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     10 
     11 <h1>
     12   Getting Started with the LLVM System  
     13 </h1>
     14 
     15 <ul>
     16   <li><a href="#overview">Overview</a>
     17   <li><a href="#quickstart">Getting Started Quickly (A Summary)</a>
     18   <li><a href="#requirements">Requirements</a>
     19     <ol>
     20       <li><a href="#hardware">Hardware</a></li>
     21       <li><a href="#software">Software</a></li>
     22       <li><a href="#brokengcc">Broken versions of GCC and other tools</a></li>
     23     </ol></li>
     24 
     25   <li><a href="#starting">Getting Started with LLVM</a>
     26     <ol>
     27       <li><a href="#terminology">Terminology and Notation</a></li>
     28       <li><a href="#environment">Setting Up Your Environment</a></li>
     29       <li><a href="#unpack">Unpacking the LLVM Archives</a></li>
     30       <li><a href="#checkout">Checkout LLVM from Subversion</a></li>
     31       <li><a href="#git_mirror">LLVM GIT mirror</a></li>
     32       <li><a href="#installcf">Install the GCC Front End</a></li>
     33       <li><a href="#config">Local LLVM Configuration</a></li>
     34       <li><a href="#compile">Compiling the LLVM Suite Source Code</a></li>
     35       <li><a href="#cross-compile">Cross-Compiling LLVM</a></li>
     36       <li><a href="#objfiles">The Location of LLVM Object Files</a></li>
     37       <li><a href="#optionalconfig">Optional Configuration Items</a></li>
     38     </ol></li>
     39 
     40   <li><a href="#layout">Program layout</a>
     41     <ol>
     42       <li><a href="#examples"><tt>llvm/examples</tt></a></li>
     43       <li><a href="#include"><tt>llvm/include</tt></a></li>
     44       <li><a href="#lib"><tt>llvm/lib</tt></a></li>
     45       <li><a href="#projects"><tt>llvm/projects</tt></a></li>
     46       <li><a href="#runtime"><tt>llvm/runtime</tt></a></li>
     47       <li><a href="#test"><tt>llvm/test</tt></a></li>
     48       <li><a href="#test-suite"><tt>test-suite</tt></a></li>
     49       <li><a href="#tools"><tt>llvm/tools</tt></a></li>
     50       <li><a href="#utils"><tt>llvm/utils</tt></a></li>
     51     </ol></li>
     52 
     53   <li><a href="#tutorial">An Example Using the LLVM Tool Chain</a>
     54       <ol>
     55          <li><a href="#tutorial4">Example with llvm-gcc4</a></li>
     56       </ol>
     57   <li><a href="#problems">Common Problems</a>
     58   <li><a href="#links">Links</a>
     59 </ul>
     60 
     61 <div class="doc_author">
     62   <p>Written by: 
     63     <a href="mailto:criswell (a] uiuc.edu">John Criswell</a>, 
     64     <a href="mailto:sabre (a] nondot.org">Chris Lattner</a>,
     65     <a href="http://misha.brukman.net/">Misha Brukman</a>, 
     66     <a href="http://www.cs.uiuc.edu/~vadve">Vikram Adve</a>, and
     67     <a href="mailto:gshi1 (a] uiuc.edu">Guochun Shi</a>.
     68   </p>
     69 </div>
     70 
     71 
     72 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
     73 <h2>
     74   <a name="overview">Overview</a>
     75 </h2>
     76 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
     77 
     78 <div>
     79 
     80 <p>Welcome to LLVM! In order to get started, you first need to know some
     81 basic information.</p>
     82 
     83 <p>First, LLVM comes in three pieces. The first piece is the LLVM
     84 suite. This contains all of the tools, libraries, and header files
     85 needed to use the low level virtual machine.  It contains an
     86 assembler, disassembler, bitcode analyzer and bitcode optimizer.  It
     87 also contains basic regression tests that can be used to test the LLVM
     88 tools and the GCC front end.</p>
     89 
     90 <p>The second piece is the GCC front end.  This component provides a version of
     91 GCC that compiles C and C++ code into LLVM bitcode.  Currently, the GCC front
     92 end uses the GCC parser to convert code to LLVM.  Once
     93 compiled into LLVM bitcode, a program can be manipulated with the LLVM tools
     94 from the LLVM suite.</p>
     95 
     96 <p>
     97 There is a third, optional piece called Test Suite.  It is a suite of programs
     98 with a testing harness that can be used to further test LLVM's functionality
     99 and performance.
    100 </p>
    101 
    102 </div>
    103 
    104 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
    105 <h2>
    106   <a name="quickstart">Getting Started Quickly (A Summary)</a>
    107 </h2>
    108 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
    109 
    110 <div>
    111 
    112 <p>Here's the short story for getting up and running quickly with LLVM:</p>
    113 
    114 <ol>
    115   <li>Read the documentation.</li>
    116   <li>Read the documentation.</li>
    117   <li>Remember that you were warned twice about reading the documentation.</li>
    118   <li>Install the llvm-gcc-4.2 front end if you intend to compile C or C++
    119       (see <a href="#installcf">Install the GCC Front End</a> for details):
    120     <ol>
    121       <li><tt>cd <i>where-you-want-the-C-front-end-to-live</i></tt></li>
    122       <li><tt>gunzip --stdout llvm-gcc-4.2-<i>version</i>-<i>platform</i>.tar.gz | tar -xvf -</tt></li>
    123 	  <li><tt><i>install-binutils-binary-from-MinGW</i></tt> (Windows only)</li>
    124 	  <li>Note: If the binary extension is "<tt>.bz</tt>" use <tt>bunzip2</tt> instead of <tt>gunzip</tt>.</li>
    125 	  <li>Note: On Windows, use <a href="http://www.7-zip.org/">7-Zip</a> or a similar archiving tool.</li>
    126 	  <li>Add <tt>llvm-gcc</tt>'s "<tt>bin</tt>" directory to your <tt>PATH</tt> environment variable.</li>
    127     </ol></li>
    128 
    129   <li>Get the LLVM Source Code
    130   <ul>
    131     <li>With the distributed files (or use <a href="#checkout">SVN</a>):
    132     <ol>
    133       <li><tt>cd <i>where-you-want-llvm-to-live</i></tt>
    134       <li><tt>gunzip --stdout llvm-<i>version</i>.tar.gz | tar -xvf -</tt>
    135     </ol></li>
    136 
    137   </ul></li>
    138 
    139   <li><b>[Optional]</b> Get the Test Suite Source Code 
    140   <ul>
    141     <li>With the distributed files (or use <a href="#checkout">SVN</a>):
    142     <ol>
    143       <li><tt>cd <i>where-you-want-llvm-to-live</i></tt>
    144       <li><tt>cd llvm/projects</tt>
    145       <li><tt>gunzip --stdout llvm-test-<i>version</i>.tar.gz | tar -xvf -</tt>
    146       <li><tt>mv llvm-test-<i>version</i> test-suite</tt>
    147     </ol></li>
    148 
    149   </ul></li>
    150 
    151 
    152   <li>Configure the LLVM Build Environment
    153   <ol>
    154     <li><tt>cd <i>where-you-want-to-build-llvm</i></tt></li>
    155     <li><tt><i>/path/to/llvm/</i>configure [options]</tt><br>
    156     Some common options:
    157 
    158       <ul>
    159         <li><tt>--prefix=<i>directory</i></tt>
    160         <p>Specify for <i>directory</i> the full pathname of where you
    161         want the LLVM tools and libraries to be installed (default
    162         <tt>/usr/local</tt>).</p></li>
    163         <li><tt>--with-llvmgccdir=<i>directory</i></tt>
    164         <p>Optionally, specify for <i>directory</i> the full pathname of the 
    165         C/C++ front end installation to use with this LLVM configuration. If
    166         not specified, the PATH will be searched.  This is only needed if you
    167         want to run test-suite or do some special kinds of LLVM builds.</p></li>
    168         <li><tt>--enable-spec2000=<i>directory</i></tt>
    169             <p>Enable the SPEC2000 benchmarks for testing.  The SPEC2000
    170             benchmarks should be available in
    171             <tt><i>directory</i></tt>.</p></li>
    172       </ul>
    173   </ol></li>
    174 
    175   <li>Build the LLVM Suite:
    176   <ol>
    177       <li><tt>gmake -k |&amp; tee gnumake.out
    178       &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;# this is csh or tcsh syntax</tt></li>
    179       <li>If you get an "internal compiler error (ICE)" or test failures, see 
    180           <a href="#brokengcc">below</a>.</li>
    181   </ol>
    182 
    183 </ol>
    184 
    185 <p>Consult the <a href="#starting">Getting Started with LLVM</a> section for
    186 detailed information on configuring and compiling LLVM.  See <a
    187 href="#environment">Setting Up Your Environment</a> for tips that simplify
    188 working with the GCC front end and LLVM tools.  Go to <a href="#layout">Program
    189 Layout</a> to learn about the layout of the source code tree.</p>
    190 
    191 </div>
    192 
    193 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
    194 <h2>
    195   <a name="requirements">Requirements</a>
    196 </h2>
    197 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
    198 
    199 <div>
    200 
    201 <p>Before you begin to use the LLVM system, review the requirements given below.
