Using MIR to test and debug the backend
You saw in the previous section that many passes are run in the target backend. However, most of these passes do not operate on LLVM IR, but on MIR. This is a target-dependent representation of the instructions, and therefore more low-level than LLVM IR. It can still contain references to virtual registers, so it is not yet the pure instruction of the target CPU.
To see the optimizations on the IR level, you can, for example, tell llc
to dump the IR after each pass. This does not work with the machine passes in the backend, because they do not work on IR. Instead, MIR serves a similar purpose.
MIR is a textual representation of the current state of the machine instructions in the current module. It utilizes the YAML format, which allows for serialization and deserialization. The basic idea is that you can stop the pass pipeline at a point and inspect the state in YAML format. You can also modify the YAML file, or create your own, and pass...