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authorChris Lattner <sabre@nondot.org>2007-09-26 05:44:21 +0000
committerChris Lattner <sabre@nondot.org>2007-09-26 05:44:21 +0000
commitd4298715f6448d1d4c24c99a2f6ebd5de449cf1f (patch)
treee1d5f73df3374c98ef30ef694898b37859248f7f
parentca9976d6fea556430cdb1dd92dc69f0fc257ea96 (diff)
downloadexternal_llvm-d4298715f6448d1d4c24c99a2f6ebd5de449cf1f.zip
external_llvm-d4298715f6448d1d4c24c99a2f6ebd5de449cf1f.tar.gz
external_llvm-d4298715f6448d1d4c24c99a2f6ebd5de449cf1f.tar.bz2
now with more prose.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@42341 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
-rw-r--r--docs/ReleaseNotes.html125
1 files changed, 80 insertions, 45 deletions
diff --git a/docs/ReleaseNotes.html b/docs/ReleaseNotes.html
index 2622a49..c8fc2ab 100644
--- a/docs/ReleaseNotes.html
+++ b/docs/ReleaseNotes.html
@@ -93,13 +93,14 @@ analysis tools or source-to-source translators.</p>
<div class="doc_text">
-<p>Some of the most noticable improvements this release have been in the
-optimizer, speeding it up and making it more aggressive</p>
+<p>Some of the most noticable feature improvements this release have been in the
+optimizer, speeding it up and making it more aggressive. For example:</p>
<ul>
<li>Owen Anderson wrote the new MemoryDependenceAnalysis pass, which provides
- a lazy, caching layer on top of alias analysis. He then used it to rewrite
+ a lazy, caching layer on top of <a href="AliasAnalysis.html">
+ AliasAnalysis</a>. He then used it to rewrite
DeadStoreElimination which resulted in significantly better compile time in
common cases, </li>
<li>Owen implemented the new GVN pass, which is also based on
@@ -110,9 +111,11 @@ optimizer, speeding it up and making it more aggressive</p>
shares some details with the new GVN pass. It is still in need of compile
time tuning, and is not turned on by default.</li>
<li>Devang merged ETForest and DomTree into a single easier to use data
-structure.</li>
+ structure. This makes it more obvious which datastructure to choose
+ (because there is only one) and makes the compiler more memory and time
+ efficient (less stuff to keep up-to-date).</li>
<li>Nick Lewycky improved loop trip count analysis to handle many more common
-cases.</li>
+ cases.</li>
</ul>
@@ -125,33 +128,43 @@ cases.</li>
<div class="doc_text">
+<p>One of the main focuses of this release was performance tuning and bug
+ fixing. In addition to these, several new major changes occurred:</p>
+
<ul>
-<li>Dale finished up the Tail Merging optimization in the code generator,
-enabling it by default. This produces smaller code that is also faster in some
-cases.</li>
+<li>Dale finished up the Tail Merging optimization in the code generator, and
+ enabled it by default. This produces smaller code that is also faster in
+ some cases.</li>
+
+<li>Christopher Lamb implemented support for virtual register sub-registers,
+ which can be used to better model many forms of subregisters. As an example
+ use, he modified the X86 backend to use this to model truncates and
+ extends more accurately (leading to better code).</li>
<li>Dan Gohman changed the way we represent vectors before legalization,
-significantly simplifying the SelectionDAG representation for these and making
-the code generator faster for vector code.</li>
+ significantly simplifying the SelectionDAG representation for these and
+ making the code generator faster for vector code.</li>
-<li>Evan remat rewrite (coalesced intervals + folding of remat'd loads) and
-live intervals improvements.</li>
+<li>Evan contributed a new target independent if-converter. While it is
+ target independent, at this point only the ARM backend uses it so far.</li>
-<li>Dan Gohman contributed support for better alignment and volatility handling
-in the code generator, and significantly enhanced alignment analysis for SSE
-load/store instructions.</li>
+<li>Evan rewrite the way the register allocator handles rematerialization,
+ allowing it to be much more effective on two-address targets like X86,
+ and taught it to fold loads away when possible (also a big win on X86).</li>
-<li>Christopher Lamb virtual register sub-register support, better truncates and
-extends on X86.</li>
+<li>Dan Gohman contributed support for better alignment and volatility handling
+ in the code generator, and significantly enhanced alignment analysis for SSE
+ load/store instructions. With his changes, an insufficiently-aligned SSE
+ load instruction turns into <tt>movups</tt>, for example.</li>
<li>Duraid Madina contributed a new "bigblock" register allocator, and Roman
-Levenstein contributed several big improvements. BigBlock is optimized for code
-that uses very large basic blocks. It is slightly slower than the "local"
-allocator, but produces much better code.</li>
+ Levenstein contributed several big improvements. BigBlock is optimized for
+ code that uses very large basic blocks. It is slightly slower than the
+ "local" allocator, but produces much better code.</li>