    202 This may save you some trouble by knowing ahead of time what hardware and
    203 software you will need.</p>
    204 
    205 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    206 <h3>
    207   <a name="hardware">Hardware</a>
    208 </h3>
    209 
    210 <div>
    211 
    212 <p>LLVM is known to work on the following platforms:</p>
    213 
    214 <table cellpadding="3" summary="Known LLVM platforms">
    215 <tr>
    216   <th>OS</th>
    217   <th>Arch</th>
    218   <th>Compilers</th>
    219 </tr>
    220 <tr>
    221   <td>AuroraUX</td>
    222   <td>x86<sup><a href="#pf_1">1</a></sup></td>
    223   <td>GCC</td>
    224 </tr>
    225 <tr>
    226   <td>Linux</td>
    227   <td>x86<sup><a href="#pf_1">1</a></sup></td>
    228   <td>GCC</td>
    229 </tr>
    230 <tr>
    231   <td>Linux</td>
    232   <td>amd64</td>
    233   <td>GCC</td>
    234 </tr>
    235 <tr>
    236   <td>Solaris</td>
    237   <td>V9 (Ultrasparc)</td>
    238   <td>GCC</td>
    239 </tr>
    240 <tr>
    241   <td>FreeBSD</td>
    242   <td>x86<sup><a href="#pf_1">1</a></sup></td>
    243   <td>GCC</td>
    244 </tr>
    245 <tr>
    246   <td>FreeBSD</td>
    247   <td>amd64</td>
    248   <td>GCC</td>
    249 </tr>
    250 <tr>
    251   <td>MacOS X<sup><a href="#pf_2">2</a></sup></td>
    252   <td>PowerPC</td>
    253   <td>GCC</td>
    254 </tr>
    255 <tr>
    256   <td>MacOS X<sup><a href="#pf_2">2</a>,<a href="#pf_9">9</a></sup></td>
    257   <td>x86</td>
    258   <td>GCC</td>
    259 </tr>
    260 <tr>
    261   <td>Cygwin/Win32</td>
    262   <td>x86<sup><a href="#pf_1">1</a>,<a href="#pf_8">8</a>,
    263      <a href="#pf_11">11</a></sup></td>
    264   <td>GCC 3.4.X, binutils 2.20</td>
    265 </tr>
    266 <tr>
    267   <td>MinGW/Win32</td>
    268   <td>x86<sup><a href="#pf_1">1</a>,<a href="#pf_6">6</a>,
    269      <a href="#pf_8">8</a>, <a href="#pf_10">10</a>,
    270      <a href="#pf_11">11</a></sup></td>
    271   <td>GCC 3.4.X, binutils 2.20</td>
    272 </tr>
    273 </table>
    274 
    275 <p>LLVM has partial support for the following platforms:</p>
    276 
    277 <table summary="LLVM partial platform support">
    278 <tr>
    279   <th>OS</th>
    280   <th>Arch</th>
    281   <th>Compilers</th>
    282 </tr>
    283 <tr>
    284   <td>Windows</td>
    285   <td>x86<sup><a href="#pf_1">1</a></sup></td>
    286   <td>Visual Studio 2005 SP1 or higher<sup><a href="#pf_4">4</a>,<a href="#pf_5">5</a></sup></td>
    287 <tr>
    288   <td>AIX<sup><a href="#pf_3">3</a>,<a href="#pf_4">4</a></sup></td>
    289   <td>PowerPC</td>
    290   <td>GCC</td>
    291 </tr>
    292 <tr>
    293   <td>Linux<sup><a href="#pf_3">3</a>,<a href="#pf_5">5</a></sup></td>
    294   <td>PowerPC</td>
    295   <td>GCC</td>
    296 </tr>
    297 
    298 <tr>
    299   <td>Linux<sup><a href="#pf_7">7</a></sup></td>
    300   <td>Alpha</td>
    301   <td>GCC</td>
    302 </tr>
    303 <tr>
    304   <td>Linux<sup><a href="#pf_7">7</a></sup></td>
    305   <td>Itanium (IA-64)</td>
    306   <td>GCC</td>
    307 </tr>
    308 <tr>
    309   <td>HP-UX<sup><a href="#pf_7">7</a></sup></td>
    310   <td>Itanium (IA-64)</td>
    311   <td>HP aCC</td>
    312 </tr>
    313 <tr>
    314   <td>Windows x64</td>
    315   <td>x86-64</td>
    316   <td>mingw-w64's GCC-4.5.x<sup><a href="#pf_12">12</a></sup></td>
    317 </tr>
    318 </table>
    319 
    320 <p><b>Notes:</b></p>
    321 
    322 <div class="doc_notes">
    323 <ol>
    324 <li><a name="pf_1">Code generation supported for Pentium processors and
    325 up</a></li>
    326 <li><a name="pf_2">Code generation supported for 32-bit ABI only</a></li>
    327 <li><a name="pf_3">No native code generation</a></li>
    328 <li><a name="pf_4">Build is not complete: one or more tools do not link or function</a></li>
    329 <li><a name="pf_5">The GCC-based C/C++ frontend does not build</a></li>
    330 <li><a name="pf_6">The port is done using the MSYS shell.</a></li>
    331 <li><a name="pf_7">Native code generation exists but is not complete.</a></li>
    332 <li><a name="pf_8">Binutils 2.20 or later is required to build the assembler
    333     generated by LLVM properly.</a></li>
    334 <li><a name="pf_9">XCode 2.5 and gcc 4.0.1</a> (Apple Build 5370) will trip
    335     internal LLVM assert messages when compiled for Release at optimization
    336     levels greater than 0 (i.e., <i>"-O1"</i> and higher).
    337     Add <i>OPTIMIZE_OPTION="-O0"</i> to the build command line
    338     if compiling for LLVM Release or bootstrapping the LLVM toolchain.</li>
    339 <li><a name="pf_10">For MSYS/MinGW on Windows, be sure to install the MSYS
    340     version of the perl package, and be sure it appears in your path
    341     before any Windows-based versions such as Strawberry Perl and
    342     ActivePerl, as these have Windows-specifics that will cause the
    343     build to fail.</a></li>
    344 <li><a name="pf_11">To use LLVM modules on Win32-based system,
    345     you may configure LLVM with <i>&quot;--enable-shared&quot;</i>.</a></li>
    346 <li><a name="pf_12">To compile SPU backend, you need to add
    347     <tt>&quot;LDFLAGS=-Wl,--stack,16777216&quot;</tt> to configure.</a></li>
    348 </ol>
    349 </div>
    350 
    351 <p>Note that you will need about 1-3 GB of space for a full LLVM build in Debug
    352 mode, depending on the system (it is so large because of all the debugging
    353 information and the fact that the libraries are statically linked into multiple
    354 tools).  If you do not need many of the tools and you are space-conscious, you
    355 can pass <tt>ONLY_TOOLS="tools you need"</tt> to make.  The Release build
    356 requires considerably less space.</p>
    357 
    358 <p>The LLVM suite <i>may</i> compile on other platforms, but it is not
    359 guaranteed to do so.  If compilation is successful, the LLVM utilities should be
    360 able to assemble, disassemble, analyze, and optimize LLVM bitcode.  Code
    361 generation should work as well, although the generated native code may not work
    362 on your platform.</p>
    363 
    364 <p>The GCC front end is not very portable at the moment.  If you want to get it
    365 to work on another platform, you can download a copy of the source and <a
    366 href="GCCFEBuildInstrs.html">try to compile it</a> on your platform.</p>
    367 
    368 </div>
    369 
    370 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    371 <h3>
    372   <a name="software">Software</a>
    373 </h3>
    374 <div>
    375   <p>Compiling LLVM requires that you have several software packages 
    376   installed. The table below lists those required packages. The Package column
    377   is the usual name for the software package that LLVM depends on. The Version
    378   column provides "known to work" versions of the package. The Notes column
    379   describes how LLVM uses the package and provides other details.</p>
    380   <table summary="Packages required to compile LLVM">
    381     <tr><th>Package</th><th>Version</th><th>Notes</th></tr>
    382 
    383     <tr>
    384       <td><a href="http://savannah.gnu.org/projects/make">GNU Make</a></td>
    385       <td>3.79, 3.79.1</td>
    386       <td>Makefile/build processor</td>
    387     </tr>
    388 
    389     <tr>
    390       <td><a href="http://gcc.gnu.org/">GCC</a></td>
    391       <td>3.4.2</td>
    392       <td>C/C++ compiler<sup><a href="#sf1">1</a></sup></td>
    393     </tr>
    394 
    395     <tr>
    396       <td><a href="http://www.gnu.org/software/texinfo/">TeXinfo</a></td>
    397       <td>4.5</td>
    398       <td>For building the CFE</td>
    399     </tr>
    400 
    401     <tr>
    402       <td><a href="http://subversion.tigris.org/project_packages.html">SVN</a></td>
    403       <td>&ge;1.3</td>
    404       <td>Subversion access to LLVM<sup><a href="#sf2">2</a></sup></td>
    405     </tr>
    406 
    407     <!-- FIXME:
    408     Do we support dg?
    409     Are DejaGnu and expect obsolete?
    410     Shall we mention Python? -->
    411 
    412     <tr>
    413       <td><a href="http://savannah.gnu.org/projects/dejagnu">DejaGnu</a></td>
    414       <td>1.4.2</td>
    415       <td>Automated test suite<sup><a href="#sf3">3</a></sup></td>
    416     </tr>
    417 
    418     <tr>
    419       <td><a href="http://www.tcl.tk/software/tcltk/">tcl</a></td>
    420       <td>8.3, 8.4</td>
    421       <td>Automated test suite<sup><a href="#sf3">3</a></sup></td>
    422     </tr>
    423 
    424     <tr>
    425       <td><a href="http://expect.nist.gov/">expect</a></td>
    426       <td>5.38.0</td>
    427       <td>Automated test suite<sup><a href="#sf3">3</a></sup></td>
    428     </tr>
    429 
    430     <tr>
    431       <td><a href="http://www.perl.com/download.csp">perl</a></td>
    432       <td>&ge;5.6.0</td>
    433       <td>Nightly tester, utilities</td>
    434     </tr>
    435 
    436     <tr>
    437       <td><a href="http://savannah.gnu.org/projects/m4">GNU M4</a>
    438       <td>1.4</td>
    439       <td>Macro processor for configuration<sup><a href="#sf4">4</a></sup></td>
    440     </tr>
    441 
    442     <tr>
    443       <td><a href="http://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/">GNU Autoconf</a></td>
    444       <td>2.61</td>
    445       <td>Configuration script builder<sup><a href="#sf4">4</a></sup></td>
    446     </tr>
    447 
    448     <tr>
    449       <td><a href="http://www.gnu.org/software/automake/">GNU Automake</a></td>
    450       <td>1.10</td>
    451       <td>aclocal macro generator<sup><a href="#sf4">4</a></sup></td>
    452     </tr>
    453 
    454     <tr>
    455       <td><a href="http://savannah.gnu.org/projects/libtool">libtool</a></td>
    456       <td>1.5.22</td>
    457       <td>Shared library manager<sup><a href="#sf4">4</a></sup></td>
    458     </tr>
    459 
    460   </table>
    461 
    462   <p><b>Notes:</b></p>
    463   <div class="doc_notes">
    464   <ol>
    465     <li><a name="sf1">Only the C and C++ languages are needed so there's no
    466       need to build the other languages for LLVM's purposes.</a> See 
    467       <a href="#brokengcc">below</a> for specific version info.</li>
    468     <li><a name="sf2">You only need Subversion if you intend to build from the 
    469       latest LLVM sources. If you're working from a release distribution, you
    470       don't need Subversion.</a></li>
    471     <li><a name="sf3">Only needed if you want to run the automated test 
    472       suite in the <tt>llvm/test</tt> directory.</a></li>
    473     <li><a name="sf4">If you want to make changes to the configure scripts, 
    474       you will need GNU autoconf (2.61), and consequently, GNU M4 (version 1.4 
    475       or higher). You will also need automake (1.10). We only use aclocal 
    476       from that package.</a></li>
    477   </ol>
    478   </div>
    479   
    480   <p>Additionally, your compilation host is expected to have the usual 
    481   plethora of Unix utilities. Specifically:</p>
    482   <ul>
    483     <li><b>ar</b> - archive library builder</li>
    484     <li><b>bzip2*</b> - bzip2 command for distribution generation</li>
    485     <li><b>bunzip2*</b> - bunzip2 command for distribution checking</li>
    486     <li><b>chmod</b> - change permissions on a file</li>
    487     <li><b>cat</b> - output concatenation utility</li>
    488     <li><b>cp</b> - copy files</li>
    489     <li><b>date</b> - print the current date/time </li>
    490     <li><b>echo</b> - print to standard output</li>
    491     <li><b>egrep</b> - extended regular expression search utility</li>
    492     <li><b>find</b> - find files/dirs in a file system</li>
    493     <li><b>grep</b> - regular expression search utility</li>
    494     <li><b>gzip*</b> - gzip command for distribution generation</li>
    495     <li><b>gunzip*</b> - gunzip command for distribution checking</li>
    496     <li><b>install</b> - install directories/files </li>
    497     <li><b>mkdir</b> - create a directory</li>
    498     <li><b>mv</b> - move (rename) files</li>
    499     <li><b>ranlib</b> - symbol table builder for archive libraries</li>
    500     <li><b>rm</b> - remove (delete) files and directories</li>
    501     <li><b>sed</b> - stream editor for transforming output</li>
    502     <li><b>sh</b> - Bourne shell for make build scripts</li>
    503     <li><b>tar</b> - tape archive for distribution generation</li>
    504     <li><b>test</b> - test things in file system</li>
    505     <li><b>unzip*</b> - unzip command for distribution checking</li>
    506     <li><b>zip*</b> - zip command for distribution generation</li>
    507   </ul>
    508 </div>
    509 
    510 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    511 <h3>
    512   <a name="brokengcc">Broken versions of GCC and other tools</a>
    513 </h3>
    514 
    515 <div>
    516 
    517 <p>LLVM is very demanding of the host C++ compiler, and as such tends to expose
    518 bugs in the compiler.  In particular, several versions of GCC crash when trying
    519 to compile LLVM.  We routinely use GCC 3.3.3, 3.4.0, and Apple 4.0.1 
    520 successfully with them (however, see important notes below).  Other versions 
    521 of GCC will probably work as well.  GCC versions listed
    522 here are known to not work.  If you are using one of these versions, please try
    523 to upgrade your GCC to something more recent.  If you run into a problem with a
    524 version of GCC not listed here, please <a href="mailto:llvmdev (a] cs.uiuc.edu">let
    525 us know</a>.  Please use the "<tt>gcc -v</tt>" command to find out which version
    526 of GCC you are using.
