1 <html> 2 <head> 3 <title>Clang Compiler User's Manual</title> 4 <link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="../menu.css" /> 5 <link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="../content.css" /> 6 <style type="text/css"> 7 td { 8 vertical-align: top; 9 } 10 </style> 11 </head> 12 <body> 13 14 <!--#include virtual="../menu.html.incl"--> 15 16 <div id="content"> 17 18 <h1>Clang Compiler User's Manual</h1> 19 20 <ul> 21 <li><a href="#intro">Introduction</a> 22 <ul> 23 <li><a href="#terminology">Terminology</a></li> 24 <li><a href="#basicusage">Basic Usage</a></li> 25 </ul> 26 </li> 27 <li><a href="#commandline">Command Line Options</a> 28 <ul> 29 <li><a href="#cl_diagnostics">Options to Control Error and Warning 30 Messages</a></li> 31 </ul> 32 </li> 33 <li><a href="#general_features">Language and Target-Independent Features</a> 34 <ul> 35 <li><a href="#diagnostics">Controlling Errors and Warnings</a> 36 <ul> 37 <li><a href="#diagnostics_display">Controlling How Clang Displays Diagnostics</a></li> 38 <li><a href="#diagnostics_mappings">Diagnostic Mappings</a></li> 39 <li><a href="#diagnostics_categories">Diagnostic Categories</a></li> 40 <li><a href="#diagnostics_commandline">Controlling Diagnostics via Command Line Flags</a></li> 41 <li><a href="#diagnostics_pragmas">Controlling Diagnostics via Pragmas</a></li> 42 <li><a href="#diagnostics_enable_everything">Enabling All Warnings</a></li> 43 <li><a href="#analyzer_diagnositics">Controlling Static Analyzer Diagnostics</a></li> 44 </ul> 45 </li> 46 <li><a href="#precompiledheaders">Precompiled Headers</a></li> 47 <li><a href="#codegen">Controlling Code Generation</a></li> 48 </ul> 49 </li> 50 <li><a href="#c">C Language Features</a> 51 <ul> 52 <li><a href="#c_ext">Extensions supported by clang</a></li> 53 <li><a href="#c_modes">Differences between various standard modes</a></li> 54 <li><a href="#c_unimpl_gcc">GCC extensions not implemented yet</a></li> 55 <li><a href="#c_unsupp_gcc">Intentionally unsupported GCC extensions</a></li> 56 <li><a href="#c_ms">Microsoft extensions</a></li> 57 </ul> 58 </li> 59 <li><a href="#target_features">Target-Specific Features and Limitations</a> 60 <ul> 61 <li><a href="#target_arch">CPU Architectures Features and Limitations</a> 62 <ul> 63 <li><a href="#target_arch_x86">X86</a></li> 64 <li><a href="#target_arch_arm">ARM</a></li> 65 <li><a href="#target_arch_other">Other platforms</a></li> 66 </ul> 67 </li> 68 <li><a href="#target_os">Operating System Features and Limitations</a> 69 <ul> 70 <li><a href="#target_os_darwin">Darwin (Mac OS/X)</a></li> 71 <li>Linux, etc.</li> 72 <li><a href="#target_os_win32">Windows</a></li> 73 </ul> 74 </li> 75 </ul> 76 </li> 77 </ul> 78 79 80 <!-- ======================================================================= --> 81 <h2 id="intro">Introduction</h2> 82 <!-- ======================================================================= --> 83 84 <p>The Clang Compiler is an open-source compiler for the C family of programming 85 languages, aiming to be the best in class implementation of these languages. 86 Clang builds on the LLVM optimizer and code generator, allowing it to provide 87 high-quality optimization and code generation support for many targets. For 88 more general information, please see the <a href="http://clang.llvm.org">Clang 89 Web Site</a> or the <a href="http://llvm.org">LLVM Web Site</a>.</p> 90 91 <p>This document describes important notes about using Clang as a compiler for 92 an end-user, documenting the supported features, command line options, etc. If 93 you are interested in using Clang to build a tool that processes code, please 94 see <a href="InternalsManual.html">the Clang Internals Manual</a>. If you are 95 interested in the <a href="http://clang.llvm.org/StaticAnalysis.html">Clang 96 Static Analyzer</a>, please see its web page.</p> 97 98 <p>Clang is designed to support the C family of programming languages, which 99 includes <a href="#c">C</a>, <a href="#objc">Objective-C</a>, <a 100 href="#cxx">C++</a>, and <a href="#objcxx">Objective-C++</a> as well as many 101 dialects of those. For language-specific information, please see the 102 corresponding language specific section:</p> 103 104 <ul> 105 <li><a href="#c">C Language</a>: K&R C, ANSI C89, ISO C90, ISO C94 106 (C89+AMD1), ISO C99 (+TC1, TC2, TC3). </li> 107 <li><a href="#objc">Objective-C Language</a>: ObjC 1, ObjC 2, ObjC 2.1, plus 108 variants depending on base language.</li> 109 <li><a href="#cxx">C++ Language Features</a></li> 110 <li><a href="#objcxx">Objective C++ Language</a></li> 111 </ul> 112 113 <p>In addition to these base languages and their dialects, Clang supports a 114 broad variety of language extensions, which are documented in the corresponding 115 language section. These extensions are provided to be compatible with the GCC, 116 Microsoft, and other popular compilers as well as to improve functionality 117 through Clang-specific features. The Clang driver and language features are 118 intentionally designed to be as compatible with the GNU GCC compiler as 119 reasonably possible, easing migration from GCC to Clang. In most cases, code 120 "just works".</p> 121 122 <p>In addition to language specific features, Clang has a variety of features 123 that depend on what CPU architecture or operating system is being compiled for. 124 Please see the <a href="#target_features">Target-Specific Features and 125 Limitations</a> section for more details.</p> 126 127 <p>The rest of the introduction introduces some basic <a 128 href="#terminology">compiler terminology</a> that is used throughout this manual 129 and contains a basic <a href="#basicusage">introduction to using Clang</a> 130 as a command line compiler.</p> 131 132 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 133 <h3 id="terminology">Terminology</h3> 134 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 135 136 <p>Front end, parser, backend, preprocessor, undefined behavior, diagnostic, 137 optimizer</p> 138 139 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 140 <h3 id="basicusage">Basic Usage</h3> 141 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 142 143 <p>Intro to how to use a C compiler for newbies.