
 | |
| <li>A new (experimental) "-rendermf" pass is available which renders a
 | |
|     MachineFunction into HTML, showing live ranges and other useful
 | |
|     details.</li>
 | |
| <li>The new SubRegIndex tablegen class allows subregisters to be indexed
 | |
|     symbolically instead of numerically.  If your target uses subregisters you
 | |
|     will need to adapt to use SubRegIndex when you upgrade to 2.8.</li>
 | |
| <!-- SplitKit -->
 | |
| 
 | |
| <li>The -fast-isel instruction selection path (used at -O0 on X86) was rewritten
 | |
|     to work bottom-up on basic blocks instead of top down.  This makes it
 | |
|     slightly faster (because the MachineDCE pass is not needed any longer) and
 | |
|     allows it to generate better code in some cases.</li>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="x86">X86-32 and X86-64 Target Improvements</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| <p>New features and major changes in the X86 target include:
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li>The X86 backend now supports holding X87 floating point stack values
 | |
|     in registers across basic blocks, dramatically improving performance of code
 | |
|     that uses long double, and when targeting CPUs that don't support SSE.</li>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <li>The X86 backend now uses a SSEDomainFix pass to optimize SSE operations.  On
 | |
|     Nehalem ("Core i7") and newer CPUs there is a 2 cycle latency penalty on
 | |
|     using a register in a different domain than where it was defined. This pass
 | |
|     optimizes away these stalls.</li>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <li>The X86 backend now promotes 16-bit integer operations to 32-bits when
 | |
|     possible. This avoids 0x66 prefixes, which are slow on some
 | |
|     microarchitectures and bloat the code on all of them.</li>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <li>The X86 backend now supports the Microsoft "thiscall" calling convention,
 | |
|     and a <a href="LangRef.html#callingconv">calling convention</a> to support
 | |
|     <a href="#GHC">ghc</a>.</li>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <li>The X86 backend supports a new "llvm.x86.int" intrinsic, which maps onto
 | |
|     the X86 "int $42" and "int3" instructions.</li>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <li>At the IR level, the <2 x float> datatype is now promoted and passed
 | |
|     around as a <4 x float> instead of being passed and returned as an MMX
 | |
|     vector.  If you have a frontend that uses this, please pass and return a
 | |
|     <2 x i32> instead (using bitcasts).</li>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <li>When printing .s files in verbose assembly mode (the default for clang -S),
 | |
|     the X86 backend now decodes X86 shuffle instructions and prints human
 | |
|     readable comments after the most inscrutable of them, e.g.:
 | |
|     
 | |
| <pre>
 | |
|   insertps $113, %xmm3, %xmm0 <i># xmm0 = zero,xmm0[1,2],xmm3[1]</i>
 | |
|   unpcklps %xmm1, %xmm0       <i># xmm0 = xmm0[0],xmm1[0],xmm0[1],xmm1[1]</i>
 | |
|   pshufd   $1, %xmm1, %xmm1   <i># xmm1 = xmm1[1,0,0,0]</i>
 | |
| </pre>
 | |
| </li>
 | |
|         
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="ARM">ARM Target Improvements</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| <p>New features of the ARM target include:
 | |
| </p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li>The ARM backend now optimizes tail calls into jumps.</li>
 | |
| <li>Scheduling is improved through the new list-hybrid scheduler as well
 | |
|     as through better modeling of structural hazards.</li>
 | |
| <li><a href="LangRef.html#int_fp16">Half float</a> instructions are now
 | |
|     supported.</li>
 | |
| <li>NEON support has been improved to model instructions which operate onto 
 | |
|     multiple consecutive registers more aggressively.  This avoids lots of
 | |
|     extraneous register copies.</li>
 | |
| <li>The ARM backend now uses a new "ARMGlobalMerge" pass, which merges several
 | |
|     global variables into one, saving extra address computation (all the global
 | |
|     variables can be accessed via same base address) and potentially reducing
 | |
|     register pressure.</li>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <li>The ARM backend has received many minor improvements and tweaks which lead
 | |
|     to substantially better performance in a wide range of different scenarios.