    527 </p>
    528 
    529 <p><b>GCC versions prior to 3.0</b>: GCC 2.96.x and before had several
    530 problems in the STL that effectively prevent it from compiling LLVM.
    531 </p>
    532 
    533 <p><b>GCC 3.2.2 and 3.2.3</b>: These versions of GCC fails to compile LLVM with
    534 a bogus template error.  This was fixed in later GCCs.</p>
    535 
    536 <p><b>GCC 3.3.2</b>: This version of GCC suffered from a <a 
    537 href="http://gcc.gnu.org/PR13392">serious bug</a> which causes it to crash in
    538 the "<tt>convert_from_eh_region_ranges_1</tt>" GCC function.</p>
    539 
    540 <p><b>Cygwin GCC 3.3.3</b>: The version of GCC 3.3.3 commonly shipped with 
    541    Cygwin does not work.  Please <a href="GCCFEBuildInstrs.html#cygwin">upgrade 
    542    to a newer version</a> if possible.</p>
    543 <p><b>SuSE GCC 3.3.3</b>: The version of GCC 3.3.3 shipped with SuSE 9.1 (and 
    544    possibly others) does not compile LLVM correctly (it appears that exception 
    545    handling is broken in some cases).  Please download the FSF 3.3.3 or upgrade
    546    to a newer version of GCC.</p>
    547 <p><b>GCC 3.4.0 on linux/x86 (32-bit)</b>: GCC miscompiles portions of the 
    548    code generator, causing an infinite loop in the llvm-gcc build when built
    549    with optimizations enabled (i.e. a release build).</p>
    550 <p><b>GCC 3.4.2 on linux/x86 (32-bit)</b>: GCC miscompiles portions of the 
    551    code generator at -O3, as with 3.4.0.  However gcc 3.4.2 (unlike 3.4.0)
    552    correctly compiles LLVM at -O2.  A work around is to build release LLVM
    553    builds with "make ENABLE_OPTIMIZED=1 OPTIMIZE_OPTION=-O2 ..."</p>
    554 <p><b>GCC 3.4.x on X86-64/amd64</b>: GCC <a href="http://llvm.org/PR1056">
    555    miscompiles portions of LLVM</a>.</p>
    556 <p><b>GCC 3.4.4 (CodeSourcery ARM 2005q3-2)</b>: this compiler miscompiles LLVM
    557    when building with optimizations enabled.  It appears to work with 
    558    "<tt>make ENABLE_OPTIMIZED=1 OPTIMIZE_OPTION=-O1</tt>" or build a debug
    559    build.</p>
    560 <p><b>IA-64 GCC 4.0.0</b>: The IA-64 version of GCC 4.0.0 is known to
    561    miscompile LLVM.</p>
    562 <p><b>Apple Xcode 2.3</b>: GCC crashes when compiling LLVM at -O3 (which is the
    563    default with ENABLE_OPTIMIZED=1.  To work around this, build with 
    564    "ENABLE_OPTIMIZED=1 OPTIMIZE_OPTION=-O2".</p>
    565 <p><b>GCC 4.1.1</b>: GCC fails to build LLVM with template concept check errors
    566       compiling some files.  At the time of this writing, GCC mainline (4.2)
    567       did not share the problem.</p>
    568 <p><b>GCC 4.1.1 on X86-64/amd64</b>: GCC <a href="http://llvm.org/PR1063">
    569    miscompiles portions of LLVM</a> when compiling llvm itself into 64-bit 
    570    code.  LLVM will appear to mostly work but will be buggy, e.g. failing 
    571    portions of its testsuite.</p>
    572 <p><b>GCC 4.1.2 on OpenSUSE</b>: Seg faults during libstdc++ build and on x86_64
    573 platforms compiling md5.c gets a mangled constant.</p>
    574 <p><b>GCC 4.1.2 (20061115 (prerelease) (Debian 4.1.1-21)) on Debian</b>: Appears
    575 to miscompile parts of LLVM 2.4. One symptom is ValueSymbolTable complaining
    576 about symbols remaining in the table on destruction.</p>
    577 <p><b>GCC 4.1.2 20071124 (Red Hat 4.1.2-42)</b>: Suffers from the same symptoms
    578 as the previous one. It appears to work with ENABLE_OPTIMIZED=0 (the default).</p>
    579 <p><b>Cygwin GCC 4.3.2 20080827 (beta) 2</b>:
    580   Users <a href="http://llvm.org/PR4145">reported</a> various problems related
    581   with link errors when using this GCC version.</p>
    582 <p><b>Debian GCC 4.3.2 on X86</b>: Crashes building some files in LLVM 2.6.</p>
    583 <p><b>GCC 4.3.3 (Debian 4.3.3-10) on ARM</b>: Miscompiles parts of LLVM 2.6
    584 when optimizations are turned on. The symptom is an infinite loop in
    585 FoldingSetImpl::RemoveNode while running the code generator.</p>
    586 <p><b>GCC 4.3.5 and GCC 4.4.5 on ARM</b>: These can miscompile <tt>value >>
    587 1</tt> even at -O0. A test failure in <tt>test/Assembler/alignstack.ll</tt> is
    588 one symptom of the problem.
    589 <p><b>GNU ld 2.16.X</b>. Some 2.16.X versions of the ld linker will produce very
    590 long warning messages complaining that some ".gnu.linkonce.t.*" symbol was
    591 defined in a discarded section. You can safely ignore these messages as they are
    592 erroneous and the linkage is correct.  These messages disappear using ld
    593 2.17.</p>
    594 
    595 <p><b>GNU binutils 2.17</b>: Binutils 2.17 contains <a 
    596 href="http://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=3111">a bug</a> which
    597 causes huge link times (minutes instead of seconds) when building LLVM.  We
    598 recommend upgrading to a newer version (2.17.50.0.4 or later).</p>
    599 
    600 <p><b>GNU Binutils 2.19.1 Gold</b>: This version of Gold contained
    601 <a href="http://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=9836">a bug</a>
    602 which causes intermittent failures when building LLVM with position independent
    603 code.  The symptom is an error about cyclic dependencies.  We recommend
    604 upgrading to a newer version of Gold.</p>
    605 
    606 </div>
    607 
    608 </div>
    609 
    610 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
    611 <h2>
    612   <a name="starting">Getting Started with LLVM</a>
    613 </h2>
    614 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
    615 
    616 <div>
    617 
    618 <p>The remainder of this guide is meant to get you up and running with
    619 LLVM and to give you some basic information about the LLVM environment.</p>
    620 
    621 <p>The later sections of this guide describe the <a
    622 href="#layout">general layout</a> of the the LLVM source tree, a <a
    623 href="#tutorial">simple example</a> using the LLVM tool chain, and <a
    624 href="#links">links</a> to find more information about LLVM or to get
    625 help via e-mail.</p>
    626 
    627 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    628 <h3>
    629   <a name="terminology">Terminology and Notation</a>
    630 </h3>
    631 
    632 <div>
    633 
    634 <p>Throughout this manual, the following names are used to denote paths
    635 specific to the local system and working environment.  <i>These are not
    636 environment variables you need to set but just strings used in the rest
    637 of this document below</i>.  In any of the examples below, simply replace
    638 each of these names with the appropriate pathname on your local system.
    639 All these paths are absolute:</p>
    640 
    641 <dl>
    642     <dt>SRC_ROOT
    643     <dd>
    644     This is the top level directory of the LLVM source tree.
    645     <br><br>
    646 
    647     <dt>OBJ_ROOT
    648     <dd>
    649     This is the top level directory of the LLVM object tree (i.e. the
    650     tree where object files and compiled programs will be placed.  It
    651     can be the same as SRC_ROOT).
    652     <br><br>
    653 
    654     <dt>LLVMGCCDIR
    655     <dd>
    656     This is where the LLVM GCC Front End is installed.
    657     <p>
    658     For the pre-built GCC front end binaries, the LLVMGCCDIR is
    659     <tt>llvm-gcc/<i>platform</i>/llvm-gcc</tt>.
    660 </dl>
    661 
    662 </div>
    663 
    664 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    665 <h3>
    666   <a name="environment">Setting Up Your Environment</a>
    667 </h3>
    668 
    669 <div>
    670 
    671 <p>
    672 In order to compile and use LLVM, you may need to set some environment
    673 variables.
