1 =pod 2 3 =head1 NAME 4 5 llvm-ar - LLVM archiver 6 7 =head1 SYNOPSIS 8 9 B<llvm-ar> [-]{dmpqrtx}[Rabfikouz] [relpos] [count] <archive> [files...] 10 11 12 =head1 DESCRIPTION 13 14 The B<llvm-ar> command is similar to the common Unix utility, C<ar>. It 15 archives several files together into a single file. The intent for this is 16 to produce archive libraries by LLVM bitcode that can be linked into an 17 LLVM program. However, the archive can contain any kind of file. By default, 18 B<llvm-ar> generates a symbol table that makes linking faster because 19 only the symbol table needs to be consulted, not each individual file member 20 of the archive. 21 22 The B<llvm-ar> command can be used to I<read> both SVR4 and BSD style archive 23 files. However, it cannot be used to write them. While the B<llvm-ar> command 24 produces files that are I<almost> identical to the format used by other C<ar> 25 implementations, it has two significant departures in order to make the 26 archive appropriate for LLVM. The first departure is that B<llvm-ar> only 27 uses BSD4.4 style long path names (stored immediately after the header) and 28 never contains a string table for long names. The second departure is that the 29 symbol table is formated for efficient construction of an in-memory data 30 structure that permits rapid (red-black tree) lookups. Consequently, archives 31 produced with B<llvm-ar> usually won't be readable or editable with any 32 C<ar> implementation or useful for linking. Using the C<f> modifier to flatten 33 file names will make the archive readable by other C<ar> implementations 34 but not for linking because the symbol table format for LLVM is unique. If an 35 SVR4 or BSD style archive is used with the C<r> (replace) or C<q> (quick 36 update) operations, the archive will be reconstructed in LLVM format. This 37 means that the string table will be dropped (in deference to BSD 4.4 long names) 38 and an LLVM symbol table will be added (by default). The system symbol table 39 will be retained. 40 41 Here's where B<llvm-ar> departs from previous C<ar> implementations: 42 43 =over 44 45 =item I<Symbol Table> 46 47 Since B<llvm-ar> is intended to archive bitcode files, the symbol table 48 won't make much sense to anything but LLVM. Consequently, the symbol table's 49 format has been simplified. It consists simply of a sequence of pairs 50 of a file member index number as an LSB 4byte integer and a null-terminated 51 string. 52 53 =item I<Long Paths> 54 55 Some C<ar> implementations (SVR4) use a separate file member to record long 56 path names (> 15 characters). B<llvm-ar> takes the BSD 4.4 and Mac OS X 57 approach which is to simply store the full path name immediately preceding 58 the data for the file. The path name is null terminated and may contain the 59 slash (/) character. 60 61 =item I<Compression> 62 63 B<llvm-ar> can compress the members of an archive to save space. The 64 compression used depends on what's available on the platform and what choices 65 the LLVM Compressor utility makes. It generally favors bzip2 but will select 66 between "no compression" or bzip2 depending on what makes sense for the 67 file's content. 68 69 =item I<Directory Recursion> 70 71 Most C<ar> implementations do not recurse through directories but simply 72 ignore directories if they are presented to the program in the F<files> 73 option. B<llvm-ar>, however, can recurse through directory structures and 74 add all the files under a directory, if requested. 75 76 =item I<TOC Verbose Output> 77 78 When B<llvm-ar> prints out the verbose table of contents (C<tv> option), it 79 precedes the usual output with a character indicating the basic kind of 80 content in the file. A blank means the file is a regular file. A 'Z' means 81 the file is compressed. A 'B' means the file is an LLVM bitcode file. An 82 'S' means the file is the symbol table. 83 84 =back 85 86 =head1 OPTIONS 87 88 The options to B<llvm-ar> are compatible with other C<ar> implementations. 89 However, there are a few modifiers (F<zR>) that are not found in other 90 C<ar>s. The options to B<llvm-ar> specify a single basic operation to 91 perform on the archive, a variety of modifiers for that operation, the 92 name of the archive file, and an optional list of file names. These options 93 are used to determine how B<llvm-ar> should process the archive file. 94 95 The Operations and Modifiers are explained in the sections below. The minimal 96 set of options is at least one operator and the name of the archive. Typically 97 archive files end with a C<.a> suffix, but this is not required. Following 98 the F<archive-name> comes a list of F<files> that indicate the specific members 99 of the archive to operate on. If the F<files> option is not specified, it 100 generally means either "none" or "all" members, depending on the operation. 