- We actually pretend that we have two separate types for LLVM assembly/bitcode because we need to use the standard suffixes with LTO ('clang -O4 -c t.c' should generate 't.o').
It is now possible to do something like:
$ clang -emit-llvm -S t.c -o t.ll ... assorted other compile flags ...
$ clang -c t.ll -o t.o ... assorted other compile flags ...
and expect that the output will be almost* identical to:
$ clang -c t.c -o t.o ... assorted other compile flags ...
because all the target settings (default CPU, target features, etc.) will all be initialized properly by the driver/frontend.
*: This isn't perfect yet, because in practice we will end up running the optimization passes twice. It's possible to get something equivalent out with a well placed -mllvm -disable-llvm-optzns, but I'm still thinking about the cleanest way to solve this problem more generally.
llvm-svn: 105584
- This magically enables using 'clang -cc1' as a replacement for most of 'llvm-as', 'llvm-dis', 'llc' and 'opt' functionality.
For example, 'llvm-as' is:
$ clang -cc1 -emit-llvm-bc FOO.ll -o FOO.bc
and 'llvm-dis' is:
$ clang -cc1 -emit-llvm FOO.bc -o -
and 'opt' is, e.g.:
$ clang -cc1 -emit-llvm -O3 -o FOO.opt.ll FOO.ll
and 'llc' is, e.g.:
$ clang -cc1 -S -o - FOO.ll
The nice thing about using the backend tools this way is that they are guaranteed to exactly match how the compiler generates code (for example, setting the same backend options).
llvm-svn: 105583
- These inputs follow an abbreviated execution path, but are still worth handling by FrontendAction so they reuse all the other clang -cc1 features.
llvm-svn: 105582
scrounging through SCEVUnknown contents and SCEVNAryExpr operands;
instead just do a simple deterministic comparison of the precomputed
hash data.
Also, since this is more precise, it eliminates the need for the slow
N^2 duplicate detection code.
llvm-svn: 105540
encapsulation to force the users of these classes to know about the internal
data structure of the Operands structure. It also can lead to errors, like in
the MSIL writer.
llvm-svn: 105539
or block-pointer type by removing the qualifiers parameter. Introduce a
method to perform semantic checking when adding qualifiers to a type.
llvm-svn: 105526
In file included from X86InstrInfo.cpp:16:
X86GenInstrInfo.inc:2789: error: integer constant is too large for 'long' type
X86GenInstrInfo.inc:2790: error: integer constant is too large for 'long' type
X86GenInstrInfo.inc:2792: error: integer constant is too large for 'long' type
X86GenInstrInfo.inc:2793: error: integer constant is too large for 'long' type
X86GenInstrInfo.inc:2808: error: integer constant is too large for 'long' type
X86GenInstrInfo.inc:2809: error: integer constant is too large for 'long' type
X86GenInstrInfo.inc:2816: error: integer constant is too large for 'long' type
X86GenInstrInfo.inc:2817: error: integer constant is too large for 'long' type
llvm-svn: 105524
a member template, and you try to call the member template with an explicit
template argument. See PR7247
For example, this downgrades the error to a warning in:
template<typename T> struct set{};
struct Value {
template<typename T>
void set(T value) {
}
};
void foo() {
Value v;
v.set<double>(3.2); // Warning here.
}
llvm-svn: 105518