    674 
    675 <dl>
    676   <dt><tt>LLVM_LIB_SEARCH_PATH</tt>=<tt>/path/to/your/bitcode/libs</tt></dt>
    677   <dd>[Optional] This environment variable helps LLVM linking tools find the
    678   locations of your bitcode libraries. It is provided only as a
    679   convenience since you can specify the paths using the -L options of the
    680   tools and the C/C++ front-end will automatically use the bitcode files
    681   installed in its
    682   <tt>lib</tt> directory.</dd>
    683 </dl>
    684 
    685 </div>
    686 
    687 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    688 <h3>
    689   <a name="unpack">Unpacking the LLVM Archives</a>
    690 </h3>
    691 
    692 <div>
    693 
    694 <p>
    695 If you have the LLVM distribution, you will need to unpack it before you
    696 can begin to compile it.  LLVM is distributed as a set of two files: the LLVM
    697 suite and the LLVM GCC front end compiled for your platform.  There is an
    698 additional test suite that is optional.  Each file is a TAR archive that is
    699 compressed with the gzip program.
    700 </p>
    701 
    702 <p>The files are as follows, with <em>x.y</em> marking the version number:
    703 <dl>
    704   <dt><tt>llvm-x.y.tar.gz</tt></dt>
    705   <dd>Source release for the LLVM libraries and tools.<br></dd>
    706 
    707   <dt><tt>llvm-test-x.y.tar.gz</tt></dt>
    708   <dd>Source release for the LLVM test-suite.</dd>
    709 
    710   <dt><tt>llvm-gcc-4.2-x.y.source.tar.gz</tt></dt>
    711   <dd>Source release of the llvm-gcc-4.2 front end.  See README.LLVM in the root
    712       directory for build instructions.<br></dd>
    713 
    714   <dt><tt>llvm-gcc-4.2-x.y-platform.tar.gz</tt></dt>
    715   <dd>Binary release of the llvm-gcc-4.2 front end for a specific platform.<br></dd>
    716 
    717 </dl>
    718 
    719 </div>
    720 
    721 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    722 <h3>
    723   <a name="checkout">Checkout LLVM from Subversion</a>
    724 </h3>
    725 
    726 <div>
    727 
    728 <p>If you have access to our Subversion repository, you can get a fresh copy of
    729 the entire source code.  All you need to do is check it out from Subversion as
    730 follows:</p>
    731 
    732 <ul>
    733   <li><tt>cd <i>where-you-want-llvm-to-live</i></tt></li>
    734   <li>Read-Only: <tt>svn co http://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk llvm</tt></li>
    735   <li>Read-Write:<tt>svn co https://user@llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk
    736     llvm</tt></li>
    737 </ul>
    738 
    739 
    740 <p>This will create an '<tt>llvm</tt>' directory in the current
    741 directory and fully populate it with the LLVM source code, Makefiles,
    742 test directories, and local copies of documentation files.</p>
    743 
    744 <p>If you want to get a specific release (as opposed to the most recent
    745 revision), you can checkout it from the '<tt>tags</tt>' directory (instead of
    746 '<tt>trunk</tt>'). The following releases are located in the following
    747 subdirectories of the '<tt>tags</tt>' directory:</p>
    748 
    749 <ul>
    750 <li>Release 3.0: <b>RELEASE_30/final</b></li>
    751 <li>Release 2.9: <b>RELEASE_29/final</b></li>
    752 <li>Release 2.8: <b>RELEASE_28</b></li>
    753 <li>Release 2.7: <b>RELEASE_27</b></li>
    754 <li>Release 2.6: <b>RELEASE_26</b></li>
    755 <li>Release 2.5: <b>RELEASE_25</b></li>
    756 <li>Release 2.4: <b>RELEASE_24</b></li>
    757 <li>Release 2.3: <b>RELEASE_23</b></li>
    758 <li>Release 2.2: <b>RELEASE_22</b></li>
    759 <li>Release 2.1: <b>RELEASE_21</b></li>
    760 <li>Release 2.0: <b>RELEASE_20</b></li>
    761 <li>Release 1.9: <b>RELEASE_19</b></li>
    762 <li>Release 1.8: <b>RELEASE_18</b></li>
    763 <li>Release 1.7: <b>RELEASE_17</b></li>
    764 <li>Release 1.6: <b>RELEASE_16</b></li>
    765 <li>Release 1.5: <b>RELEASE_15</b></li>
    766 <li>Release 1.4: <b>RELEASE_14</b></li>
    767 <li>Release 1.3: <b>RELEASE_13</b></li>
    768 <li>Release 1.2: <b>RELEASE_12</b></li>
    769 <li>Release 1.1: <b>RELEASE_11</b></li>
    770 <li>Release 1.0: <b>RELEASE_1</b></li>
    771 </ul>
    772 
    773 <p>If you would like to get the LLVM test suite (a separate package as of 1.4),
    774 you get it from the Subversion repository:</p>
    775 
    776 <div class="doc_code">
    777 <pre>
    778 % cd llvm/projects
    779 % svn co http://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/test-suite/trunk test-suite
    780 </pre>
    781 </div>
    782 
    783 <p>By placing it in the <tt>llvm/projects</tt>, it will be automatically
    784 configured by the LLVM configure script as well as automatically updated when
    785 you run <tt>svn update</tt>.</p>
    786 
    787 <p>If you would like to get the GCC front end source code, you can also get it 
    788 and build it yourself.  Please follow <a href="GCCFEBuildInstrs.html">these 
    789 instructions</a> to successfully get and build the LLVM GCC front-end.</p>
    790 
    791 </div>
    792 
    793 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    794 <h3>
    795   <a name="git_mirror">GIT mirror</a>
    796 </h3>
    797 
    798 <div>
    799 
    800 <p>GIT mirrors are available for a number of LLVM subprojects. These mirrors
    801   sync automatically with each Subversion commit and contain all necessary
    802   git-svn marks (so, you can recreate git-svn metadata locally). Note that right
    803   now mirrors reflect only <tt>trunk</tt> for each project. You can do the
    804   read-only GIT clone of LLVM via:</p>
    805 
    806 <pre class="doc_code">
    807 git clone http://llvm.org/git/llvm.git
    808 </pre>
    809 
    810 <p>If you want to check out clang too, run:</p>
    811 
    812 <pre class="doc_code">
    813 git clone http://llvm.org/git/llvm.git
    814 cd llvm/tools
    815 git clone http://llvm.org/git/clang.git
    816 </pre>
    817 
    818 <p>
    819 Since the upstream repository is in Subversion, you should use
    820 <tt>&quot;git pull --rebase&quot;</tt>
    821 instead of <tt>&quot;git pull&quot;</tt> to avoid generating a non-linear
    822 history in your clone.
    823 To configure <tt>&quot;git pull&quot;</tt> to pass <tt>--rebase</tt> by default
    824 on the master branch, run the following command:
    825 </p>
    826 
    827 <pre class="doc_code">
    828 git config branch.master.rebase true
    829 </pre>
    830 
    831 <h4>Sending patches with Git</h4>
    832 <div>
    833 <p>
    834 Please read <a href="DeveloperPolicy.html#patches">Developer Policy</a>, too.
    835 </p>
    836 
    837 <p>
    838 Assume <tt>master</tt> points the upstream and <tt>mybranch</tt> points your
    839 working branch, and <tt>mybranch</tt> is rebased onto <tt>master</tt>.
    840 At first you may check sanity of whitespaces:
    841 </p>
    842 
    843 <pre class="doc_code">
    844 git diff --check master..mybranch
    845 </pre>
    846 
    847 <p>
    848 The easiest way to generate a patch is as below:
    849 </p>
    850 
    851 <pre class="doc_code">
    852 git diff master..mybranch &gt; /path/to/mybranch.diff
    853 </pre>
    854 
    855 <p>
    856 It is a little different from svn-generated diff. git-diff-generated diff has
    857 prefixes like <tt>a/</tt> and <tt>b/</tt>. Don't worry, most developers might
    858 know it could be accepted with <tt>patch -p1 -N</tt>.
    859 </p>
    860 
    861 <p>
    862 But you may generate patchset with git-format-patch. It generates
    863 by-each-commit patchset. To generate patch files to attach to your article:
    864 </p>
    865 
    866 <pre class="doc_code">
    867 git format-patch --no-attach master..mybranch -o /path/to/your/patchset
    868 </pre>
    869 
    870 <p>
    871 If you would like to send patches directly, you may use git-send-email or
    872 git-imap-send. Here is an example to generate the patchset in Gmail's [Drafts].
    873 </p>
    874 
    875 <pre class="doc_code">
    876 git format-patch --attach master..mybranch --stdout | git imap-send
    877 </pre>
    878 
    879 <p>
    880 Then, your .git/config should have [imap] sections.
    881 </p>
    882 
    883 <pre class="doc_code">
    884 [imap]
    885         host = imaps://imap.gmail.com
    886         user = <em>your.gmail.account</em>@gmail.com
    887         pass = <em>himitsu!</em>
    888         port = 993
    889         sslverify = false
    890 ; in English
    891         folder = "[Gmail]/Drafts"
    892 ; example for Japanese, "Modified UTF-7" encoded.
    893         folder = "[Gmail]/&amp;Tgtm+DBN-"
    894 </pre>
    895 
    896 </div>
    897 
    898 <h4>For developers to work with git-svn</h4>
    899 <div>
    900 
    901 <p>To set up clone from which you can submit code using
    902    <tt>git-svn</tt>, run:</p>
    903 
    904 <pre class="doc_code">
    905 git clone http://llvm.org/git/llvm.git
    906 cd llvm
    907 git svn init https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk --username=&lt;username>
    908 git config svn-remote.svn.fetch :refs/remotes/origin/master
    909 git svn rebase -l  # -l avoids fetching ahead of the git mirror.
    910 
    911 # If you have clang too:
    912 cd tools
    913 git clone http://llvm.org/git/clang.git
    914 cd clang
    915 git svn init https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/cfe/trunk --username=&lt;username>
    916 git config svn-remote.svn.fetch :refs/remotes/origin/master
    917 git svn rebase -l
    918 </pre>
    919 
    920 <p>To update this clone without generating git-svn tags that conflict
    921 with the upstream git repo, run:</p>
    922 
    923 <pre class="doc_code">
    924 git fetch && (cd tools/clang && git fetch)  # Get matching revisions of both trees.