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <li>The ARM NEON intrinsics have been substantially reworked to reduce
 | |
|     redundancy and improve code generation.  Some of the major changes are:
 | |
|   <ol>
 | |
|   <li>
 | |
|     All of the NEON load and store intrinsics (llvm.arm.neon.vld* and
 | |
|     llvm.arm.neon.vst*) take an extra parameter to specify the alignment in bytes
 | |
|     of the memory being accessed.
 | |
|   </li>
 | |
|   <li>
 | |
|     The llvm.arm.neon.vaba intrinsic (vector absolute difference and
 | |
|     accumulate) has been removed.  This operation is now represented using
 | |
|     the llvm.arm.neon.vabd intrinsic (vector absolute difference) followed by a
 | |
|     vector add.
 | |
|   </li>
 | |
|   <li>
 | |
|     The llvm.arm.neon.vabdl and llvm.arm.neon.vabal intrinsics (lengthening
 | |
|     vector absolute difference with and without accumulation) have been removed.
 | |
|     They are represented using the llvm.arm.neon.vabd intrinsic (vector absolute
 | |
|     difference) followed by a vector zero-extend operation, and for vabal,
 | |
|     a vector add.
 | |
|   </li>
 | |
|   <li>
 | |
|     The llvm.arm.neon.vmovn intrinsic has been removed.  Calls of this intrinsic
 | |
|     are now replaced by vector truncate operations.
 | |
|   </li>
 | |
|   <li>
 | |
|     The llvm.arm.neon.vmovls and llvm.arm.neon.vmovlu intrinsics have been
 | |
|     removed.  They are now represented as vector sign-extend (vmovls) and
 | |
|     zero-extend (vmovlu) operations.
 | |
|   </li>
 | |
|   <li>
 | |
|     The llvm.arm.neon.vaddl*, llvm.arm.neon.vaddw*, llvm.arm.neon.vsubl*, and
 | |
|     llvm.arm.neon.vsubw* intrinsics (lengthening vector add and subtract) have
 | |
|     been removed.  They are replaced by vector add and vector subtract operations
 | |
|     where one (vaddw, vsubw) or both (vaddl, vsubl) of the operands are either
 | |
|     sign-extended or zero-extended.
 | |
|   </li>
 | |
|   <li>
 | |
|     The llvm.arm.neon.vmulls, llvm.arm.neon.vmullu, llvm.arm.neon.vmlal*, and
 | |
|     llvm.arm.neon.vmlsl* intrinsics (lengthening vector multiply with and without
 | |
|     accumulation and subtraction) have been removed.  These operations are now
 | |
|     represented as vector multiplications where the operands are either
 | |
|     sign-extended or zero-extended, followed by a vector add for vmlal or a
 | |
|     vector subtract for vmlsl.  Note that the polynomial vector multiply
 | |
|     intrinsic, llvm.arm.neon.vmullp, remains unchanged.
 | |
|   </li>
 | |
|   </ol>
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="changes">Major Changes and Removed Features</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>If you're already an LLVM user or developer with out-of-tree changes based
 | |
| on LLVM 2.7, this section lists some "gotchas" that you may run into upgrading
 | |
| from the previous release.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li>The build configuration machinery changed the output directory names.  It
 | |
|     wasn't clear to many people that a "Release-Asserts" build was a release build
 | |
|     without asserts.  To make this more clear, "Release" does not include
 | |
|     assertions and "Release+Asserts" does (likewise, "Debug" and
 | |
|     "Debug+Asserts").</li>
 | |
| <li>The MSIL Backend was removed, it was unsupported and broken.</li>
 | |
| <li>The ABCD, SSI, and SCCVN passes were removed.  These were not fully
 | |
|     functional and their behavior has been or will be subsumed by the
 | |
|     LazyValueInfo  pass.</li>
 | |
| <li>The LLVM IR 'Union' feature was removed.  While this is a desirable feature
 | |
|     for LLVM IR to support, the existing implementation was half baked and
 | |
|     barely useful.  We'd really like anyone interested to resurrect the work and
 | |
|     finish it for a future release.</li>
 | |
| <li>If you're used to reading .ll files, you'll probably notice that .ll file
 | |
|     dumps don't produce #uses comments anymore.  To get them, run a .bc file
 | |
|     through "llvm-dis --show-annotations".</li>
 | |
| <li>Target triples are now stored in a normalized form, and all inputs from
 | |
|     humans are expected to be normalized by Triple::normalize before being
 | |
|     stored in a module triple or passed to another library.</li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>In addition, many APIs have changed in this release.  Some of the major LLVM
 | |
| API changes are:</p>
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li>LLVM 2.8 changes the internal order of operands in <a
 | |
|   href="http://llvm.org/doxygen/classllvm_1_1InvokeInst.html"><tt>InvokeInst</tt></a>
 | |
|   and <a href="http://llvm.org/doxygen/classllvm_1_1CallInst.html"><tt>CallInst</tt></a>.
