Introduce a new class (MachineCodeInfo) that the JIT can fill in with details. Right now, just the address and the size of the machine code are reported.
Patch by Evan Phoenix!
llvm-svn: 72040
that has not been JIT'd yet, the callee is put on a list of pending functions
to JIT. The call is directed through a stub, which is updated with the address
of the function after it has been JIT'd. A new interface for allocating and
updating empty stubs is provided.
Add support for removing the ModuleProvider the JIT was created with, which
would otherwise invalidate the JIT's PassManager, which is initialized with the
ModuleProvider's Module.
Add support under a new ExecutionEngine flag for emitting the infomration
necessary to update Function and GlobalVariable stubs after JITing them, by
recording the address of the stub and the name of the GlobalValue. This allows
code to be copied from one address space to another, where libraries may live
at different virtual addresses, and have the stubs updated with their new
correct target addresses.
llvm-svn: 64906
SingleSource/UnitTests/2007-04-25-weak.c in JIT mode. The test
now passes on systems which are able to produce a correct
reference output to compare with.
llvm-svn: 61674
variable is moved to the execution engine. The JIT calls the TargetJITInfo
to allocate thread local storage. Currently, only linux/x86 knows how to
allocate thread local global variables.
llvm-svn: 58142
1. The "JITState" object creates a PassManager with the ModuleProvider that the
jit is created with. If the ModuleProvider is removed and deleted, the
PassManager is invalid.
2. The Global maps in the JIT were not invalidated with a ModuleProvider was
removed. This could lead to a case where the Module would be freed, and a
new Module with Globals at the same addresses could return invalid results.
llvm-svn: 51384
This patch completes the changes for making lli thread-safe. Here's the list
of changes:
* The Support/ThreadSupport* files were removed and replaced with the
MutexGuard.h file since all ThreadSupport* declared was a Mutex Guard.
The implementation of MutexGuard.h is now based on sys::Mutex which hides
its implementation and makes it unnecessary to have the -NoSupport.h and
-PThreads.h versions of ThreadSupport.
* All places in ExecutionEngine that previously referred to "Mutex" now
refer to sys::Mutex
* All places in ExecutionEngine that previously referred to "MutexLocker"
now refer to MutexGuard (this is frivolous but I believe the technically
correct name for such a class is "Guard" not a "Locker").
These changes passed all of llvm-test. All we need now are some test cases
that actually use multiple threads.
llvm-svn: 22404
VM.cpp and JIT.cpp files into JIT.cpp. This also splits some nasty code out
into TargetSelect.cpp so that people hopefully won't notice it. :)
llvm-svn: 10544