    925 git checkout master
    926 git svn rebase -l
    927 (cd tools/clang &&
    928  git checkout master &&
    929  git svn rebase -l)
    930 </pre>
    931 
    932 <p>This leaves your working directories on their master branches, so
    933 you'll need to <tt>checkout</tt> each working branch individually and
    934 <tt>rebase</tt> it on top of its parent branch.  (Note: This script is
    935 intended for relative newbies to git.  If you have more experience,
    936 you can likely improve on it.)</p>
    937 
    938 <p>The git-svn metadata can get out of sync after you mess around with
    939 branches and <code>dcommit</code>. When that happens, <code>git svn
    940 dcommit</code> stops working, complaining about files with uncommitted
    941 changes. The fix is to rebuild the metadata:</p>
    942 
    943 <pre class="doc_code">
    944 rm -rf .git/svn
    945 git svn rebase -l
    946 </pre>
    947 
    948 </div>
    949 
    950 </div>
    951 
    952 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
    953 <h3>
    954   <a name="installcf">Install the GCC Front End</a>
    955 </h3>
    956 
    957 <div>
    958 
    959 <p>Before configuring and compiling the LLVM suite (or if you want to use just the LLVM
    960 GCC front end) you can optionally extract the front end from the binary distribution.
    961 It is used for running the LLVM test-suite and for compiling C/C++ programs.  Note that
    962 you can optionally <a href="GCCFEBuildInstrs.html">build llvm-gcc yourself</a> after building the
    963 main LLVM repository.</p>
    964 
    965 <p>To install the GCC front end, do the following (on Windows, use an archival tool
    966 like <a href="http://www.7-zip.org/">7-zip</a> that understands gzipped tars):</p>
    967 
    968 <ol>
    969   <li><tt>cd <i>where-you-want-the-front-end-to-live</i></tt></li>
    970   <li><tt>gunzip --stdout llvm-gcc-4.2-<i>version</i>-<i>platform</i>.tar.gz | tar -xvf
    971       -</tt></li>
    972 </ol>
    973 
    974 <p>Once the binary is uncompressed, if you're using a *nix-based system, add a symlink for
    975 <tt>llvm-gcc</tt> and <tt>llvm-g++</tt> to some directory in your path.  If you're using a
    976 Windows-based system, add the <tt>bin</tt> subdirectory of your front end installation directory
    977 to your <tt>PATH</tt> environment variable.  For example, if you uncompressed the binary to
    978 <tt>c:\llvm-gcc</tt>, add <tt>c:\llvm-gcc\bin</tt> to your <tt>PATH</tt>.</p>
    979 
    980 <p>If you now want to build LLVM from source, when you configure LLVM, it will 
    981 automatically detect <tt>llvm-gcc</tt>'s presence (if it is in your path) enabling its
    982 use in test-suite.  Note that you can always build or install <tt>llvm-gcc</tt> at any
    983 point after building the main LLVM repository: just reconfigure llvm and 
    984 test-suite will pick it up.
    985 </p>
    986 
    987 <p>As a convenience for Windows users, the front end binaries for MinGW/x86 include
    988 versions of the required w32api and mingw-runtime binaries.  The last remaining step for
    989 Windows users is to simply uncompress the binary binutils package from
    990 <a href="http://mingw.org/">MinGW</a> into your front end installation directory.  While the
    991 front end installation steps are not quite the same as a typical manual MinGW installation,
    992 they should be similar enough to those who have previously installed MinGW on Windows systems.</p>
    993 
    994 <p>To install binutils on Windows:</p>
    995 
    996 <ol>
    997   <li><tt><i>download GNU Binutils from <a href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw/files/">MinGW Downloads</a></i></tt></li>
    998   <li><tt>cd <i>where-you-uncompressed-the-front-end</i></tt></li>
    999   <li><tt><i>uncompress archived binutils directories (not the tar file) into the current directory</i></tt></li>
   1000 </ol>
   1001 
   1002 <p>The binary versions of the LLVM GCC front end may not suit all of your needs.  For
   1003 example, the binary distribution may include an old version of a system header
   1004 file, not "fix" a header file that needs to be fixed for GCC, or it may be linked with
   1005 libraries not available on your system.  In cases like these, you may want to try
   1006 <a href="GCCFEBuildInstrs.html">building the GCC front end from source</a>.  Thankfully,
   1007 this is much easier now than it was in the past.</p>
   1008 
   1009 <p>We also do not currently support updating of the GCC front end by manually overlaying
   1010 newer versions of the w32api and mingw-runtime binary packages that may become available
   1011 from MinGW.  At this time, it's best to think of the MinGW LLVM GCC front end binary as
   1012 a self-contained convenience package that requires Windows users to simply download and
   1013 uncompress the GNU Binutils binary package from the MinGW project.</p>
   1014 
   1015 <p>Regardless of your platform, if you discover that installing the LLVM GCC front end
   1016 binaries is not as easy as previously described, or you would like to suggest improvements,
   1017 please let us know how you would like to see things improved by dropping us a note on our
   1018 <a href="http://llvm.org/docs/#maillist">mailing list</a>.</p>
   1019 
   1020 </div>
   1021 
   1022 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
   1023 <h3>
   1024   <a name="config">Local LLVM Configuration</a>
   1025 </h3>
   1026 
   1027 <div>
   1028 
   1029   <p>Once checked out from the Subversion repository, the LLVM suite source 
   1030   code must be
   1031 configured via the <tt>configure</tt> script.  This script sets variables in the
   1032 various <tt>*.in</tt> files, most notably <tt>llvm/Makefile.config</tt> and 
   1033 <tt>llvm/include/Config/config.h</tt>.  It also populates <i>OBJ_ROOT</i> with 
   1034 the Makefiles needed to begin building LLVM.</p>
   1035 
   1036 <p>The following environment variables are used by the <tt>configure</tt>
   1037 script to configure the build system:</p>
   1038 
   1039 <table summary="LLVM configure script environment variables">
   1040   <tr><th>Variable</th><th>Purpose</th></tr>
   1041   <tr>
   1042     <td>CC</td>
   1043     <td>Tells <tt>configure</tt> which C compiler to use.  By default,
   1044         <tt>configure</tt> will look for the first GCC C compiler in
   1045         <tt>PATH</tt>.  Use this variable to override
   1046         <tt>configure</tt>'s default behavior.</td>
   1047   </tr>
   1048   <tr>
   1049     <td>CXX</td>
   1050     <td>Tells <tt>configure</tt> which C++ compiler to use.  By default,
   1051        <tt>configure</tt> will look for the first GCC C++ compiler in
   1052        <tt>PATH</tt>.  Use this variable to override
   1053        <tt>configure</tt>'s default behavior.</td>
   1054   </tr>
   1055 </table>
   1056 
   1057 <p>The following options can be used to set or enable LLVM specific options:</p>
   1058 
   1059 <dl>
   1060   <dt><i>--with-llvmgccdir</i></dt>
   1061   <dd>Path to the LLVM C/C++ FrontEnd to be used with this LLVM configuration. 
   1062   The value of this option should specify the full pathname of the C/C++ Front
   1063   End to be used. If this option is not provided, the PATH will be searched for
   1064   a program named <i>llvm-gcc</i> and the C/C++ FrontEnd install directory will
   1065   be inferred from the path found. If the option is not given, and no llvm-gcc
   1066   can be found in the path then a warning will be produced by 
   1067   <tt>configure</tt> indicating this situation. LLVM may still be built with 
   1068   the <tt>tools-only</tt> target but attempting to build the runtime libraries
   1069   will fail as these libraries require llvm-gcc and llvm-g++. See 
   1070   <a href="#installcf">Install the GCC Front End</a> for details on installing
   1071   the C/C++ Front End. See
   1072   <a href="GCCFEBuildInstrs.html">Bootstrapping the LLVM C/C++ Front-End</a>
   1073   for details on building the C/C++ Front End.</dd>
   1074   <dt><i>--with-tclinclude</i></dt>
   1075   <dd>Path to the tcl include directory under which <tt>tclsh</tt> can be
   1076   found. Use this if you have multiple tcl installations on your machine and you
   1077   want to use a specific one (8.x) for LLVM. LLVM only uses tcl for running the
   1078   dejagnu based test suite in <tt>llvm/test</tt>. If you don't specify this
   1079   option, the LLVM configure script will search for the tcl 8.4 and 8.3
   1080   releases.
   1081   <br><br>
   1082   </dd>
   1083   <dt><i>--enable-optimized</i></dt>
   1084   <dd>
   1085     Enables optimized compilation (debugging symbols are removed
   1086     and GCC optimization flags are enabled). Note that this is the default 
   1087     setting     if you are using the LLVM distribution. The default behavior 
   1088     of an Subversion checkout is to use an unoptimized build (also known as a 
   1089     debug build).
   1090     <br><br>
   1091   </dd>
   1092   <dt><i>--enable-debug-runtime</i></dt>
   1093   <dd>
   1094     Enables debug symbols in the runtime libraries. The default is to strip
   1095     debug symbols from the runtime libraries. 
   1096   </dd>
   1097   <dt><i>--enable-jit</i></dt>
   1098   <dd>
   1099     Compile the Just In Time (JIT) compiler functionality.  This is not
   1100     available
   1101     on all platforms.  The default is dependent on platform, so it is best
   1102     to explicitly enable it if you want it.
   1103     <br><br>
   1104   </dd>
   1105   <dt><i>--enable-targets=</i><tt>target-option</tt></dt>
   1106   <dd>Controls which targets will be built and linked into llc. The default 
   1107   value for <tt>target_options</tt> is "all" which builds and links all 
   1108   available targets.  The value "host-only" can be specified to build only a 
   1109   native compiler (no cross-compiler targets available). The "native" target is 
   1110   selected as the target of the build host. You can also specify a comma 
   1111   separated list of target names that you want available in llc. The target 
   1112   names use all lower case. The current set of targets is: <br>
   1113   <tt>alpha, ia64, powerpc, skeleton, sparc, x86</tt>.
   1114   <br><br></dd>
   1115   <dt><i>--enable-doxygen</i></dt>
   1116   <dd>Look for the doxygen program and enable construction of doxygen based
   1117   documentation from the source code. This is disabled by default because 
   1118   generating the documentation can take a long time and producess 100s of 
   1119   megabytes of output.</dd>
   1120   <dt><i>--with-udis86</i></dt>
   1121   <dd>LLVM can use external disassembler library for various purposes (now it's
   1122   used only for examining code produced by JIT). This option will enable usage
   1123   of <a href="http://udis86.sourceforge.net/">udis86</a> x86 (both 32 and 64
   1124   bits) disassembler library.</dd>
   1125 </dl>
   1126 
   1127 <p>To configure LLVM, follow these steps:</p>
   1128 
   1129 <ol>
   1130     <li><p>Change directory into the object root directory:</p>
   1131 
   1132     <div class="doc_code"><pre>% cd <i>OBJ_ROOT</i></pre></div></li>
   1133 
   1134     <li><p>Run the <tt>configure</tt> script located in the LLVM source
   1135     tree:</p>
   1136 
   1137     <div class="doc_code">
   1138     <pre>% <i>SRC_ROOT</i>/configure --prefix=/install/path [other options]</pre>
   1139     </div></li>
   1140 </ol>
   1141 
   1142 </div>
   1143 
   1144 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
   1145 <h3>
   1146   <a name="compile">Compiling the LLVM Suite Source Code</a>
   1147 </h3>
   1148 
   1149 <div>
   1150 
   1151 <p>Once you have configured LLVM, you can build it.  There are three types of
   1152 builds:</p>
   1153 
   1154 <dl>
   1155     <dt>Debug Builds
   1156     <dd>
   1157     These builds are the default when one is using an Subversion checkout and 
   1158     types <tt>gmake</tt> (unless the <tt>--enable-optimized</tt> option was 
   1159     used during configuration).  The build system will compile the tools and 
   1160     libraries with debugging information.  To get a Debug Build using the
   1161     LLVM distribution the <tt>--disable-optimized</tt> option must be passed
   1162     to <tt>configure</tt>.