</p> 144 <p> 145 compile + link 146 147 compile then link 148 149 debug info 150 151 enabling optimizations 152 153 picking a language to use, defaults to C99 by default. Autosenses based on 154 extension. 155 156 using a makefile 157 </p> 158 159 160 <!-- ======================================================================= --> 161 <h2 id="commandline">Command Line Options</h2> 162 <!-- ======================================================================= --> 163 164 <p> 165 This section is generally an index into other sections. It does not go into 166 depth on the ones that are covered by other sections. However, the first part 167 introduces the language selection and other high level options like -c, -g, etc. 168 </p> 169 170 171 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 172 <h3 id="cl_diagnostics">Options to Control Error and Warning Messages</h3> 173 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 174 175 <p><b>-Werror</b>: Turn warnings into errors.</p> 176 <p><b>-Werror=foo</b>: Turn warning "foo" into an error.</p> 177 <p><b>-Wno-error=foo</b>: Turn warning "foo" into an warning even if -Werror is 178 specified.</p> 179 <p><b>-Wfoo</b>: Enable warning foo</p> 180 <p><b>-Wno-foo</b>: Disable warning foo</p> 181 <p><b>-w</b>: Disable all warnings.</p> 182 <p><b>-pedantic</b>: Warn on language extensions.</p> 183 <p><b>-pedantic-errors</b>: Error on language extensions.</p> 184 <p><b>-Wsystem-headers</b>: Enable warnings from system headers.</p> 185 186 <p><b>-ferror-limit=123</b>: Stop emitting diagnostics after 123 errors have 187 been produced. The default is 20, and the error limit can be disabled with 188 -ferror-limit=0.</p> 189 190 <p><b>-ftemplate-backtrace-limit=123</b>: Only emit up to 123 template instantiation notes within the template instantiation backtrace for a single warning or error. The default is 10, and the limit can be disabled with -ftemplate-backtrace-limit=0.</p> 191 192 <!-- ================================================= --> 193 <h4 id="cl_diag_formatting">Formatting of Diagnostics</h4> 194 <!-- ================================================= --> 195 196 <p>Clang aims to produce beautiful diagnostics by default, particularly for new 197 users that first come to Clang. However, different people have different 198 preferences, and sometimes Clang is driven by another program that wants to 199 parse simple and consistent output, not a person. For these cases, Clang 200 provides a wide range of options to control the exact output format of the 201 diagnostics that it generates.</p> 202 203 <dl> 204 205 <!-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --> 206 <dt id="opt_fshow-column"><b>-f[no-]show-column</b>: Print column number in 207 diagnostic.</dt> 208 <dd>This option, which defaults to on, controls whether or not Clang prints the 209 column number of a diagnostic. For example, when this is enabled, Clang will 210 print something like: 211 212 <pre> 213 test.c:28:8: warning: extra tokens at end of #endif directive [-Wextra-tokens] 214 #endif bad 215 ^ 216 // 217 </pre> 218 219 <p>When this is disabled, Clang will print "test.c:28: warning..." with no 220 column number.</p> 221 </dd> 222 223 <!-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --> 224 <dt id="opt_fshow-source-location"><b>-f[no-]show-source-location</b>: Print 225 source file/line/column information in diagnostic.</dt> 226 <dd>This option, which defaults to on, controls whether or not Clang prints the 227 filename, line number and column number of a diagnostic. For example, 228 when this is enabled, Clang will print something like: 229 230 <pre> 231 test.c:28:8: warning: extra tokens at end of #endif directive [-Wextra-tokens] 232 #endif bad 233 ^ 234 // 235 </pre> 236 237 <p>When this is disabled, Clang will not print the "test.c:28:8: " part.</p> 238 </dd> 239 240 <!-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --> 241 <dt id="opt_fcaret-diagnostics"><b>-f[no-]caret-diagnostics</b>: Print source 242 line and ranges from source code in diagnostic.</dt> 243 <dd>This option, which defaults to on, controls whether or not Clang prints the 244 source line, source ranges, and caret when emitting a diagnostic. For example, 245 when this is enabled, Clang will print something like: 246 247 <pre> 248 test.c:28:8: warning: extra tokens at end of #endif directive [-Wextra-tokens] 249 #endif bad 250 ^ 251 // 252 </pre> 253 </dd> 254 <!-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --> 255 <dt id="opt_fcolor_diagnostics"><b>-f[no-]color-diagnostics</b>: </dt> 256 <dd>This option, which defaults to on when a color-capable terminal is 257 detected, controls whether or not Clang prints diagnostics in color. 258 When this option is enabled, Clang will use colors to highlight 259 specific parts of the diagnostic, e.g., 260 <pre> 261 <b><font color="black">test.c:28:8: <font color="magenta">warning</font>: extra tokens at end of #endif directive [-Wextra-tokens]</font></b> 262 #endif bad 263 <font color="green">^</font> 264 <font color="green">//</font> 265 </pre> 266 267 <p>When this is disabled, Clang will just print:</p> 268 269 <pre> 270 test.c:2:8: warning: extra tokens at end of #endif directive [-Wextra-tokens] 271 #endif bad 272 ^ 273 // 274 </pre> 275 </dd> 276 <!-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --> 277 <dt id="opt_fdiagnostics-format"><b>-fdiagnostics-format=clang/msvc/vi</b>: 278 Changes diagnostic output format to better match IDEs and command line tools.</dt> 279 <dd>This option controls the output format of the filename, line number, and column printed in diagnostic messages. The options, and their affect on formatting a simple conversion diagnostic, follow: 280 281 <dl> 282 <dt><b>clang</b> (default)</dt> 283 <dd> 284 <pre>t.c:3:11: warning: conversion specifies type 'char *' but the argument has type 'int'</pre> 285 </dd> 286 287 <dt><b>msvc</b></dt> 288 <dd> 289 <pre>t.c(3,11) : warning: conversion specifies type 'char *' but the argument has type 'int'</pre> 290 </dd> 291 292 <dt><b>vi</b></dt> 293 <dd> 294 <pre>t.c +3:11: warning: conversion specifies type 'char *' but the argument has type 'int'</pre> 295 </dd> 296 </dl> 297 </dd> 298 299 <!