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Welcome to the Pre-Release of the Automatic Pool Allocator! LICENSE: ======== Before using the Automatic Pool Allocator, you should read the pre-release license in LICENSE.TXT. KNOWN ISSUES: ============= DSA is undergoing significant changes and may not be entirely stable or correct. See lib/DSA/README. Windows does not support loadable modules in LLVM, so poolalloc must be linked into opt. BUILDING: ========= To build the Automatic Pool Allocator, you will need to have installed and compiled LLVM. Once that is done, you can build the Automatic Pool Allocator using the following steps: 1. Run the configure script to tell the build system LLVM has been installed. Use the --with-llvmsrc=<dir> option to specify the location of the LLVM source code, and use the --with-llvmobj=<dir> option to specify the location of the LLVM object code. For example, if the user joe with home directory of /usr/home/joe has the LLVM source in /usr/home/joe/llvm, and it was configured with ./configure --with-objroot=/tmp, then the Automatic Pool Allocator should be configured with: > ./configure --with-llvmsrc=/usr/home/joe/llvm \ --with-llvmobj=/tmp/llvm 2. Using GNU Make (sometimes called gmake), type "make" to build the Automatic Pool Allocator: > make 3. To install the pool allocator bytecode libraries into the C front end, use make with the install target: > make install USING THE POOL ALLOCATOR: ========================= To use the Automatic Pool Allocator optimization pass, you will need to explicitly load it into the opt program: > opt -load <path to pool allocator> -poolalloc <other opt options> To link and run programs with the pool allocator, you will need to have the poolalloc bytecode library in your LLVM_LIB_SEARCH_PATH. If you have followed the directions in the "Getting Started Guide" for LLVM, your LLVM_LIB_SEARCH_PATH environment variable already points to the C front end's directory of bytecode libraries. Just use the install target (mentioned above) of make to install the poolalloc library into that directory. To link a bytecode file once it has been optimized, you can do the following: > llvmgcc -o <output file> <optimized bytecode file> -lpoolalloc ...where llvmgcc is an alias to the GCC C front end. This will generate a bytecode file that can be executed. BUGS: ===== Please see our website for information on how to report bugs (http://llvm.cs.uiuc.edu/docs/HowToSubmitABug.html). LLVM DEVELOPER'S MAILING LIST ============================= The LLVM Developer's Mailing List provides announcements and general discussion about LLVM. The list is low volume. You can subscribe to it at http://lists.llvm.org/mailman/listinfo/llvm-dev.
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