Home | History | Annotate | Download | only in www
      1 <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN"
      2           "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd">
      3 <!-- Material used from: HTML 4.01 specs: http://www.w3.org/TR/html401/ -->
      4 <html>
      5 <head>
      6   <META http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1">
      7   <title>Hacking on clang</title>
      8   <link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="menu.css">
      9   <link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="content.css">
     10   <style type="text/css">
     11   pre { margin-left: 1.5em; }
     12   </style>
     13 </head>
     14 <body>
     15 <!--#include virtual="menu.html.incl"-->
     16 <div id="content">
     17   <!--*********************************************************************-->
     18   <h1>Hacking on Clang</h1>
     19   <!--*********************************************************************-->
     20 
     21   <p>This document provides some hints for how to get started hacking
     22   on Clang for developers who are new to the Clang and/or LLVM
     23   codebases.</p>
     24     <ul>
     25       <li><a href="#style">Coding Standards</a></li>
     26       <li><a href="#docs">Developer Documentation</a></li>
     27       <li><a href="#debugging">Debugging</a></li>
     28       <li><a href="#testing">Testing</a>
     29       <ul>
     30         <li><a href="#testingNonWindows">Testing on Unix-like Systems</a></li>
     31         <li><a href="#testingWindows">Testing using Visual Studio on Windows</a></li>
     32         <li><a href="#testingCommands">Testing on the Command Line</a></li>
     33       </ul>
     34       </li>
     35       <li><a href="#patches">Creating Patch Files</a></li>
     36       <li><a href="#irgen">LLVM IR Generation</a></li>
     37     </ul>
     38 
     39   <!--=====================================================================-->
     40   <h2 id="style">Coding Standards</h2>
     41   <!--=====================================================================-->
     42 
     43   <p>Clang follows the
     44   LLVM <a href="http://llvm.org/docs/CodingStandards.html">Coding
     45   Standards</a>. When submitting patches, please take care to follow these standards
     46   and to match the style of the code to that present in Clang (for example, in
     47   terms of indentation, bracing, and statement spacing).</p>
     48 
     49   <p>Clang has a few additional coding standards:</p>
     50   <ul>
     51     <li><i>cstdio is forbidden</i>: library code should not output diagnostics
     52       or other information using <tt>cstdio</tt>; debugging routines should
     53       use <tt>llvm::errs()</tt>. Other uses of <tt>cstdio</tt> impose behavior
     54       upon clients and block integrating Clang as a library. Libraries should
     55       support <tt>raw_ostream</tt> based interfaces for textual
     56       output. See <a href="http://llvm.org/docs/CodingStandards.html#ll_raw_ostream">Coding
     57       Standards</a>.</li>
     58   </ul>
     59 
     60   <!--=====================================================================-->
     61   <h2 id="docs">Developer Documentation</h2>
     62   <!--=====================================================================-->
     63 
     64   <p>Both Clang and LLVM use doxygen to provide API documentation. Their
     65   respective web pages (generated nightly) are here:</p>
     66     <ul>
     67       <li><a href="http://clang.llvm.org/doxygen">Clang</a></li>
     68       <li><a href="http://llvm.org/doxygen">LLVM</a></li>
     69     </ul>
     70 
     71   <p>For work on the LLVM IR generation, the LLVM assembly language
     72   <a href="http://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html">reference manual</a> is
     73   also useful.</p>
     74 
     75   <!--=====================================================================-->
     76   <h2 id="debugging">Debugging</h2>
     77   <!--=====================================================================-->
     78 
     79   <p>Inspecting data structures in a debugger:</p>
     80     <ul>
     81       <li>Many LLVM and Clang data structures provide
     82         a <tt>dump()</tt> method which will print a description of the
     83         data structure to <tt>stderr</tt>.</li>
     84       <li>The <a href="docs/InternalsManual.html#QualType"><tt>QualType</tt></a>
     85       structure is used pervasively. This is a simple value class for
     86       wrapping types with qualifiers; you can use
     87       the <tt>isConstQualified()</tt>, for example, to get one of the
     88       qualifiers, and the <tt>getTypePtr()</tt> method to get the
     89       wrapped <tt>Type*</tt> which you can then dump.</li>
     90       <li>For <a href="http://lldb.llvm.org"> <tt>LLDB</tt></a> users there are
     91       data formatters for clang data structures in