-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --> 300 <dt id="opt_fdiagnostics-show-name"><b>-f[no-]diagnostics-show-name</b>: 301 Enable the display of the diagnostic name.</dt> 302 <dd>This option, which defaults to off, controls whether or not 303 Clang prints the associated name.</dd> 304 <br> 305 <!-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --> 306 <dt id="opt_fdiagnostics-show-option"><b>-f[no-]diagnostics-show-option</b>: 307 Enable <tt>[-Woption]</tt> information in diagnostic line.</dt> 308 <dd>This option, which defaults to on, 309 controls whether or not Clang prints the associated <A 310 href="#cl_diag_warning_groups">warning group</a> option name when outputting 311 a warning diagnostic. For example, in this output: 312 313 <pre> 314 test.c:28:8: warning: extra tokens at end of #endif directive [-Wextra-tokens] 315 #endif bad 316 ^ 317 // 318 </pre> 319 320 <p>Passing <b>-fno-diagnostics-show-option</b> will prevent Clang from printing 321 the [<a href="#opt_Wextra-tokens">-Wextra-tokens</a>] information in the 322 diagnostic. This information tells you the flag needed to enable or disable the 323 diagnostic, either from the command line or through <a 324 href="#pragma_GCC_diagnostic">#pragma GCC diagnostic</a>.</dd> 325 326 <!-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --> 327 <dt id="opt_fdiagnostics-show-category"><b>-fdiagnostics-show-category=none/id/name</b>: 328 Enable printing category information in diagnostic line.</dt> 329 <dd>This option, which defaults to "none", 330 controls whether or not Clang prints the category associated with a diagnostic 331 when emitting it. Each diagnostic may or many not have an associated category, 332 if it has one, it is listed in the diagnostic categorization field of the 333 diagnostic line (in the []'s). 334 335 <p>For example, a format string warning will produce these three renditions 336 based on the setting of this option:</p> 337 338 <pre> 339 t.c:3:11: warning: conversion specifies type 'char *' but the argument has type 'int' [-Wformat] 340 t.c:3:11: warning: conversion specifies type 'char *' but the argument has type 'int' [-Wformat<b>,1</b>] 341 t.c:3:11: warning: conversion specifies type 'char *' but the argument has type 'int' [-Wformat<b>,Format String</b>] 342 </pre> 343 344 <p>This category can be used by clients that want to group diagnostics by 345 category, so it should be a high level category. We want dozens of these, not 346 hundreds or thousands of them.</p> 347 </dd> 348 349 350 351 <!-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --> 352 <dt id="opt_fdiagnostics-fixit-info"><b>-f[no-]diagnostics-fixit-info</b>: 353 Enable "FixIt" information in the diagnostics output.</dt> 354 <dd>This option, which defaults to on, controls whether or not Clang prints the 355 information on how to fix a specific diagnostic underneath it when it knows. 356 For example, in this output: 357 358 <pre> 359 test.c:28:8: warning: extra tokens at end of #endif directive [-Wextra-tokens] 360 #endif bad 361 ^ 362 // 363 </pre> 364 365 <p>Passing <b>-fno-diagnostics-fixit-info</b> will prevent Clang from printing 366 the "//" line at the end of the message. This information is useful for users 367 who may not understand what is wrong, but can be confusing for machine 368 parsing.</p> 369 </dd> 370 371 <!-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --> 372 <dt id="opt_fdiagnostics-print-source-range-info"> 373 <b>-f[no-]diagnostics-print-source-range-info</b>: 374 Print machine parsable information about source ranges.</dt> 375 <dd>This option, which defaults to off, controls whether or not Clang prints 376 information about source ranges in a machine parsable format after the 377 file/line/column number information. The information is a simple sequence of 378 brace enclosed ranges, where each range lists the start and end line/column 379 locations. For example, in this output: 380 381 <pre> 382 exprs.c:47:15:{47:8-47:14}{47:17-47:24}: error: invalid operands to binary expression ('int *' and '_Complex float') 383 P = (P-42) + Gamma*4; 384 ~~~~~~ ^ ~~~~~~~ 385 </pre> 386 387 <p>The {}'s are generated by -fdiagnostics-print-source-range-info.</p> 388 </dd> 389 390 <!-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --> 391 <dt id="opt_fdiagnostics-parseable-fixits"> 392 <b>-fdiagnostics-parseable-fixits</b>: 393 Print Fix-Its in a machine parseable form.</dt> 394 <dd><p>This option makes Clang print available Fix-Its in a machine parseable format at the end of diagnostics. The following example illustrates the format:</p> 395 396 <pre> 397 fix-it:"t.cpp":{7:25-7:29}:"Gamma" 398 </pre> 399 400 <p>The range printed is a half-open range, so in this example the characters at 401 column 25 up to but not including column 29 on line 7 in t.cpp should be 402 replaced with the string "Gamma". Either the range or the replacement 403 string may be empty (representing strict insertions and strict erasures, 404 respectively). Both the file name and the insertion string escape backslash (as 405 "\\"), tabs (as "\t"), newlines (as "\n"), double 406 quotes(as "\"") and non-printable characters (as octal 407 "\xxx").</p> 408 </dd> 409 410 </dl> 411 412 413 414 415 <!-- ===================================================== --> 416 <h4 id="cl_diag_warning_groups">Individual Warning Groups</h4> 417 <!-- ===================================================== --> 418 419 <p>TODO: Generate this from tblgen. Define one anchor per warning group.</p> 420 421 422 <dl> 423 424 425 <!-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --> 426 <dt id="opt_Wextra-tokens"><b>-Wextra-tokens</b>: Warn about excess tokens at 427 the end of a preprocessor directive.</dt> 428 <dd>This option, which defaults to on, enables warnings about extra tokens at 429 the end of preprocessor directives. For example: 430 431 <pre> 432 test.c:28:8: warning: extra tokens at end of #endif directive [-Wextra-tokens] 433 #endif bad 434 ^ 435 </pre> 436 437 <p>These extra tokens are not strictly conforming, and are usually best handled 438 by commenting them out.</p> 439 440 <p>This option is also enabled by <a href="">-Wfoo</a>, <a href="">-Wbar</a>, 441 and <a href="">-Wbaz</a>.</p> 442 </dd> 443 444 <!