   1163     <br><br>
   1164 
   1165     <dt>Release (Optimized) Builds
   1166     <dd>
   1167     These builds are enabled with the <tt>--enable-optimized</tt> option to
   1168     <tt>configure</tt> or by specifying <tt>ENABLE_OPTIMIZED=1</tt> on the
   1169     <tt>gmake</tt> command line.  For these builds, the build system will
   1170     compile the tools and libraries with GCC optimizations enabled and strip
   1171     debugging information from the libraries and executables it generates. 
   1172     Note that Release Builds are default when using an LLVM distribution.
   1173     <br><br>
   1174 
   1175     <dt>Profile Builds
   1176     <dd>
   1177     These builds are for use with profiling.  They compile profiling
   1178     information into the code for use with programs like <tt>gprof</tt>.
   1179     Profile builds must be started by specifying <tt>ENABLE_PROFILING=1</tt>
   1180     on the <tt>gmake</tt> command line.
   1181 </dl>
   1182 
   1183 <p>Once you have LLVM configured, you can build it by entering the
   1184 <i>OBJ_ROOT</i> directory and issuing the following command:</p>
   1185 
   1186 <div class="doc_code"><pre>% gmake</pre></div>
   1187 
   1188 <p>If the build fails, please <a href="#brokengcc">check here</a> to see if you
   1189 are using a version of GCC that is known not to compile LLVM.</p>
   1190 
   1191 <p>
   1192 If you have multiple processors in your machine, you may wish to use some of
   1193 the parallel build options provided by GNU Make.  For example, you could use the
   1194 command:</p>
   1195 
   1196 <div class="doc_code"><pre>% gmake -j2</pre></div>
   1197 
   1198 <p>There are several special targets which are useful when working with the LLVM
   1199 source code:</p>
   1200 
   1201 <dl>
   1202   <dt><tt>gmake clean</tt>
   1203   <dd>
   1204   Removes all files generated by the build.  This includes object files,
   1205   generated C/C++ files, libraries, and executables.
   1206   <br><br>
   1207 
   1208   <dt><tt>gmake dist-clean</tt>
   1209   <dd>
   1210   Removes everything that <tt>gmake clean</tt> does, but also removes files
   1211   generated by <tt>configure</tt>.  It attempts to return the source tree to the
   1212   original state in which it was shipped.
   1213   <br><br>
   1214 
   1215   <dt><tt>gmake install</tt>
   1216   <dd>
   1217   Installs LLVM header files, libraries, tools, and documentation in a
   1218   hierarchy 
   1219   under $PREFIX, specified with <tt>./configure --prefix=[dir]</tt>, which 
   1220   defaults to <tt>/usr/local</tt>.
   1221   <br><br>
   1222 
   1223   <dt><tt>gmake -C runtime install-bytecode</tt>
   1224   <dd>
   1225   Assuming you built LLVM into $OBJDIR, when this command is run, it will 
   1226   install bitcode libraries into the GCC front end's bitcode library 
   1227   directory.  If you need to update your bitcode libraries,
   1228   this is the target to use once you've built them.
   1229   <br><br>
   1230 </dl>
   1231 
   1232 <p>Please see the <a href="MakefileGuide.html">Makefile Guide</a> for further
   1233 details on these <tt>make</tt> targets and descriptions of other targets
   1234 available.</p>
   1235 
   1236 <p>It is also possible to override default values from <tt>configure</tt> by
   1237 declaring variables on the command line.  The following are some examples:</p>
   1238 
   1239 <dl>
   1240   <dt><tt>gmake ENABLE_OPTIMIZED=1</tt>
   1241   <dd>
   1242   Perform a Release (Optimized) build.
   1243   <br><br>
   1244 
   1245   <dt><tt>gmake ENABLE_OPTIMIZED=1 DISABLE_ASSERTIONS=1</tt>
   1246   <dd>
   1247   Perform a Release (Optimized) build without assertions enabled.
   1248   <br><br>
   1249  
   1250   <dt><tt>gmake ENABLE_OPTIMIZED=0</tt>
   1251   <dd>
   1252   Perform a Debug build.
   1253   <br><br>
   1254 
   1255   <dt><tt>gmake ENABLE_PROFILING=1</tt>
   1256   <dd>
   1257   Perform a Profiling build.
   1258   <br><br>
   1259 
   1260   <dt><tt>gmake VERBOSE=1</tt>
   1261   <dd>
   1262   Print what <tt>gmake</tt> is doing on standard output.
   1263   <br><br>
   1264 
   1265   <dt><tt>gmake TOOL_VERBOSE=1</tt></dt>
   1266   <dd>Ask each tool invoked by the makefiles to print out what it is doing on 
   1267   the standard output. This also implies <tt>VERBOSE=1</tt>.
   1268   <br><br></dd>
   1269 </dl>
   1270 
   1271 <p>Every directory in the LLVM object tree includes a <tt>Makefile</tt> to build
   1272 it and any subdirectories that it contains.  Entering any directory inside the
   1273 LLVM object tree and typing <tt>gmake</tt> should rebuild anything in or below
   1274 that directory that is out of date.</p>
   1275 
   1276 </div>
   1277 
   1278 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
   1279 <h3>
   1280   <a name="cross-compile">Cross-Compiling LLVM</a>
   1281 </h3>
   1282 
   1283 <div>
   1284   <p>It is possible to cross-compile LLVM itself. That is, you can create LLVM
   1285   executables and libraries to be hosted on a platform different from the
   1286   platform where they are build (a Canadian Cross build). To configure a
   1287   cross-compile, supply the configure script with <tt>--build</tt> and
   1288   <tt>--host</tt> options that are different. The values of these options must
   1289   be legal target triples that your GCC compiler supports.</p>
   1290 
   1291   <p>The result of such a build is executables that are not runnable on
   1292   on the build host (--build option) but can be executed on the compile host
   1293   (--host option).</p>
   1294 </div>
   1295 
   1296 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
   1297 <h3>
   1298   <a name="objfiles">The Location of LLVM Object Files</a>
   1299 </h3>
   1300 
   1301 <div>
   1302 
   1303 <p>The LLVM build system is capable of sharing a single LLVM source tree among
   1304 several LLVM builds.  Hence, it is possible to build LLVM for several different
   1305 platforms or configurations using the same source tree.</p>
   1306 
   1307 <p>This is accomplished in the typical autoconf manner:</p>
   1308 
   1309 <ul>
   1310   <li><p>Change directory to where the LLVM object files should live:</p>
   1311 
   1312       <div class="doc_code"><pre>% cd <i>OBJ_ROOT</i></pre></div></li>
   1313 
   1314   <li><p>Run the <tt>configure</tt> script found in the LLVM source
   1315       directory:</p>
   1316 
   1317       <div class="doc_code"><pre>% <i>SRC_ROOT</i>/configure</pre></div></li>
   1318 </ul>
   1319 
   1320 <p>The LLVM build will place files underneath <i>OBJ_ROOT</i> in directories
   1321 named after the build type:</p>
   1322 
   1323 <dl>
   1324   <dt>Debug Builds with assertions enabled (the default)
   1325   <dd>
   1326   <dl>
   1327     <dt>Tools
   1328     <dd><tt><i>OBJ_ROOT</i>/Debug+Asserts/bin</tt>
   1329     <dt>Libraries
   1330     <dd><tt><i>OBJ_ROOT</i>/Debug+Asserts/lib</tt>
   1331   </dl>
   1332   <br><br>
   1333 
   1334   <dt>Release Builds
   1335   <dd>
   1336   <dl>
   1337     <dt>Tools
   1338     <dd><tt><i>OBJ_ROOT</i>/Release/bin</tt>
   1339     <dt>Libraries
   1340     <dd><tt><i>OBJ_ROOT</i>/Release/lib</tt>
   1341   </dl>
   1342   <br><br>
   1343 
   1344   <dt>Profile Builds
   1345   <dd>
   1346   <dl>
   1347     <dt>Tools
   1348     <dd><tt><i>OBJ_ROOT</i>/Profile/bin</tt>
   1349     <dt>Libraries
   1350     <dd><tt><i>OBJ_ROOT</i>/Profile/lib</tt>
   1351   </dl>
   1352 </dl>
   1353 
   1354 </div>
   1355 
   1356 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
   1357 <h3>
   1358   <a name="optionalconfig">Optional Configuration Items</a>
   1359 </h3>
   1360 
   1361 <div>
   1362 
   1363 <p>
   1364 If you're running on a Linux system that supports the "<a
   1365 href="http://www.tat.physik.uni-tuebingen.de/~rguenth/linux/binfmt_misc.html">binfmt_misc</a>"
   1366 module, and you have root access on the system, you can set your system up to
   1367 execute LLVM bitcode files directly. To do this, use commands like this (the
   1368 first command may not be required if you are already using the module):</p>
   1369 
   1370 <div class="doc_code">
   1371 <pre>
   1372 $ mount -t binfmt_misc none /proc/sys/fs/binfmt_misc
   1373 $ echo ':llvm:M::BC::/path/to/lli:' &gt; /proc/sys/fs/binfmt_misc/register
   1374 $ chmod u+x hello.bc   (if needed)
   1375 $ ./hello.bc
   1376 </pre>
   1377 </div>
   1378 
   1379 <p>
   1380 This allows you to execute LLVM bitcode files directly.  On Debian, you 
   1381 can also use this command instead of the 'echo' command above:
   1382 </p>
   1383 
   1384 <div class="doc_code">
   1385 <pre>
   1386 $ sudo update-binfmts --install llvm /path/to/lli --magic 'BC'
   1387 </pre>
   1388 </div>
   1389 
   1390 </div>
   1391 
   1392 </div>
   1393 
   1394 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
   1395 <h2>
   1396   <a name="layout">Program Layout</a>
   1397 </h2>
   1398 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
   1399 
   1400 <div>
   1401 
   1402 <p>One useful source of information about the LLVM source base is the LLVM <a
   1403 href="http://www.doxygen.org/">doxygen</a> documentation available at <tt><a
   1404 href="http://llvm.org/doxygen/">http://llvm.org/doxygen/</a></tt>.
