Renaming as' -> llvm-as' and dis' -> llvm-dis'.

git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@8195 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
This commit is contained in:
Misha Brukman 2003-08-28 22:02:50 +00:00
parent 82086a5894
commit a0a0a03946

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@ -815,12 +815,12 @@
following is a brief introduction to the most important tools.</p>
<dl compact>
<dt><tt><b>as</b></tt><dd>The assembler transforms the human readable
<dt><tt><b>llvm-as</b></tt><dd>The assembler transforms the human readable
LLVM assembly to LLVM bytecode.<p>
<dt><tt><b>dis</b></tt><dd>The disassembler transforms the LLVM bytecode
to human readable LLVM assembly. Additionally it can convert LLVM
bytecode to C, which is enabled with the <tt>-c</tt> option.<p>
<dt><tt><b>llvm-dis</b></tt><dd>The disassembler transforms the LLVM
bytecode to human readable LLVM assembly. Additionally it can convert
LLVM bytecode to C, which is enabled with the <tt>-c</tt> option.<p>
<dt><tt><b>lli</b></tt><dd> <tt>lli</tt> is the LLVM interpreter, which
can directly execute LLVM bytecode (although very slowly...). In addition
@ -851,7 +851,7 @@
<tt>x.o</tt> file (which is an LLVM bytecode file that can be
disassembled or manipulated just like any other bytecode file). The
command line interface to <tt>gccas</tt> is designed to be as close as
possible to the <b>system</b> '<tt>as</tt>' utility so that the gcc
possible to the <b>system</b> `<tt>as</tt>' utility so that the gcc
frontend itself did not have to be modified to interface to a "weird"
assembler.<p>
@ -1035,10 +1035,10 @@
<tt>% lli hello.bc</tt><p>
<li>Use the <tt>dis</tt> utility to take a look at the LLVM assembly
<li>Use the <tt>llvm-dis</tt> utility to take a look at the LLVM assembly
code:<p>
<tt>% dis < hello.bc | less</tt><p>
<tt>% llvm-dis < hello.bc | less</tt><p>
<li>Compile the program to native Sparc assembly using the code
generator (assuming you are currently on a Sparc system):<p>