memory pressure. This order spaces out large executables with small ones in
between so that in a -j2 or -j3 build, it only attempts to build only one
large executable at time. If you're doing -j4, you probably have enuogh
memory anyway.
llvm-svn: 29835
Shrinkify LLVM's footprint by removing the analyze tool and moving its
functionality into the opt tool. THis eliminates one of the largest tools
from LLVM and doesn't make opt much bigger because it already included
most of the analysis passes. To get the old analyze functionality pass
the -analyze option to opt. Note that the integeration here is dead
simple. The "main" of analyze was just copied to opt and invoked if the
-analyze option was given. There may be opportunities for further
integration such as removing the distinction between transform passes
and analysis passes.
To use the analysis functionality, if you previously did this:
analyze $FNAME -domset -disable-verify
you would now do this:
opt -analyze $FNAME -domset -disable-verify
Pretty simple.
llvm-svn: 29762
llee was a nice hack, but it wasn't portable so its gone, with Misha's
approval. Operating systems have facilities available for making bytecode
directly executable without this utility.
llvm-svn: 18916
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.
llvm-svn: 14048
1. The TargetMachine structure is free to decide the process a particular target uses to generate code.
2. All of the gooee details of the sparc backend are now localized in the lib/CodeGen/TargetMAchine/Sparc directory. The Sparc.h file that is globally visible is just a stub.
3. The Sparc.h file that esxists now will dissapear entirely someday when we have multiple backends chosen by a factory of some sort.
llvm-svn: 559