We have a global reg. allocator now -- thanks to Alkis.

Fix a typo.
Add a project I've always thought would be cool.


git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@12747 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
This commit is contained in:
Brian Gaeke 2004-04-07 15:31:23 +00:00
parent 8b3df485d5
commit 2d26135b90

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@ -188,7 +188,7 @@ Irreducible Loops</a>.</li>
<div class="doc_text">
<p>Sometimes creating new things is more fun that improving existing things.
<p>Sometimes creating new things is more fun than improving existing things.
These projects tend to be more involved and perhaps require more work, but can
also be very rewarding.</p>
@ -293,7 +293,6 @@ profiling code to work with the generic profiling interfaces.</li>
<div class="doc_text">
<ol>
<li>Implement a global register allocator</li>
<li>Implement a better instruction selector</li>
<li>Implement support for the "switch" instruction without requiring the
lower-switches pass.</li>
@ -309,7 +308,12 @@ profiling code to work with the generic profiling interfaces.</li>
<div class="doc_text">
<ol>
<li>Write a new frontend for some language (Java? OCaml? Forth?)</li>
<li>Port the <A HREF="http://www-sop.inria.fr/mimosa/fp/Bigloo/">Bigloo</A>
Scheme compiler, from Manuel Serrano at INRIA Sophia-Antipolis, to
output LLVM bytecode. It seems that it can already output .NET
bytecode, JVM bytecode, and C, so LLVM would ostensibly be another good
candidate.</li>
<li>Write a new frontend for some other language (Java? OCaml? Forth?)</li>
<li>Write a new backend for a target (IA64? MIPS? MMIX?)</li>
<li>Random test vector generator: Use a C grammar to generate random C code;
run it through llvm-gcc, then run a random set of passes on it using opt.