101 102 =head2 Operations 103 104 =over 105 106 =item d 107 108 Delete files from the archive. No modifiers are applicable to this operation. 109 The F<files> options specify which members should be removed from the 110 archive. It is not an error if a specified file does not appear in the archive. 111 If no F<files> are specified, the archive is not modified. 112 113 =item m[abi] 114 115 Move files from one location in the archive to another. The F<a>, F<b>, and 116 F<i> modifiers apply to this operation. The F<files> will all be moved 117 to the location given by the modifiers. If no modifiers are used, the files 118 will be moved to the end of the archive. If no F<files> are specified, the 119 archive is not modified. 120 121 =item p[k] 122 123 Print files to the standard output. The F<k> modifier applies to this 124 operation. This operation simply prints the F<files> indicated to the 125 standard output. If no F<files> are specified, the entire archive is printed. 126 Printing bitcode files is ill-advised as they might confuse your terminal 127 settings. The F<p> operation never modifies the archive. 128 129 =item q[Rfz] 130 131 Quickly append files to the end of the archive. The F<R>, F<f>, and F<z> 132 modifiers apply to this operation. This operation quickly adds the 133 F<files> to the archive without checking for duplicates that should be 134 removed first. If no F<files> are specified, the archive is not modified. 135 Because of the way that B<llvm-ar> constructs the archive file, its dubious 136 whether the F<q> operation is any faster than the F<r> operation. 137 138 =item r[Rabfuz] 139 140 Replace or insert file members. The F<R>, F<a>, F<b>, F<f>, F<u>, and F<z> 141 modifiers apply to this operation. This operation will replace existing 142 F<files> or insert them at the end of the archive if they do not exist. If no 143 F<files> are specified, the archive is not modified. 144 145 =item t[v] 146 147 Print the table of contents. Without any modifiers, this operation just prints 148 the names of the members to the standard output. With the F<v> modifier, 149 B<llvm-ar> also prints out the file type (B=bitcode, Z=compressed, S=symbol 150 table, blank=regular file), the permission mode, the owner and group, the 151 size, and the date. If any F<files> are specified, the listing is only for 152 those files. If no F<files> are specified, the table of contents for the 153 whole archive is printed. 154 155 =item x[oP] 156 157 Extract archive members back to files. The F<o> modifier applies to this 158 operation. This operation retrieves the indicated F<files> from the archive 159 and writes them back to the operating system's file system. If no 160 F<files> are specified, the entire archive is extract. 161 162 =back 163 164 =head2 Modifiers (operation specific) 165 166 The modifiers below are specific to certain operations. See the Operations 167 section (above) to determine which modifiers are applicable to which operations. 168 169 =over 170 171 =item [a] 172 173 When inserting or moving member files, this option specifies the destination of 174 the new files as being C<a>fter the F<relpos> member. If F<relpos> is not found, 175 the files are placed at the end of the archive. 176 177 =item [b] 178 179 When inserting or moving member files, this option specifies the destination of 180 the new files as being C<b>efore the F<relpos> member. If F<relpos> is not 181 found, the files are placed at the end of the archive. This modifier is 182 identical to the the F<i> modifier. 183 184 =item [f] 185 186 Normally, B<llvm-ar> stores the full path name to a file as presented to it on 187 the command line. With this option, truncated (15 characters max) names are 188 used. This ensures name compatibility with older versions of C<ar> but may also 189 thwart correct extraction of the files (duplicates may overwrite). If used with 190 the F<R> option, the directory recursion will be performed but the file names 191 will all be C<f>lattened to simple file names. 