 | |
|   To be portable across releases, please use the <tt>CallSite</tt> class and the
 | |
|   high-level accessors, such as <tt>getCalledValue</tt> and
 | |
|   <tt>setUnwindDest</tt>.
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>
 | |
|   You can no longer pass use_iterators directly to cast<> (and similar),
 | |
|   because these routines tend to perform costly dereference operations more
 | |
|   than once. You have to dereference the iterators yourself and pass them in.
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>
 | |
|   llvm.memcpy.*, llvm.memset.*, llvm.memmove.* intrinsics take an extra
 | |
|   parameter now ("i1 isVolatile"), totaling 5 parameters, and the pointer
 | |
|   operands are now address-space qualified.
 | |
|   If you were creating these intrinsic calls and prototypes yourself (as opposed
 | |
|   to using Intrinsic::getDeclaration), you can use
 | |
|   UpgradeIntrinsicFunction/UpgradeIntrinsicCall to be portable across releases.
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>
 | |
|   SetCurrentDebugLocation takes a DebugLoc now instead of a MDNode.
 | |
|   Change your code to use
 | |
|   SetCurrentDebugLocation(DebugLoc::getFromDILocation(...)).
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>
 | |
|   The <tt>RegisterPass</tt> and <tt>RegisterAnalysisGroup</tt> templates are
 | |
|   considered deprecated, but continue to function in LLVM 2.8.  Clients are  
 | |
|   strongly advised to use the upcoming <tt>INITIALIZE_PASS()</tt> and
 | |
|   <tt>INITIALIZE_AG_PASS()</tt> macros instead.
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>
 | |
|   The constructor for the Triple class no longer tries to understand odd triple
 | |
|   specifications.  Frontends should ensure that they only pass valid triples to
 | |
|   LLVM.  The Triple::normalize utility method has been added to help front-ends
 | |
|   deal with funky triples.
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>
 | |
|   The signature of the <tt>GCMetadataPrinter::finishAssembly</tt> virtual
 | |
|   function changed: the <tt>raw_ostream</tt> and <tt>MCAsmInfo</tt> arguments
 | |
|   were dropped.  GC plugins which compute stack maps must be updated to avoid
 | |
|   having the old definition overload the new signature.
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| <li>
 | |
|   The signature of <tt>MemoryBuffer::getMemBuffer</tt> changed.  Unfortunately
 | |
|   calls intended for the old version still compile, but will not work correctly,
 | |
|   leading to a confusing error about an invalid header in the bitcode.