     92       <a href="http://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/trunk/utils/ClangDataFormat.py">
     93       <tt>utils/ClangDataFormat.py</tt></a>.</li>
     94     </ul>
     95 
     96   <!--=====================================================================-->
     97   <h3 id="debuggingVisualStudio">Debugging using Visual Studio</h3>
     98   <!--=====================================================================-->
     99 
    100   <p>The files 
    101     <a href="http://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk/utils/llvm.natvis">
    102       <tt>utils/llvm.natvis</tt></a> and 
    103     <a href="http://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/trunk/utils/clang.natvis">
    104       <tt>utils/clang.natvis</tt></a> provide debugger visualizers 
    105       that make debugging of more complex data types much easier.</p>
    106   <p>Put the files into 
    107     <tt>%USERPROFILE%\Documents\Visual Studio 2012\Visualizers</tt> or 
    108     create a symbolic link so they update automatically.</p>
    109 
    110   <!--=====================================================================-->
    111   <h2 id="testing">Testing</h2>
    112   <!--=====================================================================-->
    113 
    114   <!--=====================================================================-->
    115   <h3 id="testingNonWindows">Testing on Unix-like Systems</h3>
    116   <!--=====================================================================-->
    117 
    118   <p>Clang includes a basic regression suite in the tree which can be
    119   run with <tt>make test</tt> from the top-level clang directory, or
    120   just <tt>make</tt> in the <em>test</em> sub-directory.
    121   <tt>make VERBOSE=1</tt> can be used to show more detail
    122   about what is being run.</p>
    123 
    124   <p>If you built LLVM and Clang using CMake, the test suite can be run
    125   with <tt>make clang-test</tt> from the top-level LLVM directory.</p>
    126 
    127   <p>The tests primarily consist of a test runner script running the compiler
    128   under test on individual test files grouped in the directories under the
    129   test directory.  The individual test files include comments at the
    130   beginning indicating the Clang compile options to use, to be read
    131   by the test runner. Embedded comments also can do things like telling
    132   the test runner that an error is expected at the current line.
    133   Any output files produced by the test will be placed under
    134   a created Output directory.</p>
    135 
    136   <p>During the run of <tt>make test</tt>, the terminal output will
    137   display a line similar to the following:</p>
    138 
    139   <pre>--- Running clang tests for i686-pc-linux-gnu ---</pre>
    140 
    141   <p>followed by a line continually overwritten with the current test
    142   file being compiled, and an overall completion percentage.</p>
    143 
    144   <p>After the <tt>make test</tt> run completes, the absence of any
    145   <tt>Failing Tests (count):</tt> message indicates that no tests
    146   failed unexpectedly.  If any tests did fail, the
    147   <tt>Failing Tests (count):</tt> message will be followed by a list
    148   of the test source file paths that failed.  For example:</p>
    149 
    150   <pre>
    151   Failing Tests (3):
    152       /home/john/llvm/tools/clang/test/SemaCXX/member-name-lookup.cpp
    153       /home/john/llvm/tools/clang/test/SemaCXX/namespace-alias.cpp
    154       /home/john/llvm/tools/clang/test/SemaCXX/using-directive.cpp
    155 </pre>
    156 
    157   <p>If you used the <tt>make VERBOSE=1</tt> option, the terminal
    158   output will reflect the error messages from the compiler and
    159   test runner.</p>
    160 
    161   <p>The regression suite can also be run with Valgrind by running
    162   <tt>make test VG=1</tt> in the top-level clang directory.</p>
    163 
    164   <p>For more intensive changes, running
    165   the <a href="http://llvm.org/docs/TestingGuide.html#testsuiterun">LLVM
    166   Test Suite</a> with clang is recommended. Currently the best way to
    167   override LLVMGCC, as in: <tt>make LLVMGCC="clang -std=gnu89"
    168   TEST=nightly report</tt> (make sure <tt>clang</tt> is in your PATH or use the
    169   full path).</p>
    170 
    171   <!--=====================================================================-->
    172   <h3 id="testingWindows">Testing using Visual Studio on Windows</h3>
    173   <!--=====================================================================-->
    174 
    175   <p>The Clang test suite can be run from either Visual Studio or
    176   the command line.</p>
    177 
    178   <p>Note that the test runner is based on
    179   Python, which must be installed.  Find Python at:
    180   <a href="http://www.python.org/download/">http://www.python.org/download/</a>.