192 193 =item [i] 194 195 A synonym for the F<b> option. 196 197 =item [k] 198 199 Normally, B<llvm-ar> will not print the contents of bitcode files when the 200 F<p> operation is used. This modifier defeats the default and allows the 201 bitcode members to be printed. 202 203 =item [N] 204 205 This option is ignored by B<llvm-ar> but provided for compatibility. 206 207 =item [o] 208 209 When extracting files, this option will cause B<llvm-ar> to preserve the 210 original modification times of the files it writes. 211 212 =item [P] 213 214 use full path names when matching 215 216 =item [R] 217 218 This modifier instructions the F<r> option to recursively process directories. 219 Without F<R>, directories are ignored and only those F<files> that refer to 220 files will be added to the archive. When F<R> is used, any directories specified 221 with F<files> will be scanned (recursively) to find files to be added to the 222 archive. Any file whose name begins with a dot will not be added. 223 224 =item [u] 225 226 When replacing existing files in the archive, only replace those files that have 227 a time stamp than the time stamp of the member in the archive. 228 229 =item [z] 230 231 When inserting or replacing any file in the archive, compress the file first. 232 This 233 modifier is safe to use when (previously) compressed bitcode files are added to 234 the archive; the compressed bitcode files will not be doubly compressed. 235 236 =back 237 238 =head2 Modifiers (generic) 239 240 The modifiers below may be applied to any operation. 241 242 =over 243 244 =item [c] 245 246 For all operations, B<llvm-ar> will always create the archive if it doesn't 247 exist. Normally, B<llvm-ar> will print a warning message indicating that the 248 archive is being created. Using this modifier turns off that warning. 249 250 =item [s] 251 252 This modifier requests that an archive index (or symbol table) be added to the 253 archive. This is the default mode of operation. The symbol table will contain 254 all the externally visible functions and global variables defined by all the 255 bitcode files in the archive. Using this modifier is more efficient that using 256 L<llvm-ranlib|llvm-ranlib> which also creates the symbol table. 257 258 =item [S] 259 260 This modifier is the opposite of the F<s> modifier. It instructs B<llvm-ar> to 261 not build the symbol table. If both F<s> and F<S> are used, the last modifier to 262 occur in the options will prevail. 263 264 =item [v] 265 266 This modifier instructs B<llvm-ar> to be verbose about what it is doing. Each 267 editing operation taken against the archive will produce a line of output saying 268 what is being done. 269 270 =back 271 272 =head1 STANDARDS 273 274 The B<llvm-ar> utility is intended to provide a superset of the IEEE Std 1003.2 275 (POSIX.2) functionality for C<ar>. B<llvm-ar> can read both SVR4 and BSD4.4 (or 276 Mac OS X) archives. If the C<f> modifier is given to the C<x> or C<r> operations 277 then B<llvm-ar> will write SVR4 compatible archives. Without this modifier, 278 B<llvm-ar> will write BSD4.4 compatible archives that have long names 279 immediately after the header and indicated using the "#1/ddd" notation for the 280 name in the header. 281 282 =head1 FILE FORMAT 283 284 The file format for LLVM Archive files is similar to that of BSD 4.4 or Mac OSX 285 archive files. In fact, except for the symbol table, the C<ar> commands on those 286 operating systems should be able to read LLVM archive files. The details of the 287 file format follow. 288 289 Each archive begins with the archive magic number which is the eight printable 290 characters "!<arch>\n" where \n represents the newline character (0x0A). 291 Following the magic number, the file is composed of even length members that 292 begin with an archive header and end with a \n padding character if necessary 293 (to make the length even). Each file member is composed of a header (defined 294 below), an optional newline-terminated "long file name" and the contents of 295 the file. 296 297 The fields of the header are described in the items below. All fields of the 298 header contain only ASCII characters, are left justified and are right padded 299 with space characters. 