Given the file
#include <stdio.h>
int main() {
printf("hello world\n");
return 0;
}
I can use the commands
clang -emit-llvm hello.c -c -o hello.bc
llc hello.bc -march=mipsel -relocation-model=static -o hello.s
to produce a nice bit of what looks like MIPS code, (placed below, to avoid breaking up the text) unfortunately, when I try and run it in my trusty SPIM simulator for MIPS I find that SPIM objects to almost every line of it. Not only the '.Section .mdebug.abi32' lines but also any line of the form '.cfi*' - and even more confusingly (because it looks like MIPS to me...) the line 'lui $2, %hi(__gnu_local_gp)" is objected to.
I am looking for some information on the different flavours of MIPS that SPIM and LLVM cope with, or someone to give an example of a MIPS simulator I can run that accepts the MIPS code that LLVM is producing.
.Section .mdebug.abi32
.previous
.file "hello.bc"
.text
.globl main
.align 2
.type main,@function
.set nomips16 # @main
.ent main
main:
.cfi_startproc
.frame $sp,32,$ra
.mask 0x80000000,-4
.fmask 0x00000000,0
.set noreorder
.set nomacro
# BB#0: # %entry
addiu $sp, $sp, -32
$tmp2:
.cfi_def_cfa_offset 32
sw $ra, 28($sp) # 4-byte Folded Spill
$tmp3:
.cfi_offset 31, -4
lui $2, %hi(__gnu_local_gp)
addiu $2, $2, %lo(__gnu_local_gp)
sw $2, 16($sp)
sw $zero, 24($sp)
lui $2, %hi($.str)
addiu $4, $2, %lo($.str)
jal printf
nop
addiu $2, $zero, 0
lw $ra, 28($sp) # 4-byte Folded Reload
addiu $sp, $sp, 32
jr $ra
nop
.set macro
.set reorder
.end main
$tmp4:
.size main, ($tmp4)-main
.cfi_endproc
.type $.str,@object # @.str
.section .rodata.str1.1,"aMS",@progbits,1
$.str:
.asciz "hello world\n"
.size $.str, 13