    181   Download the latest stable version (2.6.2 at the time of this writing).</p>
    182 
    183   <p>The GnuWin32 tools are also necessary for running the tests.
    184   Get them from <a href="http://getgnuwin32.sourceforge.net/">
    185   http://getgnuwin32.sourceforge.net/</a>.
    186   If the environment variable <tt>%PATH%</tt> does not have GnuWin32,
    187   or if other grep(s) supercedes GnuWin32 on <tt>%PATH%,</tt>
    188   you should specify <tt>LLVM_LIT_TOOLS_DIR</tt>
    189   to CMake explicitly.</p>
    190 
    191   <p>The cmake build tool is set up to create Visual Studio project files
    192   for running the tests, "clang-test" being the root.  Therefore, to
    193   run the test from Visual Studio, right-click the clang-test project
    194   and select "Build".</p>
    195 
    196   <p>
    197     Please see also
    198     <a href="http://llvm.org/docs/GettingStartedVS.html">Getting Started
    199     with the LLVM System using Microsoft Visual Studio</a> and
    200     <a href="http://llvm.org/docs/CMake.html">Building LLVM with CMake</a>.
    201   </p>
    202 
    203   <!--=====================================================================-->
    204   <h3 id="testingCommands">Testing on the Command Line</h3>
    205   <!--=====================================================================-->
    206 
    207   <p>If you want more control over how the tests are run, it may
    208   be convenient to run the test harness on the command-line directly. Before
    209   running tests from the command line, you will need to ensure that
    210   <tt>lit.site.cfg</tt> files have been created for your build.  You can do
    211   this by running the tests as described in the previous sections. Once the
    212   tests have started running, you can stop them with control+C, as the
    213   files are generated before running any tests.</p>
    214 
    215   <p>Once that is done, to run all the tests from the command line,
    216   execute a command like the following:</p>
    217 
    218   <pre>
    219   python (path to llvm)\llvm\utils\lit\lit.py -sv
    220   --param=build_mode=Win32 --param=build_config=Debug
    221   --param=clang_site_config=(build dir)\tools\clang\test\lit.site.cfg
    222  (path to llvm)\llvm\tools\clang\test
    223 </pre>
    224 
    225   <p>For CMake builds e.g. on Windows with Visual Studio, you will need
    226   to specify your build configuration (Debug, Release, etc.) via
    227   <tt>--param=build_config=(build config)</tt>.  You may also need to specify
    228   the build mode (Win32, etc) via <tt>--param=build_mode=(build mode)</tt>.</p>
    229 
    230   <p>Additionally, you will need to specify the lit site configuration which
    231   lives in (build dir)\tools\clang\test, via
    232   <tt>--param=clang_site_config=(build dir)\tools\clang\test\lit.site.cfg</tt>.