-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --> 445 <dt id="opt_Wambiguous-member-template"><b>-Wambiguous-member-template</b>: 446 Warn about unqualified uses of a member template whose name resolves 447 to another template at the location of the use.</dt> 448 <dd>This option, which defaults to on, enables a warning in the 449 following code: 450 451 <pre> 452 template<typename T> struct set{}; 453 template<typename T> struct trait { typedef const T& type; }; 454 struct Value { 455 template<typename T> void set(typename trait<T>::type value) {} 456 }; 457 void foo() { 458 Value v; 459 v.set<double>(3.2); 460 } 461 </pre> 462 463 <p>C++ [basic.lookup.classref] requires this to be an error, but, 464 because it's hard to work around, Clang downgrades it to a warning as 465 an extension.</p> 466 </dd> 467 468 <!-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --> 469 <dt id="opt_Wbind-to-temporary-copy"><b>-Wbind-to-temporary-copy</b>: Warn about 470 an unusable copy constructor when binding a reference to a temporary.</dt> 471 <dd>This option, which defaults to on, enables warnings about binding a 472 reference to a temporary when the temporary doesn't have a usable copy 473 constructor. For example: 474 475 <pre> 476 struct NonCopyable { 477 NonCopyable(); 478 private: 479 NonCopyable(const NonCopyable&); 480 }; 481 void foo(const NonCopyable&); 482 void bar() { 483 foo(NonCopyable()); // Disallowed in C++98; allowed in C++11. 484 } 485 </pre> 486 <pre> 487 struct NonCopyable2 { 488 NonCopyable2(); 489 NonCopyable2(NonCopyable2&); 490 }; 491 void foo(const NonCopyable2&); 492 void bar() { 493 foo(NonCopyable2()); // Disallowed in C++98; allowed in C++11. 494 } 495 </pre> 496 497 <p>Note that if <tt>NonCopyable2::NonCopyable2()</tt> has a default 498 argument whose instantiation produces a compile error, that error will 499 still be a hard error in C++98 mode even if this warning is turned 500 off.</p> 501 502 </dd> 503 504 </dl> 505 506 <!-- ======================================================================= --> 507 <h2 id="general_features">Language and Target-Independent Features</h2> 508 <!-- ======================================================================= --> 509 510 511 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 512 <h3 id="diagnostics">Controlling Errors and Warnings</h3> 513 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 514 515 <p>Clang provides a number of ways to control which code constructs cause it to 516 emit errors and warning messages, and how they are displayed to the console.</p> 517 518 <h4 id="diagnostics_display">Controlling How Clang Displays Diagnostics</h4> 519 520 <p>When Clang emits a diagnostic, it includes rich information in the output, 521 and gives you fine-grain control over which information is printed. Clang has 522 the ability to print this information, and these are the options that control 523 it:</p> 524 525 <ol> 526 <li>A file/line/column indicator that shows exactly where the diagnostic occurs 527 in your code [<a href="#opt_fshow-column">-fshow-column</a>, <a 528 href="#opt_fshow-source-location">-fshow-source-location</a>].</li> 529 <li>A categorization of the diagnostic as a note, warning, error, or fatal 530 error.</li> 531 <li>A text string that describes what the problem is.</li> 532 <li>An option that indicates whether to print the diagnostic name [<a 533 href="#opt_fdiagnostics-show-name">-fdiagnostics-show-name</a>].</li> 534 <li>An option that indicates how to control the diagnostic (for diagnostics that 535 support it) [<a 536 href="#opt_fdiagnostics-show-option">-fdiagnostics-show-option</a>].</li> 537 <li>A <a href="#diagnostics_categories">high-level category</a> for the 538 diagnostic for clients that want to group diagnostics by class (for 539 diagnostics that support it) [<a 540 href="#opt_fdiagnostics-show-category">-fdiagnostics-show-category</a>].</li> 541 <li>The line of source code that the issue occurs on, along with a caret and 542 ranges that indicate the important locations [<a 543 href="opt_fcaret-diagnostics">-fcaret-diagnostics</a>].</li> 544 <li>"FixIt" information, which is a concise explanation of how to fix the 545 problem (when Clang is certain it knows) [<a 546 href="opt_fdiagnostics-fixit-info">-fdiagnostics-fixit-info</a>].</li> 547 <li>A machine-parsable representation of the ranges involved (off by 548 default) [<a 549 href="opt_fdiagnostics-print-source-range-info">-fdiagnostics-print-source-range-info</a>].</li> 550 </ol> 551 552 <p>For more information please see <a href="#cl_diag_formatting">Formatting of 553 Diagnostics</a>.</p> 554 555 556 <h4 id="diagnostics_mappings">Diagnostic Mappings</h4> 557 558 <p>All diagnostics are mapped into one of these 5 classes:</p> 559 560 <ul> 561 <li>Ignored</li> 562 <li>Note</li> 563 <li>Warning</li> 564 <li>Error</li> 565 <li>Fatal</li> 566 </ul> 567 568 <h4 id="diagnostics_categories">Diagnostic Categories</h4> 569 570 <p>Though not shown by default, diagnostics may each be associated with a 571 high-level category. This category is intended to make it possible to triage 572 builds that produce a large number of errors or warnings in a grouped way. 573 </p> 574 575 <p>Categories are not shown by default, but they can be turned on with the 576 <a href="#opt_fdiagnostics-show-category">-fdiagnostics-show-category</a> option. 577 When set to "<tt>name</tt>", the category is printed textually in the diagnostic 578 output. When it is set to "<tt>id</tt>", a category number is printed. The 579 mapping of category names to category id's can be obtained by running '<tt>clang 580 --print-diagnostic-categories</tt>'. 581 </p> 582 583 <h4 id="diagnostics_commandline">Controlling Diagnostics via Command Line 584 Flags</h4> 585 586 <p>-W flags, -pedantic, etc</p> 587 588 <h4 id="diagnostics_pragmas">Controlling Diagnostics via Pragmas</h4> 589 590 <p>Clang can also control what diagnostics are enabled through the use of 591 pragmas in the source code. This is useful for turning off specific warnings 592 in a section of source code. Clang supports GCC's pragma for compatibility 593 with existing source code, as well as several extensions. </p> 594 595 <p>The pragma may control any warning that can be used from the command line. 596 Warnings may be set to ignored, warning, error, or fatal. The following 597 example code will tell Clang or GCC to ignore the -Wall warnings:</p> 598 599 <pre> 600 #pragma GCC diagnostic ignored "-Wall" 601 </pre> 602 603 <p>In addition to all of the functionality provided by GCC's pragma, Clang 604 also allows you to push and pop the current warning state. This is particularly 605 useful when writing a header file that will be compiled by other people, because 606 you don't know what warning flags they build with.