the ability to dynamically load and use targets that are not linked into it
statically. e.g.:
llc -load libparisc.so -march=parisc foo.bc -o foo.s
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but allows us to generate valid code on hosts (like windows) that do newline
translation for text files.
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will (eventually) provide statistical analysis of bytecode files as well
as the ability to dump them in a low level format (slot numbers not
resolved). The purpose of this is to aid in the Type!=Value change of
bug 122. With this initial release, llvm-abcd merely dumps out the
bytecode. However, the infrastructure for separating bytecode parsing from
handling the parsing events is in place. The style chosen is similar to
SAX XML parsing where a handler object is called to handlign the parsing
events. This probably isn't useful to anyone but me right now as there is
no analysis yet, and the dumper doesn't work on every bytecode file. It
will probably be useful by the end of this week. Note that there is some
duplication of code from the bytecode reader. This was done to eliminate
errors from being introduced in the reader and to minimize the impact to
other LLVM developers. At some point, the Analyzer and the Reader will be
integrated to use the same infrastructure. Also, sorry for the minor change
to Instruction.h but I just couldn't bring myself to write code that
depends on Instruction internals.
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bytecode files on win32 systems. We keep the shell script on unix systems
because it is much more transparent for the users and supports -load
options.
This allows llvmgcc work correctly on win32 systems without the -native or
-native-cbe options.
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to reduce the inter-file interface in the gccld tool and gets some
uninteresting code out of gccld.cpp.
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optimization pasess fail. This is necessary to avoid breaking feature
tests in the tests suite that depend on this behavior. *sigh*
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two things: the FIXME in ExtractBlocks needs to be implemented, and the basic block
extractor itself needs to have enough bugs fixed for this to be more or less
useful.
Until the time that this is generally useful, it is hidden behind the new bugpoint
-enable-block-extraction option. I hope to get the FIXME done tonight.
Also of note, this patch adds a -extract-bbs option to bugpoint which can be used
to debug the block extractor. (hint hint Misha :)
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when they have to run a gccld shell script without having lli in their path.
This is intended to address Bug 289.
Also, emit the traditional syntax ${1+"$@"} for passing all of a shell script's
args to a subprocess. If you have arguments that have spaces in them, $* will
not preserve the quoting (i.e., the quoted string "foo bar" as an argument will
end up as two arguments "foo" "bar" to lli.)
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