   1405 The following is a brief introduction to code layout:</p>
   1406 
   1407 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
   1408 <h3>
   1409   <a name="examples"><tt>llvm/examples</tt></a>
   1410 </h3>
   1411 
   1412 <div>
   1413   <p>This directory contains some simple examples of how to use the LLVM IR and
   1414   JIT.</p>
   1415 </div>
   1416 
   1417 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
   1418 <h3>
   1419   <a name="include"><tt>llvm/include</tt></a>
   1420 </h3>
   1421 
   1422 <div>
   1423 
   1424 <p>This directory contains public header files exported from the LLVM
   1425 library. The three main subdirectories of this directory are:</p>
   1426 
   1427 <dl>
   1428   <dt><tt><b>llvm/include/llvm</b></tt></dt>
   1429   <dd>This directory contains all of the LLVM specific header files.  This 
   1430   directory also has subdirectories for different portions of LLVM: 
   1431   <tt>Analysis</tt>, <tt>CodeGen</tt>, <tt>Target</tt>, <tt>Transforms</tt>, 
   1432   etc...</dd>
   1433 
   1434   <dt><tt><b>llvm/include/llvm/Support</b></tt></dt>
   1435   <dd>This directory contains generic support libraries that are provided with 
   1436   LLVM but not necessarily specific to LLVM. For example, some C++ STL utilities 
   1437   and a Command Line option processing library store their header files here.
   1438   </dd>
   1439 
   1440   <dt><tt><b>llvm/include/llvm/Config</b></tt></dt>
   1441   <dd>This directory contains header files configured by the <tt>configure</tt> 
   1442   script.  They wrap "standard" UNIX and C header files.  Source code can 
   1443   include these header files which automatically take care of the conditional 
   1444   #includes that the <tt>configure</tt> script generates.</dd>
   1445 </dl>
   1446 </div>
   1447 
   1448 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
   1449 <h3>
   1450   <a name="lib"><tt>llvm/lib</tt></a>
   1451 </h3>
   1452 
   1453 <div>
   1454 
   1455 <p>This directory contains most of the source files of the LLVM system. In LLVM,
   1456 almost all code exists in libraries, making it very easy to share code among the
   1457 different <a href="#tools">tools</a>.</p>
   1458 
   1459 <dl>
   1460   <dt><tt><b>llvm/lib/VMCore/</b></tt></dt>
   1461   <dd> This directory holds the core LLVM source files that implement core 
   1462   classes like Instruction and BasicBlock.</dd>
   1463 
   1464   <dt><tt><b>llvm/lib/AsmParser/</b></tt></dt>
   1465   <dd>This directory holds the source code for the LLVM assembly language parser 
   1466   library.</dd>
   1467 
   1468   <dt><tt><b>llvm/lib/BitCode/</b></tt></dt>
   1469   <dd>This directory holds code for reading and write LLVM bitcode.</dd>
   1470 
   1471   <dt><tt><b>llvm/lib/Analysis/</b></tt><dd>This directory contains a variety of
   1472   different program analyses, such as Dominator Information, Call Graphs,
   1473   Induction Variables, Interval Identification, Natural Loop Identification,
   1474   etc.</dd>
   1475 
   1476   <dt><tt><b>llvm/lib/Transforms/</b></tt></dt>
   1477   <dd> This directory contains the source code for the LLVM to LLVM program 
   1478   transformations, such as Aggressive Dead Code Elimination, Sparse Conditional 
   1479   Constant Propagation, Inlining, Loop Invariant Code Motion, Dead Global 
   1480   Elimination, and many others.</dd>
   1481 
   1482   <dt><tt><b>llvm/lib/Target/</b></tt></dt>
   1483   <dd> This directory contains files that describe various target architectures
   1484   for code generation.  For example, the <tt>llvm/lib/Target/X86</tt> 
   1485   directory holds the X86 machine description while
   1486   <tt>llvm/lib/Target/CBackend</tt> implements the LLVM-to-C converter.</dd>
   1487     
   1488   <dt><tt><b>llvm/lib/CodeGen/</b></tt></dt>
   1489   <dd> This directory contains the major parts of the code generator: Instruction 
   1490   Selector, Instruction Scheduling, and Register Allocation.</dd>
   1491 
   1492   <dt><tt><b>llvm/lib/MC/</b></tt></dt>
   1493   <dd>(FIXME: T.B.D.)</dd>
   1494 
   1495   <!--FIXME: obsoleted -->
   1496   <dt><tt><b>llvm/lib/Debugger/</b></tt></dt>
   1497   <dd> This directory contains the source level debugger library that makes 
   1498   it possible to instrument LLVM programs so that a debugger could identify 
   1499   source code locations at which the program is executing.</dd>
   1500 
   1501   <dt><tt><b>llvm/lib/ExecutionEngine/</b></tt></dt>
   1502   <dd> This directory contains libraries for executing LLVM bitcode directly 
   1503   at runtime in both interpreted and JIT compiled fashions.</dd>
   1504 
   1505   <dt><tt><b>llvm/lib/Support/</b></tt></dt>
   1506   <dd> This directory contains the source code that corresponds to the header
   1507   files located in <tt>llvm/include/ADT/</tt>
   1508   and <tt>llvm/include/Support/</tt>.</dd>
   1509 </dl>
   1510 
   1511 </div>
   1512 
   1513 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
   1514 <h3>
   1515   <a name="projects"><tt>llvm/projects</tt></a>
   1516 </h3>
   1517 
   1518 <div>
   1519   <p>This directory contains projects that are not strictly part of LLVM but are
   1520   shipped with LLVM. This is also the directory where you should create your own
   1521   LLVM-based projects. See <tt>llvm/projects/sample</tt> for an example of how
   1522   to set up your own project.</p>
   1523 </div>
   1524 
   1525 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
   1526 <h3>
   1527   <a name="runtime"><tt>llvm/runtime</tt></a>
   1528 </h3>
   1529 
   1530 <div>
   1531 
   1532 <p>This directory contains libraries which are compiled into LLVM bitcode and
   1533 used when linking programs with the GCC front end.  Most of these libraries are
   1534 skeleton versions of real libraries; for example, libc is a stripped down
   1535 version of glibc.</p>
   1536 
   1537 <p>Unlike the rest of the LLVM suite, this directory needs the LLVM GCC front
   1538 end to compile.</p>
   1539 
   1540 </div>
   1541 
   1542 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
   1543 <h3>
   1544   <a name="test"><tt>llvm/test</tt></a>
   1545 </h3>
   1546 
   1547 <div>
   1548   <p>This directory contains feature and regression tests and other basic sanity
   1549   checks on the LLVM infrastructure. These are intended to run quickly and cover
   1550   a lot of territory without being exhaustive.</p>
   1551 </div>
   1552 
   1553 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
   1554 <h3>
   1555   <a name="test-suite"><tt>test-suite</tt></a>
   1556 </h3>
   1557 
   1558 <div>
   1559   <p>This is not a directory in the normal llvm module; it is a separate
   1560   Subversion
   1561   module that must be checked out (usually to <tt>projects/test-suite</tt>). 
   1562   This
   1563   module contains a comprehensive correctness, performance, and benchmarking
   1564   test
   1565   suite for LLVM. It is a separate Subversion module because not every LLVM 
   1566   user is
   1567   interested in downloading or building such a comprehensive test suite. For
   1568   further details on this test suite, please see the 
   1569   <a href="TestingGuide.html">Testing Guide</a> document.</p>
   1570 </div>
   1571 
   1572 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
   1573 <h3>
   1574   <a name="tools"><tt>llvm/tools</tt></a>
   1575 </h3>
   1576 
   1577 <div>
   1578 
   1579 <p>The <b>tools</b> directory contains the executables built out of the
   1580 libraries above, which form the main part of the user interface.  You can
   1581 always get help for a tool by typing <tt>tool_name -help</tt>.  The
   1582 following is a brief introduction to the most important tools.  More detailed
   1583 information is in the <a href="CommandGuide/index.html">Command Guide</a>.</p>
   1584 
   1585 <dl>
   1586 
   1587   <dt><tt><b>bugpoint</b></tt></dt>
   1588   <dd><tt>bugpoint</tt> is used to debug
   1589   optimization passes or code generation backends by narrowing down the
   1590   given test case to the minimum number of passes and/or instructions that
   1591   still cause a problem, whether it is a crash or miscompilation. See <a
   1592   href="HowToSubmitABug.html">HowToSubmitABug.html</a> for more information
   1593   on using <tt>bugpoint</tt>.</dd>
   1594 
   1595   <dt><tt><b>llvm-ar</b></tt></dt>
   1596   <dd>The archiver produces an archive containing
   1597   the given LLVM bitcode files, optionally with an index for faster
   1598   lookup.</dd>
   1599   
   1600   <dt><tt><b>llvm-as</b></tt></dt>
   1601   <dd>The assembler transforms the human readable LLVM assembly to LLVM 
   1602   bitcode.</dd>
   1603 
   1604   <dt><tt><b>llvm-dis</b></tt></dt>
   1605   <dd>The disassembler transforms the LLVM bitcode to human readable 
   1606   LLVM assembly.</dd>
   1607 
   1608   <dt><tt><b>llvm-ld</b></tt></dt>
   1609   <dd><tt>llvm-ld</tt> is a general purpose and extensible linker for LLVM. 
   1610   It performs standard link time optimizations and allows optimization
   1611   modules to be loaded and run so that language specific optimizations can 
   1612   be applied at link time.</dd>
   1613 
   1614   <dt><tt><b>llvm-link</b></tt></dt>
   1615   <dd><tt>llvm-link</tt>, not surprisingly, links multiple LLVM modules into 
   1616   a single program.</dd>
   1617   
   1618   <dt><tt><b>lli</b></tt></dt>
   1619   <dd><tt>lli</tt> is the LLVM interpreter, which
   1620   can directly execute LLVM bitcode (although very slowly...). For architectures
   1621   that support it (currently x86, Sparc, and PowerPC), by default, <tt>lli</tt>
   1622   will function as a Just-In-Time compiler (if the functionality was compiled
   1623   in), and will execute the code <i>much</i> faster than the interpreter.</dd>
   1624 
   1625   <dt><tt><b>llc</b></tt></dt>
   1626   <dd> <tt>llc</tt> is the LLVM backend compiler, which
   1627   translates LLVM bitcode to a native code assembly file or to C code (with
   1628   the -march=c option).</dd>
   1629 
   1630   <dt><tt><b>llvm-gcc</b></tt></dt>
   1631   <dd><tt>llvm-gcc</tt> is a GCC-based C frontend that has been retargeted to 
   1632   use LLVM as its backend instead of GCC's RTL backend. It can also emit LLVM 
   1633   bitcode or assembly (with the <tt>-emit-llvm</tt> option) instead of the
   1634   usual machine code output.  It works just like any other GCC compiler, 
   1635   taking the typical <tt>-c, -S, -E, -o</tt> options that are typically used.  
