[LLVMdev] Fetching the functions in C files

Eli Bendersky eliben at google.com
Tue Oct 21 17:32:33 PDT 2014


On Tue, Oct 21, 2014 at 5:22 PM, Amiir H. Ashouri <
amirhossein.ashouri at gmail.com> wrote:

> Thanks Markus.
>
> Having llvm-as to turn the extracted function.bc file to .ll caused an
> error saying:
>
>
llvm-as is for converting bitcode (.bc) to readable LLVM IR (.ll)
llvm-dis is for the other direction

Eli


> *llvm-as-3.4: function_bc:1:1: error: expected top-level entity*
>
> *BC! #AI29bEBB2I (some more binary)*
>
> This error is just the same error that I received while using llvm-extract
> on a .c file (not .bc or .ll).
>
>
> Do I have to include other things in the command ? I mean generating a
> function.ll without anything as header, Module ID, etc might be wrong.
> right ?
>
>
> -Amir
>
> On Tue, Oct 21, 2014 at 7:51 PM, Markus Timpl <tima0900 at googlemail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> You can use llvm-dis to turn .bc files into .ll files.
>> Am 22.10.2014 01:44 schrieb "Amir H. Ashouri" <
>> amirhossein.ashouri at gmail.com>:
>>
>> Thanks for the answer John.
>>>
>>> I checked the llvm-extract and it works, but my concern is if the output
>>> of the extract could be saved as .ll instead of .bc. Sort of human-readable
>>> format so that I can parse it. Otherwise, it is better to parse the foo.ll
>>> file right away instead of using the extract tool.
>>>
>>> Please correct me if I am wrong.
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>>
>>> -Amir
>>>
>>> On Tue, Oct 21, 2014 at 7:02 PM, John Criswell <jtcriswel at gmail.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>>  On 10/21/14, 5:27 PM, Amir H. Ashouri wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Hello Everyone,
>>>>
>>>>  Just subscribed to the mailing list.
>>>>
>>>>  I was wondering how I am going to fetch each functions of a specific
>>>> source code file (c/c++) using the LLVM framework. For instance, I would
>>>> like to apply certain passes using llvm-opt on certain functions not the
>>>> whole file.
>>>>
>>>>  I would appreciate any hints or idea leading me about the starting
>>>> point.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> You might be able to use the llvm-extract tool to pull out the
>>>> functions you want into a separate bitcode file and then use opt to
>>>> optimize them.  You'd then need to create a second bitcode file that
>>>> contains the remaining functions (using llvm-extract again).  Finally,
>>>> you'd take the optimized bitcode file and the bitcode file containing the
>>>> other functions and link them together using clang and libLTO or the
>>>> llvm-link tool.
>>>>
>>>> Regards,
>>>>
>>>> John Criswell
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>  Regards,
>>>>
>>>>  -Amir
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>> LLVM Developers mailing listLLVMdev at cs.uiuc.edu         http://llvm.cs.uiuc.eduhttp://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/mailman/listinfo/llvmdev
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>> John Criswell
>>>> Assistant Professor
>>>> Department of Computer Science, University of Rochesterhttp://www.cs.rochester.edu/u/criswell
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
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>
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