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authorBill Wendling <isanbard@gmail.com>2012-05-13 10:04:01 +0000
committerBill Wendling <isanbard@gmail.com>2012-05-13 10:04:01 +0000
commitf85a5db0f486e547510ad452e2ee8a814aadc64c (patch)
tree3e8d5a50ad1624cb0cf2a402ed6b174291e72004 /docs/ReleaseNotes.html
parent71b37e2a29056758765ae2dbc3d477c2562942d3 (diff)
Update.
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/branches/release_31@156734 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/ReleaseNotes.html')
-rw-r--r--docs/ReleaseNotes.html48
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diff --git a/docs/ReleaseNotes.html b/docs/ReleaseNotes.html
index 54cfa20568..3488479542 100644
--- a/docs/ReleaseNotes.html
+++ b/docs/ReleaseNotes.html
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
<html>
<head>
<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">
- <link rel="stylesheet" href="llvm.css" type="text/css">
+ <link rel="stylesheet" href="_static/llvm.css" type="text/css">
<title>LLVM 3.1 Release Notes</title>
</head>
<body>
@@ -96,6 +96,7 @@ Release Notes</a>.</h1>
<p>In the LLVM 3.1 time-frame, the Clang team has made many improvements:</p>
<ul>
+ <li>C++11 support is greatly expanded including lambdas, initializer lists, constexpr, user-defined literals, and atomics.</li>
<li>...</li>
</ul>
@@ -119,17 +120,30 @@ Release Notes</a>.</h1>
<div>
<p><a href="http://dragonegg.llvm.org/">DragonEgg</a> is a
<a href="http://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/plugins">gcc plugin</a> that replaces GCC's
- optimizers and code generators with LLVM's. It works with gcc-4.5 or gcc-4.6,
- targets the x86-32 and x86-64 processor families, and has been successfully
- used on the Darwin, FreeBSD, KFreeBSD, Linux and OpenBSD platforms. It fully
- supports Ada, C, C++ and Fortran. It has partial support for Go, Java, Obj-C
- and Obj-C++.</p>
+ optimizers and code generators with LLVM's. It works with gcc-4.5 and gcc-4.6
+ (and partially with gcc-4.7), can target the x86-32/x86-64 and ARM processor
+ families, and has been successfully used on the Darwin, FreeBSD, KFreeBSD,
+ Linux and OpenBSD platforms. It fully supports Ada, C, C++ and Fortran. It
+ has partial support for Go, Java, Obj-C and Obj-C++.</p>
<p>The 3.1 release has the following notable changes:</p>
<ul>
- <li>...</li>
+ <li>Partial support for gcc-4.7. Ada support is poor, but other languages work
+ fairly well.</li>
+
+ <li>Support for ARM processors. Some essential gcc headers that are needed to
+ build DragonEgg for ARM are not installed by gcc. To work around this,
+ copy the missing headers from the gcc source tree.</li>
+
+ <li>Better optimization for Fortran by exploiting the fact that Fortran scalar
+ arguments have 'restrict' semantics.</li>
+
+ <li>Better optimization for all languages by passing information about type
+ aliasing and type ranges to the LLVM optimizers.</li>
+
+ <li>A regression test-suite was added.</li>
</ul>
@@ -250,7 +264,21 @@ Release Notes</a>.</h1>
a lot of other language and tools projects. This section lists some of the
projects that have already been updated to work with LLVM 3.1.</p>
- ... to be filled in right before the release ...
+<h3>Pure</h3>
+
+<p>Pure (http://pure-lang.googlecode.com/) is an algebraic/functional
+programming language based on term rewriting. Programs are collections of
+equations which are used to evaluate expressions in a symbolic fashion. The
+interpreter uses LLVM as a backend to JIT-compile Pure programs to fast native
+code. Pure offers dynamic typing, eager and lazy evaluation, lexical closures, a
+hygienic macro system (also based on term rewriting), built-in list and matrix
+support (including list and matrix comprehensions) and an easy-to-use interface
+to C and other programming languages (including the ability to load LLVM bitcode
+modules, and inline C, C++, Fortran and Faust code in Pure programs if the
+corresponding LLVM-enabled compilers are installed).</p>
+
+<p>Pure version 0.54 has been tested and is known to work with LLVM 3.1 (and
+continues to work with older LLVM releases >= 2.5).</p>
</div>
@@ -536,6 +564,9 @@ syntax, there are still significant gaps in that support.</p>
<li>The <tt>unwind</tt> instruction is now gone. With the introduction of the
new exception handling system in LLVM 3.0, the <tt>unwind</tt> instruction
became obsolete.</li>
+ <li>LLVM 3.0 and earlier automatically added the returns_twice fo functions
+ like setjmp based on the name. This functionality was removed in 3.1.
+ This affects Clang users, if -ffreestanding is used.</li>
<li>....</li>
</ul>
@@ -604,6 +635,7 @@ syntax, there are still significant gaps in that support.</p>
<ul>
<li>llvm-stress is a command line tool for generating random .ll files to fuzz
different LLVM components. </li>
+ <li>llvm-ld has been removed. Use llvm-link or Clang instead.</li>
<li>....</li>
</ul>