| 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 | 
 |  |