</p> 607 608 <p>In the below example 609 -Wmultichar is ignored for only a single line of code, after which the 610 diagnostics return to whatever state had previously existed.</p> 611 612 <pre> 613 #pragma clang diagnostic push 614 #pragma clang diagnostic ignored "-Wmultichar" 615 616 char b = 'df'; // no warning. 617 618 #pragma clang diagnostic pop 619 </pre> 620 621 <p>The push and pop pragmas will save and restore the full diagnostic state of 622 the compiler, regardless of how it was set. That means that it is possible to 623 use push and pop around GCC compatible diagnostics and Clang will push and pop 624 them appropriately, while GCC will ignore the pushes and pops as unknown 625 pragmas. It should be noted that while Clang supports the GCC pragma, Clang and 626 GCC do not support the exact same set of warnings, so even when using GCC 627 compatible #pragmas there is no guarantee that they will have identical behaviour 628 on both compilers. </p> 629 630 <h4 id="diagnostics_enable_everything">Enabling All Warnings</h4> 631 632 <p>In addition to the traditional <tt>-W</tt> flags, one can enable <b>all</b> 633 warnings by passing <tt>-Weverything</tt>. 634 This works as expected with <tt>-Werror</tt>, 635 and also includes the warnings from <tt>-pedantic</tt>.</p> 636 637 <p>Note that when combined with <tt>-w</tt> (which disables all warnings), that 638 flag wins.</p> 639 640 <h4 id="analyzer_diagnositics">Controlling Static Analyzer Diagnostics</h4> 641 642 <p>While not strictly part of the compiler, the diagnostics from Clang's <a 643 href="http://clang-analyzer.llvm.org">static analyzer</a> can also be influenced 644 by the user via changes to the source code. This can be done in two ways: 645 646 <ul> 647 648 <li id="analyzer_annotations"><b>Annotations</b>: The static analyzer recognizes various GCC-style 649 attributes (e.g., <tt>__attribute__((nonnull)))</tt>) that can either suppress 650 static analyzer warnings or teach the analyzer about code invariants which 651 enable it to find more bugs. While many of these attributes are standard GCC 652 attributes, additional ones have been added to Clang to specifically support the 653 static analyzer. Detailed information on these annotations can be found in the 654 <a href="http://clang-analyzer.llvm.org/annotations.html">analyzer's 655 documentation</a>.</li> 656 657 <li><b><tt>__clang_analyzer__</tt></b>: When the static analyzer is using Clang 658 to parse source files, it implicitly defines the preprocessor macro 659 <tt>__clang_analyzer__</tt>. While discouraged, code can use this macro to 660 selectively exclude code the analyzer examines. Here is an example: 661 662 <pre> 663 #ifndef __clang_analyzer__ 664 // Code not to be analyzed 665 #endif 666 </pre> 667 668 In general, this usage is discouraged. Instead, we prefer that users file bugs 669 against the analyzer when it flags false positives. There is also active 670 discussion of allowing users in the future to selectively silence specific 671 analyzer warnings (some of which can already be done using <a 672 href="analyzer_annotations">annotations</a>).</li> 673 674 </ul> 675 676 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 677 <h3 id="precompiledheaders">Precompiled Headers</h3> 678 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 679 680 <p><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precompiled_header">Precompiled 681 headers</a> are a general approach employed by many compilers to reduce 682 compilation time. The underlying motivation of the approach is that it is 683 common for the same (and often large) header files to be included by 684 multiple source files. Consequently, compile times can often be greatly improved 685 by caching some of the (redundant) work done by a compiler to process headers. 686 Precompiled header files, which represent one of many ways to implement 687 this optimization, are literally files that represent an on-disk cache that 688 contains the vital information necessary to reduce some of the work 689 needed to process a corresponding header file. While details of precompiled 690 headers vary between compilers, precompiled headers have been shown to be 691 highly effective at speeding up program compilation on systems with very large 692 system headers (e.g., Mac OS/X).</p> 693 694 <h4>Generating a PCH File</h4> 695 696 <p>To generate a PCH file using Clang, one invokes Clang with 697 the <b><tt>-x <i><language></i>-header</tt></b> option. This mirrors the 698 interface in GCC for generating PCH files:</p> 699 700 <pre> 701 $ gcc -x c-header test.h -o test.h.gch 702 $ clang -x c-header test.h -o test.h.pch 703 </pre> 704 705 <h4>Using a PCH File</h4> 706 707 <p>A PCH file can then be used as a prefix header when a 708 <b><tt>-include</tt></b> option is passed to <tt>clang</tt>:</p> 709 710 <pre> 711 $ clang -include test.h test.c -o test 712 </pre> 713 714 <p>The <tt>clang</tt> driver will first check if a PCH file for <tt>test.h</tt> 715 is available; if so, the contents of <tt>test.h</tt> (and the files it includes) 716 will be processed from the PCH file. Otherwise, Clang falls back to 717 directly processing the content of <tt>test.h</tt>. This mirrors the behavior of 718 GCC.</p> 719 720 <p><b>NOTE:</b> Clang does <em>not</em> automatically use PCH files 721 for headers that are directly included within a source file. For example:</p> 722 723 <pre> 724 $ clang -x c-header test.h -o test.h.pch 725 $ cat test.c 726 #include "test.h" 727 $ clang test.c -o test 728 </pre> 729 730 <p>In this example, <tt>clang</tt> will not automatically use the PCH file for 731 <tt>test.h</tt> since <tt>test.h</tt> was included directly in the source file 732 and not specified on the command line using <tt>-include</tt>.