LLVM get constant integer back from Value*

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失恋的感觉
失恋的感觉 2020-12-09 08:45

I create a llvm::Value* from a integer constant like this:

llvm::Value* constValue = llvm::ConstantInt::get( llvmContext , llvm::APInt( node->someInt() ))         


        
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  • 2020-12-09 09:06

    Given llvm::Value* foo and you know that foo is actually a ConstantInt, I believe that the idiomatic LLVM code approach is to use dyn_cast as follows:

    if (llvm::ConstantInt* CI = dyn_cast<llvm::ConstantInt>(foo)) {
      // foo indeed is a ConstantInt, we can use CI here
    }
    else {
      // foo was not actually a ConstantInt
    }
    

    If you're absolutely sure that foo is a ConstantInt and are ready to be hit with an assertion failure if it isn't, you can use cast instead of dyn_cast.


    P.S. Do note that cast and dyn_cast are part of LLVM's own implementation of RTTI. dyn_cast acts somewhat similarly to the standard C++ dynamic_cast, though there are differences in implementation and performance (as can be read here).

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  • 2020-12-09 09:09

    Eli's answer is great, but it's missing the final part, which is getting the integer back. The full picture should look like this:

    if (ConstantInt* CI = dyn_cast<ConstantInt>(Val)) {
      if (CI->getBitWidth() <= 32) {
        constIntValue = CI->getSExtValue();
      }
    }
    

    Of course, you can also change it to <= 64 if constIntValue is a 64-bit integer, etc.

    And as Eli wrote, if you are confident the value is indeed of type ConstInt, you can use cast<ConstantInt> instead of dyn_cast.

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