    233   </p>
    234 
    235   <p>To run a single test:</p>
    236 
    237   <pre>
    238   python (path to llvm)\llvm\utils\lit\lit.py -sv
    239   --param=build_mode=Win32 --param=build_config=Debug
    240   --param=clang_site_config=(build dir)\tools\clang\test\lit.site.cfg
    241   (path to llvm)\llvm\tools\clang\test\(dir)\(test)
    242 </pre>
    243 
    244   <p>For example:</p>
    245 
    246   <pre>
    247   python C:\Tool\llvm\utils\lit\lit.py -sv
    248   --param=build_mode=Win32 --param=build_config=Debug
    249   --param=clang_site_config=c:\Tools\build\tools\clang\test\lit.site.cfg
    250   C:\Tools\llvm\tools\clang\test\Sema\wchar.c
    251 </pre>
    252 
    253   <p>The -sv option above tells the runner to show the test output if
    254   any tests failed, to help you determine the cause of failure.</p>
    255 
    256   <p>You can also pass in the --no-progress-bar option if you wish to disable
    257   progress indications while the tests are running.</p>
    258 
    259   <p>Your output might look something like this:</p>
    260 
    261   <pre>lit.py: lit.cfg:152: note: using clang: 'C:\Tools\llvm\bin\Release\clang.EXE'
    262 -- Testing: Testing: 2534 tests, 4 threads --
    263 Testing: 0 .. 10.. 20.. 30.. 40.. 50.. 60.. 70.. 80.. 90..
    264 Testing Time: 81.52s
    265   Expected Passes    : 2503
    266   Expected Failures  : 28
    267   Unsupported Tests  : 3
    268 </pre>
    269 
    270   <p>The statistic, "Unexpected Failures" (not shown if all tests pass), is the important one.</p>
    271 
    272   <!--=====================================================================-->
    273   <h2 id="patches">Creating Patch Files</h2>
    274   <!--=====================================================================-->
    275 
    276   <p>To return changes to the Clang team, unless you have checkin
    277   privileges, the preferred way is to send patch files to the
    278   cfe-commits mailing list, with an explanation of what the patch is
    279   for.  clang follows <a
    280   href="http://llvm.org/docs/DeveloperPolicy.html">LLVM's developer policy</a>.
    281   If your patch requires a wider discussion (for example, because it is an
    282   architectural change), you can use the cfe-dev mailing list.</p>
    283 
    284   <p>To create these patch files, change directory
    285   to the llvm/tools/clang root and run:</p>
    286 
    287   <pre>svn diff (relative path) >(patch file name)</pre>
    288 
    289   <p>For example, for getting the diffs of all of clang:</p>
    290 
    291   <pre>svn diff . >~/mypatchfile.patch</pre>
    292 
    293   <p>For example, for getting the diffs of a single file:</p>
    294 
    295   <pre>svn diff lib/Parse/ParseDeclCXX.cpp >~/ParseDeclCXX.patch</pre>
    296 
    297   <p>Note that the paths embedded in the patch depend on where you run it,
    298   so changing directory to the llvm/tools/clang directory is recommended.</p>
    299 
    300   <!--=====================================================================-->
    301   <h2 id="irgen">LLVM IR Generation</h2>
    302   <!--=====================================================================-->
    303 
    304   <p>The LLVM IR generation part of clang handles conversion of the
    305     AST nodes output by the Sema module to the LLVM Intermediate
    306     Representation (IR). Historically, this was referred to as
    307     "codegen", and the Clang code for this lives
    308     in <tt>lib/CodeGen</tt>.</p>
    309 
    310   <p>The output is most easily inspected using the <tt>-emit-llvm</tt>
    311     option to clang (possibly in conjunction with <tt>-o -</tt>). You
    312     can also use <tt>-emit-llvm-bc</tt> to write an LLVM bitcode file
    313     which can be processed by the suite of LLVM tools
    314     like <tt>llvm-dis</tt>, <tt>llvm-nm</tt>, etc. See the LLVM
    315     <a href="http://llvm.org/docs/CommandGuide/">Command Guide</a>
    316     for more information.</p>
    317 
    318 </div>
    319 </body>
    320 </html>
    321