300 301 =over 302 303 =item name - char[16] 304 305 This field of the header provides the name of the archive member. If the name is 306 longer than 15 characters or contains a slash (/) character, then this field 307 contains C<#1/nnn> where C<nnn> provides the length of the name and the C<#1/> 308 is literal. In this case, the actual name of the file is provided in the C<nnn> 309 bytes immediately following the header. If the name is 15 characters or less, it 310 is contained directly in this field and terminated with a slash (/) character. 311 312 =item date - char[12] 313 314 This field provides the date of modification of the file in the form of a 315 decimal encoded number that provides the number of seconds since the epoch 316 (since 00:00:00 Jan 1, 1970) per Posix specifications. 317 318 =item uid - char[6] 319 320 This field provides the user id of the file encoded as a decimal ASCII string. 321 This field might not make much sense on non-Unix systems. On Unix, it is the 322 same value as the st_uid field of the stat structure returned by the stat(2) 323 operating system call. 324 325 =item gid - char[6] 326 327 This field provides the group id of the file encoded as a decimal ASCII string. 328 This field might not make much sense on non-Unix systems. On Unix, it is the 329 same value as the st_gid field of the stat structure returned by the stat(2) 330 operating system call. 331 332 =item mode - char[8] 333 334 This field provides the access mode of the file encoded as an octal ASCII 335 string. This field might not make much sense on non-Unix systems. On Unix, it 336 is the same value as the st_mode field of the stat structure returned by the 337 stat(2) operating system call. 338 339 =item size - char[10] 340 341 This field provides the size of the file, in bytes, encoded as a decimal ASCII 342 string. If the size field is negative (starts with a minus sign, 0x02D), then 343 the archive member is stored in compressed form. The first byte of the archive 344 member's data indicates the compression type used. A value of 0 (0x30) indicates 345 that no compression was used. A value of 2 (0x32) indicates that bzip2 346 compression was used. 347 348 =item fmag - char[2] 349 350 This field is the archive file member magic number. Its content is always the 351 two characters back tick (0x60) and newline (0x0A). This provides some measure 352 utility in identifying archive files that have been corrupted. 353 354 =back 355 356 The LLVM symbol table has the special name "#_LLVM_SYM_TAB_#". It is presumed 357 that no regular archive member file will want this name. The LLVM symbol table 358 is simply composed of a sequence of triplets: byte offset, length of symbol, 359 and the symbol itself. Symbols are not null or newline terminated. Here are 360 the details on each of these items: 361 362 =over 363 364 =item offset - vbr encoded 32-bit integer 365 366 The offset item provides the offset into the archive file where the bitcode 367 member is stored that is associated with the symbol. The offset value is 0 368 based at the start of the first "normal" file member. To derive the actual 369 file offset of the member, you must add the number of bytes occupied by the file 370 signature (8 bytes) and the symbol tables. The value of this item is encoded 371 using variable bit rate encoding to reduce the size of the symbol table. 372 Variable bit rate encoding uses the high bit (0x80) of each byte to indicate 373 if there are more bytes to follow. The remaining 7 bits in each byte carry bits 374 from the value. The final byte does not have the high bit set. 375 376 =item length - vbr encoded 32-bit integer 377 378 The length item provides the length of the symbol that follows. Like this 379 I<offset> item, the length is variable bit rate encoded. 380 381 =item symbol - character array 382 383 The symbol item provides the text of the symbol that is associated with the 384 I<offset>. The symbol is not terminated by any character. Its length is provided 385 by the I<length> field. Note that is allowed (but unwise) to use non-printing 386 characters (even 0x00) in the symbol. This allows for multiple encodings of 387 symbol names. 388 389 =back 390 391 =head1 EXIT STATUS 392 393 If B<llvm-ar> succeeds, it will exit with 0. A usage error, results 394 in an exit code of 1. A hard (file system typically) error results in an 395 exit code of 2. Miscellaneous or unknown errors result in an 396 exit code of 3. 397 398 =head1 SEE ALSO 399 400 L<llvm-ranlib|llvm-ranlib>, ar(1) 401 402 =head1 AUTHORS 403 404 Maintained by the LLVM Team (L<http://llvm.org/>). 405 406 =cut 407