</p> 733 734 <h4>Relocatable PCH Files</h4> 735 <p>It is sometimes necessary to build a precompiled header from headers that 736 are not yet in their final, installed locations. For example, one might build a 737 precompiled header within the build tree that is then meant to be installed 738 alongside the headers. Clang permits the creation of "relocatable" precompiled 739 headers, which are built with a given path (into the build directory) and can 740 later be used from an installed location.</p> 741 742 <p>To build a relocatable precompiled header, place your headers into a 743 subdirectory whose structure mimics the installed location. For example, if you 744 want to build a precompiled header for the header <code>mylib.h</code> that 745 will be installed into <code>/usr/include</code>, create a subdirectory 746 <code>build/usr/include</code> and place the header <code>mylib.h</code> into 747 that subdirectory. If <code>mylib.h</code> depends on other headers, then 748 they can be stored within <code>build/usr/include</code> in a way that mimics 749 the installed location.</p> 750 751 <p>Building a relocatable precompiled header requires two additional arguments. 752 First, pass the <code>--relocatable-pch</code> flag to indicate that the 753 resulting PCH file should be relocatable. Second, pass 754 <code>-isysroot /path/to/build</code>, which makes all includes for your 755 library relative to the build directory. For example:</p> 756 757 <pre> 758 # clang -x c-header --relocatable-pch -isysroot /path/to/build /path/to/build/mylib.h mylib.h.pch 759 </pre> 760 761 <p>When loading the relocatable PCH file, the various headers used in the PCH 762 file are found from the system header root. For example, <code>mylib.h</code> 763 can be found in <code>/usr/include/mylib.h</code>. If the headers are installed 764 in some other system root, the <code>-isysroot</code> option can be used provide 765 a different system root from which the headers will be based. For example, 766 <code>-isysroot /Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.4u.sdk</code> will look for 767 <code>mylib.h</code> in 768 <code>/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.4u.sdk/usr/include/mylib.h</code>.</p> 769 770 <p>Relocatable precompiled headers are intended to be used in a limited number 771 of cases where the compilation environment is tightly controlled and the 772 precompiled header cannot be generated after headers have been installed. 773 Relocatable precompiled headers also have some performance impact, because 774 the difference in location between the header locations at PCH build time vs. 775 at the time of PCH use requires one of the PCH optimizations, 776 <code>stat()</code> caching, to be disabled. However, this change is only 777 likely to affect PCH files that reference a large number of headers.</p> 778 779 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 780 <h3 id="codegen">Controlling Code Generation</h3> 781 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 782 783 <p>Clang provides a number of ways to control code generation. The options are listed below.</p> 784 785 <!-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --> 786 <dl> 787 <dt id="opt_fcatch-undefined-behavior"><b>-fcatch-undefined-behavior</b>: Turn 788 on runtime code generation to check for undefined behavior.</dt> 789 790 <dd>This option, which defaults to off, controls whether or not Clang 791 adds runtime checks for undefined runtime behavior. If a check fails, 792 <tt>__builtin_trap()</tt> is used to indicate failure. 793 The checks are: 794 <ul> 795 <li>Subscripting where the static type of one operand is a variable 796 which is decayed from an array type and the other operand is 797 greater than the size of the array or less than zero.</li> 798 <li>Shift operators where the amount shifted is greater or equal to the 799 promoted bit-width of the left-hand-side or less than zero.</li> 800 <li>If control flow reaches __builtin_unreachable. 801 <li>When llvm implements more __builtin_object_size support, reads and 802 writes for objects that __builtin_object_size indicates we aren't 803 accessing valid memory. Bit-fields and vectors are not yet checked. 804 </ul> 805 </dd> 806 807 <dt id="opt_fno-assume-sane-operator-new"><b>-fno-assume-sane-operator-new</b>: 808 Don't assume that the C++'s new operator is sane.</dt> 809 <dd>This option tells the compiler to do not assume that C++'s global new 810 operator will always return a pointer that does not 811 alias any other pointer when the function returns.</dd> 812 813 <dt id="opt_ftrap-function"><b>-ftrap-function=[name]</b>: Instruct code 814 generator to emit a function call to the specified function name for 815 <tt>__builtin_trap()</tt>.</dt> 816 817 <dd>LLVM code generator translates <tt>__builtin_trap()</tt> to a trap 818 instruction if it is supported by the target ISA. Otherwise, the builtin is 819 translated into a call to <tt>abort</tt>. If this option is set, then the code 820 generator will always lower the builtin to a call to the specified function 821 regardless of whether the target ISA has a trap instruction. This option is 822 useful for environments (e.g. deeply embedded) where a trap cannot be properly 823 handled, or when some custom behavior is desired.</dd> 824 </dl> 825 826 <!-- ======================================================================= --> 827 <h2 id="c">C Language Features</h2> 828 <!-- ======================================================================= --> 829 830 <p>The support for standard C in clang is feature-complete except for the C99 831 floating-point pragmas.</p> 832 833 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 834 <h3 id="c_ext">Extensions supported by clang</h3> 835 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 836 837 <p>See <a href="LanguageExtensions.html">clang language extensions</a>.</p> 838 839 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 840 <h3 id="c_modes">Differences between various standard modes</h3> 841 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 842 843 <p>clang supports the -std option, which changes what language mode clang uses. 844 The supported modes for C are c89, gnu89, c94, c99, gnu99 and various aliases 845 for those modes. If no -std option is specified, clang defaults to gnu99 mode. 846 </p> 847 848 <p>Differences between all c* and gnu* modes:</p> 849 <ul> 850 <li>c* modes define "__STRICT_ANSI__".