Date: Tue, 13 Feb 2001 13:29:52 -0600 (CST) From: Chris Lattner <sabre@nondot.org> To: Vikram S. Adve <vadve@cs.uiuc.edu> Subject: LLVM Concerns... I've updated the documentation to include load store and allocation instructions (please take a look and let me know if I'm on the right track): file:/home/vadve/lattner/llvm/docs/LangRef.html#memoryops I have a couple of concerns I would like to bring up: 1. Reference types Right now, I've spec'd out the language to have a pointer type, which works fine for lots of stuff... except that Java really has references: constrained pointers that cannot be manipulated: added and subtracted, moved, etc... Do we want to have a type like this? It could be very nice for analysis (pointer always points to the start of an object, etc...) and more closely matches Java semantics. The pointer type would be kept for C++ like semantics. Through analysis, C++ pointers could be promoted to references in the LLVM representation. 2. Our "implicit" memory references in assembly language: After thinking about it, this model has two problems: A. If you do pointer analysis and realize that two stores are independent and can share the same memory source object, there is no way to represent this in either the bytecode or assembly. B. When parsing assembly/bytecode, we effectively have to do a full SSA generation/PHI node insertion pass to build the dependencies when we don't want the "pinned" representation. This is not cool. I'm tempted to make memory references explicit in both the assembly and bytecode to get around this... what do you think? -Chris