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LLVM Techniques, Tips, and Best Practices Clang and Middle-End Libraries

You're reading from   LLVM Techniques, Tips, and Best Practices Clang and Middle-End Libraries Design powerful and reliable compilers using the latest libraries and tools from LLVM

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838824952
Length 370 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Min-Yih Hsu Min-Yih Hsu
Author Profile Icon Min-Yih Hsu
Min-Yih Hsu
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Build System and LLVM-Specific Tooling
2. Chapter 1: Saving Resources When Building LLVM FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Exploring LLVM's Build System Features 4. Chapter 3: Testing with LLVM LIT 5. Chapter 4: TableGen Development 6. Section 2: Frontend Development
7. Chapter 5: Exploring Clang's Architecture 8. Chapter 6: Extending the Preprocessor 9. Chapter 7: Handling AST 10. Chapter 8: Working with Compiler Flags and Toolchains 11. Section 3: "Middle-End" Development
12. Chapter 9: Working with PassManager and AnalysisManager 13. Chapter 10: Processing LLVM IR 14. Chapter 11: Gearing Up with Support Utilities 15. Chapter 12: Learning LLVM IR Instrumentation 16. Assessments 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Writing an LLVM Pass for the new PassManager

A Pass in LLVM is the basic unit that is required to perform certain actions against LLVM IR. It is similar to a single production step in a factory, where the products that need to be processed are LLVM IR and the factory workers are the Passes. In the same way that a normal factory usually has multiple manufacturing steps, LLVM also consists of multiple Passes that are executed in sequential order, called the Pass pipeline. Figure 9.1 shows an example of the Pass pipeline:

Figure 9.1 – An example of the LLVM Pass pipeline and its intermediate results

In the preceding diagram, multiple Passes are arranged in a straight line. The LLVM IR for the foo function is processed by one Pass after another. Pass B, for instance, performs code optimization on foo and replaces an arithmetic multiplication (mul) by 2 with left shifting (shl) by 1, which is considered easier than multiplication in most hardware architectures...

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