</li> 851 <li>Target-specific defines not prefixed by underscores, like "linux", are 852 defined in gnu* modes.</li> 853 <li>Trigraphs default to being off in gnu* modes; they can be enabled by the 854 -trigraphs option.</li> 855 <li>The parser recognizes "asm" and "typeof" as keywords in gnu* modes; the 856 variants "__asm__" and "__typeof__" are recognized in all modes.</li> 857 <li>The Apple "blocks" extension is recognized by default in gnu* modes 858 on some platforms; it can be enabled in any mode with the "-fblocks" 859 option.</li> 860 <li>Arrays that are VLA's according to the standard, but which can be constant 861 folded by the frontend are treated as fixed size arrays. This occurs for 862 things like "int X[(1, 2)];", which is technically a VLA. c* modes are 863 strictly compliant and treat these as VLAs.</li> 864 </ul> 865 866 <p>Differences between *89 and *99 modes:</p> 867 <ul> 868 <li>The *99 modes default to implementing "inline" as specified in C99, while 869 the *89 modes implement the GNU version. This can be overridden for individual 870 functions with the __gnu_inline__ attribute.</li> 871 <li>Digraphs are not recognized in c89 mode.</li> 872 <li>The scope of names defined inside a "for", "if", "switch", "while", or "do" 873 statement is different. (example: "if ((struct x {int x;}*)0) {}".)</li> 874 <li>__STDC_VERSION__ is not defined in *89 modes.</li> 875 <li>"inline" is not recognized as a keyword in c89 mode.</li> 876 <li>"restrict" is not recognized as a keyword in *89 modes.</li> 877 <li>Commas are allowed in integer constant expressions in *99 modes.</li> 878 <li>Arrays which are not lvalues are not implicitly promoted to pointers in 879 *89 modes.</li> 880 <li>Some warnings are different.</li> 881 </ul> 882 883 <p>c94 mode is identical to c89 mode except that digraphs are enabled in 884 c94 mode (FIXME: And __STDC_VERSION__ should be defined!).</p> 885 886 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 887 <h3 id="c_unimpl_gcc">GCC extensions not implemented yet</h3> 888 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 889 890 <p>clang tries to be compatible with gcc as much as possible, but some gcc 891 extensions are not implemented yet:</p> 892 893 <ul> 894 895 <li>clang does not support #pragma weak 896 (<a href="http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=3679">bug 3679</a>). Due to 897 the uses described in the bug, this is likely to be implemented at some 898 point, at least partially.</li> 899 900 <li>clang does not support decimal floating point types (_Decimal32 and 901 friends) or fixed-point types (_Fract and friends); nobody has expressed 902 interest in these features yet, so it's hard to say when they will be 903 implemented.</li> 904 905 <li>clang does not support nested functions; this is a complex feature which 906 is infrequently used, so it is unlikely to be implemented anytime soon.</li> 907 908 <li>clang does not support global register variables, this is unlikely 909 to be implemented soon because it requires additional LLVM backend support. 910 </li> 911 912 <li>clang does not support static initialization of flexible array 913 members. This appears to be a rarely used extension, but could be 914 implemented pending user demand.</li> 915 916 <li>clang does not support __builtin_va_arg_pack/__builtin_va_arg_pack_len. 917 This is used rarely, but in some potentially interesting places, like the 918 glibc headers, so it may be implemented pending user demand. Note that 919 because clang pretends to be like GCC 4.2, and this extension was introduced 920 in 4.3, the glibc headers will not try to use this extension with clang at 921 the moment.</li> 922 923 <li>clang does not support the gcc extension for forward-declaring function 924 parameters; this has not showed up in any real-world code yet, though, so it 925 might never be implemented.</li> 926 927 </ul> 928 929 <p>This is not a complete list; if you find an unsupported extension 930 missing from this list, please send an e-mail to cfe-dev. This list 931 currently excludes C++; see <a href="#cxx">C++ Language Features</a>. 932 Also, this list does not include bugs in mostly-implemented features; please 933 see the <a href="http://llvm.org/bugs/buglist.cgi?quicksearch=product%3Aclang+component%3A-New%2BBugs%2CAST%2CBasic%2CDriver%2CHeaders%2CLLVM%2BCodeGen%2Cparser%2Cpreprocessor%2CSemantic%2BAnalyzer"> 934 bug tracker</a> for known existing bugs (FIXME: Is there a section for 935 bug-reporting guidelines somewhere?).</p> 936 937 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 938 <h3 id="c_unsupp_gcc">Intentionally unsupported GCC extensions</h3> 939 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 940 941 <ul> 942 943 <li>clang does not support the gcc extension that allows variable-length arrays 944 in structures. This is for a few reasons: one, it is tricky 945 to implement, two, the extension is completely undocumented, and three, the 946 extension appears to be rarely used. Note that clang <em>does</em> support 947 flexible array members (arrays with a zero or unspecified size at the end of 948 a structure).</li> 949 950 <li>clang does not have an equivalent to gcc's "fold"; this means that 951 clang doesn't accept some constructs gcc might accept in contexts where a 952 constant expression is required, like "x-x" where x is a variable.</li> 953 954 <li>clang does not support multiple alternative constraints in inline asm; this 955 is an extremely obscure feature which would be complicated to implement 956 correctly.</li> 957 958 <li>clang does not support __builtin_apply and friends; this extension is 959 extremely obscure and difficult to implement reliably.</li> 960 961 </ul> 962 963 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 964 <h3 id="c_ms">Microsoft extensions</h3> 965 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 966 967 <p>clang has some experimental support for extensions from 968 Microsoft Visual C++; to enable it, use the -fms-extensions command-line 969 option. This is the default for Windows targets. Note that the 970 support is incomplete; enabling Microsoft extensions will silently drop 971 certain constructs (including __declspec and Microsoft-style asm statements). 