<li>David Greene refactored the register allocator to split coalescing out from
-allocation, making coalescers pluggable.</li>
+ allocation, making coalescers pluggable.</li>
</ul>
@@ -168,13 +181,19 @@ allocation, making coalescers pluggable.</li>
</p>
<ul>
-<li>Bruno Cardoso Lopes contributed initial MIPS support.</li>
-<li>Bill Wendling added SSSE3 support.</li>
-<li>New Target independent if converter, ARM uses it so far</li>
+<li>Bruno Cardoso Lopes contributed initial MIPS support. It is sufficient to
+ run many small programs, but is still incomplete and is not yet
+ fully performant.</li>
+
+<li>Bill Wendling added SSSE3 support to the X86 backend.</li>
+
<li>Nicholas Geoffray contributed improved linux/ppc ABI and JIT support.</li>
+
<li>Dale Johannesen rewrote handling of 32-bit float values in the X86 backend
-when using the floating point stack, fixing several nasty bugs.</li>
-<li>Dan contributed rematerialization support for the X86 backend.</li>
+ when using the floating point stack, fixing several nasty bugs.</li>
+
+<li>Dan contributed rematerialization support for the X86 backend, in addition
+ to several X86-specific micro optimizations.</li>
</ul>
</div>
@@ -190,22 +209,28 @@ when using the floating point stack, fixing several nasty bugs.</li>
</p>
<ul>
-<li>Duncan and Anton exception handling in llvm-gcc 4.0/4.2</li>
+<li>Duncan and Anton made significant progress chasing down a number of problems
+ with C++ Zero-Cost exception handling in llvm-gcc 4.0 and 4.2. It is now at
+ the point where it "just works" on linux/x86-32 and has partial support on
+ other targets.</li>
-<li>Devang and Duncan: Bitfields, pragma pack</li>
+<li>Devang and Duncan fixed a huge number of bugs relating to bitfields, pragma
+ pack, and variable sized fields in structures.</li>
-<li>Tanya implemented support for __attribute__((noinline)) in llvm-gcc, and
-added support for generic variable annotations which are propagated into the
-LLVM IR, e.g. "<tt>int X __attribute__((annotate("myproperty")));</tt>".</li>
+<li>Tanya implemented support for <tt>__attribute__((noinline))</tt> in
+ llvm-gcc, and added support for generic variable annotations which are
+ propagated into the LLVM IR, e.g.
+ "<tt>int X __attribute__((annotate("myproperty")));</tt>".</li>
<li>Sheng Zhou and Christopher Lamb implemented alias analysis support for
-'restrict' arguments to functions.</li>
+"restrict" pointer arguments to functions.</li>
-<li>Duncan contributed support for trampolines (pointers to nested functions),
-currently only supported on x86 target.</li>
+<li>Duncan contributed support for trampolines (taking the address of a nested
+ functions), currently this is only supported in the x86 target.</li>
-<li> Lauro Ramos Venancio contributed support to encode alignment info in
-load and store instructions.</li>
+<li>Lauro Ramos Venancio contributed support to encode alignment info in
+ load and store instructions, the foundation for other alignment-related
+ work.</li>
</ul>
</div>
@@ -221,15 +246,22 @@ load and store instructions.</li>
</p>
<ul>
-<li>Neil Booth APFloat, foundation for long double support that will be wrapped
-up in 2.2. Dale contributed most of long double support, will be enabled in
-2.2.</li>
+<li>Neil Booth contributed a new "APFloat" class, which ensures that floating
+ point representation and constant folding is not dependent on the host
+ architecture that builds the application. This support is the foundation
+ for "long double" support that will be wrapped up in LLVM 2.2.</li>
+
+<li>Based on the APFloat class, Dale redesigned the internals of the ConstantFP
+ class and has been working on extending the core and optimizer components to
+ support various target-specific 'long double's. We expect this work to be
+ completed in LLVM 2.2.</li>
-<li>LLVM now provides an LLVMBuilder class which makes it significantly easier
-to create LLVM IR instructions.</li>
+<li>LLVM now provides an LLVMBuilder class, which makes it significantly easier
+ to create LLVM IR instructions.</li>
<li>Reid contributed support for intrinsics that take arbitrary integer typed
-arguments, Dan Gohman and Chandler extended it to support FP and vectors.</li>
+ arguments. Dan Gohman and Chandler extended it to support arbitrary
+ floating point arguments and vectors.</li>
</ul>
</div>
@@ -244,10 +276,13 @@ arguments, Dan Gohman and Chandler extended it to support FP and vectors.</li>
</p>
<ul>
-<li>BrainF frontend by Sterling Stein.</li>
+<li>Sterling Stein contributed a new BrainF frontend, located in llvm/examples.
+ This shows a some of the more modern APIs for building a front-end, and
+ demonstrates JIT compiler support.</li>
-<li>David Green contributed a new --enable-expensive-checks configure option
-which enables STL checking, and fixed several bugs exposed by it.</li>
+<li>David Green contributed a new <tt>--enable-expensive-checks</tt> configure
+ option which enables STL checking, and fixed several bugs exposed by
+ it.</li>
</ul>
</div>