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  • Book Overview & Buying LLVM Code Generation
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LLVM Code Generation

LLVM Code Generation

By : Quentin Colombet
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LLVM Code Generation

LLVM Code Generation

1 (1)
By: Quentin Colombet

Overview of this book

The LLVM infrastructure is a popular compiler ecosystem widely used in the tech industry and academia. This technology is crucial for both experienced and aspiring compiler developers looking to make an impact in the field. Written by Quentin Colombet, a veteran LLVM contributor and architect of the GlobalISel framework, this book provides a primer on the main aspects of LLVM, with an emphasis on its backend infrastructure; that is, everything needed to transform the intermediate representation (IR) produced by frontends like Clang into assembly code and object files. You’ll learn how to write an optimizing code generator for a toy backend in LLVM. The chapters will guide you step by step through building this backend while exploring key concepts, such as the ABI, cost model, and register allocation. You’ll also find out how to express these concepts using LLVM's existing infrastructure and how established backends address these challenges. Furthermore, the book features code snippets that demonstrate the actual APIs. By the end of this book, you’ll have gained a deeper understanding of LLVM. The concepts presented are expected to remain stable across different LLVM versions, making this book a reliable quick reference guide for understanding LLVM.
Table of Contents (30 chapters)
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Part 1: Getting Started with LLVM
8
Part 2: Middle-End: LLVM IR to LLVM IR
13
Part 3: Introduction to the Backend
17
Part 4: LLVM IR to Machine IR
22
Part 5: Final Lowering and Optimizations
28
Other Books You May Enjoy
29
Index

Assembling with the LLVM infrastructure

The LLVM infrastructure uses the same overall pipeline for producing both textual assembly files and object files.

In both cases, the process is guided by your target-specific AsmPrinter pass, which you wrote in Chapter 12. What changes to produce the different types of files is the actual implementation of the MCStreamer class. Figure 21.2 captures this difference:

Figure 21.2: How the target-specific AsmPrinter class produces a textual assembly or binary file

Figure 21.2: How the target-specific AsmPrinter class produces a textual assembly or binary file

In Figure 21.2, you can see that the abstract MCStreamer class is instantiated with the MCAsmStreamer subclass to produce a textual assembly file (.s) or with one of the MCObjectStreamer subclasses to produce the related binary file format (.o): the MCELFStreamer class for ELF, the MCXCoffStreamer class for COFF, and so on.

The subclasses of the MCObjectStreamer class encapsulate all the logic to produce the layout of the related object file format, including the...

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LLVM Code Generation
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