972 </p> 973 974 <ul> 975 <li>clang allows setting _MSC_VER with -fmsc-version=. It defaults to 1300 which 976 is the same as Visual C/C++ 2003. Any number is supported and can greatly affect 977 what Windows SDK and c++stdlib headers clang can compile. This option will be 978 removed when clang supports the full set of MS extensions required for these 979 headers.</li> 980 981 <li>clang does not support the Microsoft extension where anonymous 982 record members can be declared using user defined typedefs.</li> 983 984 <li>clang supports the Microsoft "#pragma pack" feature for 985 controlling record layout. GCC also contains support for this feature, 986 however where MSVC and GCC are incompatible clang follows the MSVC 987 definition.</li> 988 </ul> 989 990 <!-- ======================================================================= --> 991 <h2 id="target_features">Target-Specific Features and Limitations</h2> 992 <!-- ======================================================================= --> 993 994 995 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 996 <h3 id="target_arch">CPU Architectures Features and Limitations</h3> 997 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 998 999 <!-- ======================== --> 1000 <h4 id="target_arch_x86">X86</h4> 1001 <!-- ======================== --> 1002 1003 <p>The support for X86 (both 32-bit and 64-bit) is considered stable on Darwin 1004 (Mac OS/X), Linux, FreeBSD, and Dragonfly BSD: it has been tested to correctly 1005 compile many large C, C++, Objective-C, and Objective-C++ codebases.</p> 1006 1007 <p>On x86_64-mingw32, passing i128(by value) is incompatible to Microsoft x64 1008 calling conversion. You might need to tweak WinX86_64ABIInfo::classify() 1009 in lib/CodeGen/TargetInfo.cpp.</p> 1010 1011 <!-- ======================== --> 1012 <h4 id="target_arch_arm">ARM</h4> 1013 <!-- ======================== --> 1014 1015 <p>The support for ARM (specifically ARMv6 and ARMv7) is considered stable on 1016 Darwin (iOS): it has been tested to correctly compile many large C, C++, 1017 Objective-C, and Objective-C++ codebases. Clang only supports a limited number 1018 of ARM architectures. It does not yet fully support ARMv5, for example.</p> 1019 1020 <!-- ======================== --> 1021 <h4 id="target_arch_other">Other platforms</h4> 1022 <!-- ======================== --> 1023 clang currently contains some support for PPC and Sparc; however, significant 1024 pieces of code generation are still missing, and they haven't undergone 1025 significant testing. 1026 1027 <p>clang contains limited support for the MSP430 embedded processor, but both 1028 the clang support and the LLVM backend support are highly experimental. 1029 1030 <p>Other platforms are completely unsupported at the moment. Adding the 1031 minimal support needed for parsing and semantic analysis on a new platform 1032 is quite easy; see lib/Basic/Targets.cpp in the clang source tree. This level 1033 of support is also sufficient for conversion to LLVM IR for simple programs. 1034 Proper support for conversion to LLVM IR requires adding code to 1035 lib/CodeGen/CGCall.cpp at the moment; this is likely to change soon, though. 1036 Generating assembly requires a suitable LLVM backend. 1037 1038 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 1039 <h3 id="target_os">Operating System Features and Limitations</h3> 1040 <!-- = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = --> 1041 1042 <!-- ======================================= --> 1043 <h4 id="target_os_darwin">Darwin (Mac OS/X)</h4> 1044 <!-- ======================================= --> 1045 1046 <p>No __thread support, 64-bit ObjC support requires SL tools.</p> 1047 1048 <!-- ======================================= --> 1049 <h4 id="target_os_win32">Windows</h4> 1050 <!-- ======================================= --> 1051 1052 <p>Experimental supports are on Cygming.</p> 1053 1054 <h5>Cygwin</h5> 1055 1056 <p>Clang works on Cygwin-1.7.</p> 1057 1058 <h5>MinGW32</h5> 1059 1060 <p>Clang works on some mingw32 distributions. 1061 Clang assumes directories as below;</p> 1062 1063 <ul> 1064 <li><tt>C:/mingw/include</tt></li> 1065 <li><tt>C:/mingw/lib</tt></li> 1066 <li><tt>C:/mingw/lib/gcc/mingw32/4.[3-5].0/include/c++</tt></li> 1067 </ul> 1068 1069 <p>On MSYS, a few tests might fail. It is due to <a href="http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=8520">Bug 8520</a> and is fixed in <a href="http://lists.cs.uiuc.edu/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20110314/118106.html">LLVM's r127724</a>.</p> 1070 1071 <h5>MinGW-w64</h5> 1072 1073 <p>For 32-bit (i686-w64-mingw32), and 64-bit (x86_64-w64-mingw32), Clang assumes as below;<p> 1074 1075 <ul> 1076 <li><tt>GCC versions 4.5.0 to 4.5.3, 4.6.0 to 4.6.2, or 4.7.0 (for the C++ header search path)</tt></li> 1077 <li><tt>some_directory/bin/gcc.exe</tt></li> 1078 <li><tt>some_directory/bin/clang.exe</tt></li> 1079 <li><tt>some_directory/bin/clang++.exe</tt></li> 1080 <li><tt>some_directory/bin/../include/c++/GCC_version</tt></li> 1081 <li><tt>some_directory/bin/../include/c++/GCC_version/x86_64-w64-mingw32</tt></li> 1082 <li><tt>some_directory/bin/../include/c++/GCC_version/i686-w64-mingw32</tt></li> 1083 <li><tt>some_directory/bin/../include/c++/GCC_version/backward</tt></li> 1084 <li><tt>some_directory/bin/../x86_64-w64-mingw32/include</tt></li> 1085 <li><tt>some_directory/bin/../i686-w64-mingw32/include</tt></li> 1086 <li><tt>some_directory/bin/../include</tt></li> 1087 </ul> 1088 1089 <p>This directory layout is standard for any toolchain you will find on the official <a href="mingw-w64.sourceforge.net">MinGW-w64 website</a>. 1090 1091 <p>Clang expects the GCC executable "gcc.exe" compiled for i686-w64-mingw32 (or x86_64-w64-mingw32) to be present on PATH.</p> 1092 1093 <p><a href="http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=9072">Some tests might fail</a> 1094 on x86_64-w64-mingw32.</p> 1095 1096 </div> 1097 </body> 1098 </html> 1099