 | |
| </li>
 | |
|   
 | |
| <li>
 | |
|   Some APIs were renamed:
 | |
|   <ul>
 | |
|   <li>llvm_report_error -> report_fatal_error</li>
 | |
|   <li>llvm_install_error_handler -> install_fatal_error_handler</li>
 | |
|   <li>llvm::DwarfExceptionHandling -> llvm::JITExceptionHandling</li>
 | |
|   <li>VISIBILITY_HIDDEN -> LLVM_LIBRARY_VISIBILITY</li>
 | |
|   </ul>
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <li>
 | |
|   Some public headers were renamed:
 | |
|   <ul>
 | |
|     <li><tt>llvm/Assembly/AsmAnnotationWriter.h</tt> was renamed
 | |
|     to <tt>llvm/Assembly/AssemblyAnnotationWriter.h</tt>
 | |
|     </li>
 | |
|   </ul>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!--=========================================================================-->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
| <a name="devtree_changes">Development Infrastructure Changes</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>This section lists changes to the LLVM development infrastructure. This
 | |
| mostly impacts users who actively work on LLVM or follow development on
 | |
| mainline, but may also impact users who leverage the LLVM build infrastructure
 | |
| or are interested in LLVM qualification.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
|   <li>The default for <tt>make check</tt> is now to use
 | |
|   the <a href="http://llvm.org/cmds/lit.html">lit</a> testing tool, which is
 | |
|   part of LLVM itself. You can use <tt>lit</tt> directly as well, or use
 | |
|   the <tt>llvm-lit</tt> tool which is created as part of a Makefile or CMake
 | |
|   build (and knows how to find the appropriate tools). See the <tt>lit</tt>
 | |
|   documentation and the <a href="http://blog.llvm.org/2009/12/lit-it.html">blog
 | |
|   post</a>, and <a href="http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=5217">PR5217</a>
 | |
|   for more information.</li>
 | |
| 
 | |
|   <li>The LLVM <tt>test-suite</tt> infrastructure has a new "simple" test format
 | |
|   (<tt>make TEST=simple</tt>). The new format is intended to require only a
 | |
|   compiler and not a full set of LLVM tools. This makes it useful for testing
 | |
|   released compilers, for running the test suite with other compilers (for
 | |
|   performance comparisons), and makes sure that we are testing the compiler as
 | |
|   users would see it. The new format is also designed to work using reference
 | |
|   outputs instead of comparison to a baseline compiler, which makes it run much
 | |
|   faster and makes it less system dependent.</li>
 | |
| 
 | |
|   <li>Significant progress has been made on a new interface to running the
 | |
|   LLVM <tt>test-suite</tt> (aka the LLVM "nightly tests") using
 | |
|   the <a href="http://llvm.org/docs/lnt">LNT</a> infrastructure. The LNT
 | |
|   interface to the <tt>test-suite</tt> brings significantly improved reporting
 | |
|   capabilities for monitoring the correctness and generated code quality
 | |
|   produced by LLVM over time.</li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
 | |
| <div class="doc_section">
 | |
|   <a name="knownproblems">Known Problems</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>This section contains significant known problems with the LLVM system,
 | |
| listed by component.  If you run into a problem, please check the <a
 | |
| href="http://llvm.org/bugs/">LLVM bug database</a> and submit a bug if
 | |
| there isn't already one.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!-- ======================================================================= -->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
|   <a name="experimental">Experimental features included with this release</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>The following components of this LLVM release are either untested, known to
 | |
| be broken or unreliable, or are in early development.  These components should
 | |
| not be relied on, and bugs should not be filed against them, but they may be
 | |
| useful to some people.  In particular, if you would like to work on one of these
 | |
| components, please contact us on the <a
 | |
| href="http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev">LLVMdev list</a>.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li>The Alpha, Blackfin, CellSPU, MicroBlaze, MSP430, MIPS, SystemZ
 | |
|     and XCore backends are experimental.</li>
 | |
| <li><tt>llc</tt> "<tt>-filetype=obj</tt>" is experimental on all targets
 | |
|     other than darwin-i386 and darwin-x86_64.</li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!-- ======================================================================= -->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
|   <a name="x86-be">Known problems with the X86 back-end</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
|   <li>The X86 backend does not yet support
 | |
|     all <a href="http://llvm.org/PR879">inline assembly that uses the X86
 | |
|     floating point stack</a>.  It supports the 'f' and 't' constraints, but not
 | |
|     'u'.</li>
 | |
|   <li>Win64 code generation wasn't widely tested. Everything should work, but we
 | |
|     expect small issues to happen. Also, llvm-gcc cannot build the mingw64
 | |
|     runtime currently due to lack of support for the 'u' inline assembly
 | |
|     constraint and for X87 floating point inline assembly.</li>
 | |
|   <li>The X86-64 backend does not yet support the LLVM IR instruction
 | |
|       <tt>va_arg</tt>. Currently, front-ends support variadic
 | |
|       argument constructs on X86-64 by lowering them manually.</li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!-- ======================================================================= -->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
|   <a name="ppc-be">Known problems with the PowerPC back-end</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li>The Linux PPC32/ABI support needs testing for the interpreter and static
 | |
| compilation, and lacks support for debug information.</li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!-- ======================================================================= -->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
|   <a name="arm-be">Known problems with the ARM back-end</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li>Thumb mode works only on ARMv6 or higher processors. On sub-ARMv6
 | |
| processors, thumb programs can crash or produce wrong
 | |
| results (<a href="http://llvm.org/PR1388">PR1388</a>).</li>
 | |
| <li>Compilation for ARM Linux OABI (old ABI) is supported but not fully tested.
