//===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// // Random Notes //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// C90/C99/C++ Comparisons: http://david.tribble.com/text/cdiffs.htm //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// To time GCC preprocessing speed without output, use: "time gcc -MM file" This is similar to -Eonly. //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// Creating and using a PTH file for performance measurement (use a release build). $ clang -ccc-pch-is-pth -x objective-c-header INPUTS/Cocoa_h.m -o /tmp/tokencache $ clang -cc1 -token-cache /tmp/tokencache INPUTS/Cocoa_h.m //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// C++ Template Instantiation benchmark: http://users.rcn.com/abrahams/instantiation_speed/index.html //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// TODO: File Manager Speedup: We currently do a lot of stat'ing for files that don't exist, particularly when lots of -I paths exist (e.g. see the example, check for failures in stat in FileManager::getFile). It would be far better to make the following changes: 1. FileEntry contains a sys::Path instead of a std::string for Name. 2. sys::Path contains timestamp and size, lazily computed. Eliminate from FileEntry. 3. File UIDs are created on request, not when files are opened. These changes make it possible to efficiently have FileEntry objects for files that exist on the file system, but have not been used yet. Once this is done: 1. DirectoryEntry gets a boolean value "has read entries". When false, not all entries in the directory are in the file mgr, when true, they are. 2. Instead of stat'ing the file in FileManager::getFile, check to see if the dir has been read. If so, fail immediately, if not, read the dir, then retry. 3. Reading the dir uses the getdirentries syscall, creating an FileEntry for all files found. //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// // Specifying targets: -triple and -arch //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// The clang supports "-triple" and "-arch" options. At most one -triple and one -arch option may be specified. Both are optional. The "selection of target" behavior is defined as follows: (1) If the user does not specify -triple, we default to the host triple. (2) If the user specifies a -arch, that overrides the arch in the host or specified triple. //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===// verifyInputConstraint and verifyOutputConstraint should not return bool. Instead we should return something like: enum VerifyConstraintResult { Valid, // Output only OutputOperandConstraintLacksEqualsCharacter, MatchingConstraintNotValidInOutputOperand, // Input only InputOperandConstraintContainsEqualsCharacter, MatchingConstraintReferencesInvalidOperandNumber, // Both PercentConstraintUsedWithLastOperand }; //===---------------------------------------------------------------------===//