LLVM Weekly - #208, Dec 25th 2017

Welcome to the two hundred and eighth issue of LLVM Weekly, a weekly newsletter (published every Monday) covering developments in LLVM, Clang, and related projects. LLVM Weekly is brought to you by Alex Bradbury. Subscribe to future issues at http://llvmweekly.org and pass it on to anyone else you think may be interested. Please send any tips or feedback to asb@asbradbury.org, or @llvmweekly or @asbradbury on Twitter.

For those of you who celebrate it, Merry Christmas! This festive edition of LLVM Weekly is packed full of what you really wanted for christmas - LLVM development summaries.

News and articles from around the web

LLVM 5.0.1 has been released.

Kotlin/Native v0.5 is here. This release includes support for LLVM 5, as well as C, Objective C and Swift interoperability.

Portable Computing Language (pocl) v1.0 has been released. Pocl is an open-source implementation of the OpenCL standard. This release adds support for LLVM/Clang 4.0 and 5.0, experimental NVIDIA GPU support, and passing OpenCL 1.2 conformance tests for some targets.

On the mailing lists

LLVM commits

The hot path of llvm-symbolizer has been rewritten for higher performance. With the new implementation, llvm-symbolizer is over 2x faster for symbolizing backtraces from LLVM unit-tests. r321345.

Upstreaming of MC layer patches for AArch64 SVE is continuing, with support for parsing SVE predicate registers and the ZIP1/ZIP2 instructions. r320970, r320973.

The generated MatchTable used for GlobalISel is now more efficient. r321017.

MemCpyOptimizer can now optimize across basic blocks. r321138.

Clang commits

Clang (re)gained ARMv8.2-A FP16 vector intrinsics. r321294.

The Clang ASTDumper now supports a 'printing policy', allowing the output formatting to be specialised for C++. r321310.

Other project commits

LLD gained support for optimising Arm PLT sequences. r320987.

The LLVM test suite build system gained the CPU architecture detection capabilities. r321143.

Review corner

The LLVM Weekly review corner serves to highlight patches that are stuck waiting awaiting review, or work from first-time contributors. See here for more information and how to submit you work for inclusion. Of course the hope is that highlighting these patches will enable LLVM Weekly readers will step up and help to get them merged. I'll be reporting back each week on any activity generated on these patches, as well as sharing a new batch. If you want your patch included you must submit it via the linked form.