 | |
| </li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!-- ======================================================================= -->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
|   <a name="sparc-be">Known problems with the SPARC back-end</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li>The SPARC backend only supports the 32-bit SPARC ABI (-m32); it does not
 | |
|     support the 64-bit SPARC ABI (-m64).</li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!-- ======================================================================= -->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
|   <a name="mips-be">Known problems with the MIPS back-end</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li>64-bit MIPS targets are not supported yet.</li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!-- ======================================================================= -->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
|   <a name="alpha-be">Known problems with the Alpha back-end</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <li>On 21164s, some rare FP arithmetic sequences which may trap do not have the
 | |
| appropriate nops inserted to ensure restartability.</li>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!-- ======================================================================= -->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
|   <a name="c-be">Known problems with the C back-end</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>The C backend has numerous problems and is not being actively maintained.
 | |
| Depending on it for anything serious is not advised.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <ul>
 | |
| <li><a href="http://llvm.org/PR802">The C backend has only basic support for
 | |
|     inline assembly code</a>.</li>
 | |
| <li><a href="http://llvm.org/PR1658">The C backend violates the ABI of common
 | |
|     C++ programs</a>, preventing intermixing between C++ compiled by the CBE and
 | |
|     C++ code compiled with <tt>llc</tt> or native compilers.</li>
 | |
| <li>The C backend does not support all exception handling constructs.</li>
 | |
| <li>The C backend does not support arbitrary precision integers.</li>
 | |
| </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!-- ======================================================================= -->
 | |
| <div class="doc_subsection">
 | |
|   <a name="llvm-gcc">Known problems with the llvm-gcc front-end</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>llvm-gcc is generally very stable for the C family of languages.  The only
 | |
|    major language feature of GCC not supported by llvm-gcc is the
 | |
|    <tt>__builtin_apply</tt> family of builtins.   However, some extensions
 | |
|    are only supported on some targets.  For example, trampolines are only
 | |
|    supported on some targets (these are used when you take the address of a
 | |
|    nested function).</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>Fortran support generally works, but there are still several unresolved bugs
 | |
|    in <a href="http://llvm.org/bugs/">Bugzilla</a>.  Please see the
 | |
|    tools/gfortran component for details.  Note that llvm-gcc is missing major
 | |
|    Fortran performance work in the frontend and library that went into GCC after
 | |
|    4.2.  If you are interested in Fortran, we recommend that you consider using
 | |
|    <a href="#dragonegg">dragonegg</a> instead.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>The llvm-gcc 4.2 Ada compiler has basic functionality, but is no longer being
 | |
| actively maintained.  If you are interested in Ada, we recommend that you
 | |
| consider using <a href="#dragonegg">dragonegg</a> instead.</p>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
 | |
| <div class="doc_section">
 | |
|   <a name="additionalinfo">Additional Information</a>
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
 | |
| 
 | |
| <div class="doc_text">
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>A wide variety of additional information is available on the <a
 | |
| href="http://llvm.org">LLVM web page</a>, in particular in the <a
 | |
| href="http://llvm.org/docs/">documentation</a> section.  The web page also
 | |
| contains versions of the API documentation which is up-to-date with the
 | |
| Subversion version of the source code.
 | |
| You can access versions of these documents specific to this release by going
 | |
| into the "<tt>llvm/doc/</tt>" directory in the LLVM tree.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <p>If you have any questions or comments about LLVM, please feel free to contact
 | |
| us via the <a href="http://llvm.org/docs/#maillist"> mailing
 | |
| lists</a>.</p>
 | |
| 
 | |
| </div>
 | |
| 
 | |
| <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
 | |
| 
 | |
| <hr>
 | |
| <address>
 | |
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|   src="http://jigsaw.w3.org/css-validator/images/vcss-blue" alt="Valid CSS"></a>
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|   src="http://www.w3.org/Icons/valid-html401-blue" alt="Valid HTML 4.01"></a>
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| 
 | |
|   <a href="http://llvm.org/">LLVM Compiler Infrastructure</a><br>
 | |
|   Last modified: $Date$
 | |
| </address>
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| 
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| </body>
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| </html>
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