commit | 1af90ee9e41795aded1f621e4b9ff57aeed31889 | [log] [tgz] |
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author | bjacob <benoitjacob@google.com> | Mon Mar 28 22:10:53 2022 -0400 |
committer | GitHub <noreply@github.com> | Mon Mar 28 22:10:53 2022 -0400 |
tree | b77952a0bf23c5bda0dbb1610eab686c46a11093 | |
parent | 675e01231716801d8f5e3e91e89ae78857bfc655 [diff] |
add IREE_BYTECODE_MODULE_FORCE_SYSTEM_DYLIB_LINKER (#8659) This allows Tracy to see into module code in benchmarks on platforms, at least Android and Unix, where it can't decipher embedded modules. While the motivation here is about benchmarks, the new CMake option added here also controls test modules (not just benchmark modules). That is for two reasons: * It's good to be testing the same code paths as one is benchmarking. * Just like this is useful for Tracy, this could also conceivably be useful for any other debugging tool, such as GDB, that one may need to run tests in, and which unlike profilers may be useful on more than just benchmarks.
IREE (Intermediate Representation Execution Environment, pronounced as “eerie”) is an MLIR-based end-to-end compiler and runtime that lowers Machine Learning (ML) models to a unified IR that scales up to meet the needs of the datacenter and down to satisfy the constraints and special considerations of mobile and edge deployments.
See our website for project details, user guides, and instructions on building from source.
IREE is still in its early phase. We have settled down on the overarching infrastructure and are actively improving various software components as well as project logistics. It is still quite far from ready for everyday use and is made available without any support at the moment. With that said, we welcome any kind of feedback on any communication channels!
See our website for more information.
IREE is licensed under the terms of the Apache 2.0 License with LLVM Exceptions. See LICENSE for more information.