Hi Holger, On Mon, Feb 07, 2005 at 08:46 +0100, holger krekel wrote: > > - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - recorded stdout - - - - - - - - - - - - - > - - > > modname simple1_wrap > > working in /tmp/usession-129 > > llvm-as /tmp/usession-129/simple1.ll -f -o simple1.bc > > llvmc -f -O3 simple1.bc -o simple1_optimized.o > > llc simple1_optimized.o.bc -f -o simple1.s > > > _______________________________________________________________________________ > > ============= tests finished: 3 passed, 1 failed in 9.79 seconds > ============= > > > > contents of usession-129 are on codespeak.net:/home/hpk/usession-129 > > i am beginning to suspect my installation. Is there an easy way to > > verify that my installation works? Since simple1 is a very, well, simple function so it should be a good test whether your installation works. This is all very strange. I checked your simple1.bc file and it is identical to the file my LLVM produces so your installation can't be a total loss. Maybe llvmc behaves strangely if the frontend is missing, it's just some sort of wrapper for all the other llvm tools. I'll change build_llvm_module to not use llvmc tonight.
> > i manually redid the last steps above and at > > llvmc -f -O3 simple1.bc -o simple1_optimized.o > llvmc: Unexpected unknown exception occurred. > > happens but doesn't return exitcode != 0 and so the cmd execution > doesn't fail properly. So the original "Bytecode corruption" > really means it can't find the file i think :-) > > holger > You could also try to do the translation again using %~/pypy/translator/llvm> python -i genllvm.py >>> t = Translator(test.my_gcd) >>> a = t.annotate([int, int]) >>> f = llvmcompile(t, false) which turns optimization off (llvmc is then not used at all). If that works the important llvm tools work (namely the assembler llvm-as and the code-generator llc). Thanks for trying all this! Regards, Carl Friedrich _______________________________________________ [email protected] http://codespeak.net/mailman/listinfo/pypy-dev