   1636   Additionally, the the source code for <tt>llvm-gcc</tt> is available as a 
   1637   separate Subversion module.</dd>
   1638 
   1639   <dt><tt><b>opt</b></tt></dt>
   1640   <dd><tt>opt</tt> reads LLVM bitcode, applies a series of LLVM to LLVM 
   1641   transformations (which are specified on the command line), and then outputs 
   1642   the resultant bitcode.  The '<tt>opt -help</tt>' command is a good way to 
   1643   get a list of the program transformations available in LLVM.<br>
   1644   <dd><tt>opt</tt> can also be used to run a specific analysis on an input 
   1645   LLVM bitcode file and print out the results.  It is primarily useful for 
   1646   debugging analyses, or familiarizing yourself with what an analysis does.</dd>
   1647 </dl>
   1648 </div>
   1649 
   1650 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
   1651 <h3>
   1652   <a name="utils"><tt>llvm/utils</tt></a>
   1653 </h3>
   1654 
   1655 <div>
   1656 
   1657 <p>This directory contains utilities for working with LLVM source code, and some
   1658 of the utilities are actually required as part of the build process because they
   1659 are code generators for parts of LLVM infrastructure.</p>
   1660 
   1661 <dl>
   1662   <dt><tt><b>codegen-diff</b></tt> <dd><tt>codegen-diff</tt> is a script
   1663   that finds differences between code that LLC generates and code that LLI
   1664   generates. This is a useful tool if you are debugging one of them,
   1665   assuming that the other generates correct output. For the full user
   1666   manual, run <tt>`perldoc codegen-diff'</tt>.<br><br>
   1667 
   1668   <dt><tt><b>emacs/</b></tt> <dd>The <tt>emacs</tt> directory contains
   1669   syntax-highlighting files which will work with Emacs and XEmacs editors,
   1670   providing syntax highlighting support for LLVM assembly files and TableGen
   1671   description files. For information on how to use the syntax files, consult
   1672   the <tt>README</tt> file in that directory.<br><br>
   1673 
   1674   <dt><tt><b>getsrcs.sh</b></tt> <dd>The <tt>getsrcs.sh</tt> script finds
   1675   and outputs all non-generated source files, which is useful if one wishes
   1676   to do a lot of development across directories and does not want to
   1677   individually find each file. One way to use it is to run, for example:
   1678   <tt>xemacs `utils/getsources.sh`</tt> from the top of your LLVM source
   1679   tree.<br><br>
   1680 
   1681   <dt><tt><b>llvmgrep</b></tt></dt>
   1682   <dd>This little tool performs an "egrep -H -n" on each source file in LLVM and
   1683   passes to it a regular expression provided on <tt>llvmgrep</tt>'s command
   1684   line. This is a very efficient way of searching the source base for a
   1685   particular regular expression.</dd>
   1686 
   1687   <dt><tt><b>makellvm</b></tt> <dd>The <tt>makellvm</tt> script compiles all
   1688   files in the current directory and then compiles and links the tool that
   1689   is the first argument. For example, assuming you are in the directory
   1690   <tt>llvm/lib/Target/Sparc</tt>, if <tt>makellvm</tt> is in your path,
   1691   simply running <tt>makellvm llc</tt> will make a build of the current
   1692   directory, switch to directory <tt>llvm/tools/llc</tt> and build it,
   1693   causing a re-linking of LLC.<br><br>
   1694 
   1695   <dt><tt><b>NewNightlyTest.pl</b></tt> and
   1696   <tt><b>NightlyTestTemplate.html</b></tt> <dd>These files are used in a
   1697   cron script to generate nightly status reports of the functionality of
   1698   tools, and the results can be seen by following the appropriate link on
   1699   the <a href="http://llvm.org/">LLVM homepage</a>.<br><br>
   1700 
   1701   <dt><tt><b>TableGen/</b></tt> <dd>The <tt>TableGen</tt> directory contains
   1702   the tool used to generate register descriptions, instruction set
   1703   descriptions, and even assemblers from common TableGen description
   1704   files.<br><br>
   1705 
   1706   <dt><tt><b>vim/</b></tt> <dd>The <tt>vim</tt> directory contains
   1707   syntax-highlighting files which will work with the VIM editor, providing
   1708   syntax highlighting support for LLVM assembly files and TableGen
   1709   description files. For information on how to use the syntax files, consult
   1710   the <tt>README</tt> file in that directory.<br><br>
   1711 
   1712 </dl>
   1713 
   1714 </div>
   1715 
   1716 </div>
   1717 
   1718 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
   1719 <h2>
   1720   <a name="tutorial">An Example Using the LLVM Tool Chain</a>
   1721 </h2>
   1722 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
   1723 
   1724 <div>
   1725 <p>This section gives an example of using LLVM.  llvm-gcc3 is now obsolete,
   1726 so we only include instructions for llvm-gcc4.
   1727 </p>
   1728 
   1729 <p><b>Note:</b> The <i>gcc4</i> frontend's invocation is <b><i>considerably different</i></b>
   1730 from the previous <i>gcc3</i> frontend. In particular, the <i>gcc4</i> frontend <b><i>does not</i></b>
   1731 create bitcode by default: <i>gcc4</i> produces native code. As the example below illustrates,
   1732 the '--emit-llvm' flag is needed to produce LLVM bitcode output. For <i>makefiles</i> and
   1733 <i>configure</i> scripts, the CFLAGS variable needs '--emit-llvm' to produce bitcode
   1734 output.</p>
   1735 
   1736 <!-- ======================================================================= -->
   1737 <h3>
   1738   <a name="tutorial4">Example with llvm-gcc4</a>
   1739 </h3>
   1740 
   1741 <div>
   1742 
   1743 <ol>
   1744   <li><p>First, create a simple C file, name it 'hello.c':</p>
   1745 
   1746 <div class="doc_code">
   1747 <pre>
   1748 #include &lt;stdio.h&gt;
   1749 
   1750 int main() {
   1751   printf("hello world\n");
   1752   return 0;
   1753 }
   1754 </pre></div></li>
   1755 
   1756   <li><p>Next, compile the C file into a native executable:</p>
   1757 
   1758       <div class="doc_code"><pre>% llvm-gcc hello.c -o hello</pre></div>
   1759 
   1760       <p>Note that llvm-gcc works just like GCC by default.  The standard -S and
   1761         -c arguments work as usual (producing a native .s or .o file,
   1762         respectively).</p></li>
   1763 
   1764   <li><p>Next, compile the C file into a LLVM bitcode file:</p>
   1765 
   1766       <div class="doc_code">
   1767       <pre>% llvm-gcc -O3 -emit-llvm hello.c -c -o hello.bc</pre></div>
   1768 
   1769       <p>The -emit-llvm option can be used with the -S or -c options to emit an
   1770          LLVM ".ll" or ".bc" file (respectively) for the code.  This allows you
   1771          to use the <a href="CommandGuide/index.html">standard LLVM tools</a> on
   1772          the bitcode file.</p>
   1773 
   1774       <p>Unlike llvm-gcc3, llvm-gcc4 correctly responds to -O[0123] arguments.
   1775          </p></li>
   1776 
   1777   <li><p>Run the program in both forms. To run the program, use:</p>
   1778       
   1779       <div class="doc_code"><pre>% ./hello</pre></div>
   1780  
   1781       <p>and</p>
   1782 
   1783       <div class="doc_code"><pre>% lli hello.bc</pre></div>
   1784 
   1785       <p>The second examples shows how to invoke the LLVM JIT, <a
   1786        href="CommandGuide/html/lli.html">lli</a>.</p></li>
   1787 
   1788   <li><p>Use the <tt>llvm-dis</tt> utility to take a look at the LLVM assembly
   1789       code:</p>
   1790 
   1791 <div class="doc_code">
   1792 <pre>llvm-dis &lt; hello.bc | less</pre>
   1793 </div></li>
   1794 
   1795   <li><p>Compile the program to native assembly using the LLC code
   1796       generator:</p>
   1797 
   1798       <div class="doc_code"><pre>% llc hello.bc -o hello.s</pre></div></li>
   1799 
   1800   <li><p>Assemble the native assembly language file into a program:</p>
   1801 
   1802 <div class="doc_code">
   1803 <pre>
   1804 <b>Solaris:</b> % /opt/SUNWspro/bin/cc -xarch=v9 hello.s -o hello.native
   1805 
   1806 <b>Others:</b>  % gcc hello.s -o hello.native
   1807 </pre>
   1808 </div></li>
   1809 
   1810   <li><p>Execute the native code program:</p>
   1811 
   1812       <div class="doc_code"><pre>% ./hello.native</pre></div>
   1813 
   1814       <p>Note that using llvm-gcc to compile directly to native code (i.e. when
   1815          the -emit-llvm option is not present) does steps 6/7/8 for you.</p>
   1816         </li>
   1817 
   1818 </ol>
   1819 
   1820 </div>
   1821 
   1822 </div>
   1823 
   1824 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
   1825 <h2>
   1826   <a name="problems">Common Problems</a>
   1827 </h2>
   1828 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
   1829 
   1830 <div>
   1831 
   1832 <p>If you are having problems building or using LLVM, or if you have any other
   1833 general questions about LLVM, please consult the <a href="FAQ.html">Frequently
   1834 Asked Questions</a> page.</p>
   1835 
   1836 </div>
   1837 
   1838 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
   1839 <h2>
   1840   <a name="links">Links</a>
   1841 </h2>
   1842 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
   1843 
   1844 <div>
   1845 
   1846 <p>This document is just an <b>introduction</b> on how to use LLVM to do
   1847 some simple things... there are many more interesting and complicated things
   1848 that you can do that aren't documented here (but we'll gladly accept a patch
   1849 if you want to write something up!).  For more information about LLVM, check
   1850 out:</p>
   1851 
   1852 <ul>
   1853   <li><a href="http://llvm.org/">LLVM homepage</a></li>
   1854   <li><a href="http://llvm.org/doxygen/">LLVM doxygen tree</a></li>
   1855   <li><a href="http://llvm.org/docs/Projects.html">Starting a Project
   1856   that Uses LLVM</a></li>
   1857 </ul>
   1858 
   1859 </div>
   1860 
   1861 <!-- *********************************************************************** -->
   1862 
   1863 <hr>
   1864 <address>
   1865   <a href="http://jigsaw.w3.org/css-validator/check/referer"><img
   1866   src="http://jigsaw.w3.org/css-validator/images/vcss-blue" alt="Valid CSS"></a>
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   1868   src="http://www.w3.org/Icons/valid-html401-blue" alt="Valid HTML 4.01"></a>
   1869 
   1870   <a href="mailto:sabre (a] nondot.org">Chris Lattner</a><br>
   1871   <a href="http://llvm.x10sys.com/rspencer/">Reid Spencer</a><br>
   1872   <a href="http://llvm.org/">The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure</a><br>
   1873   Last modified: $Date: 2011-10-17 02:31:32 -0400 (Mon, 17 Oct 2011) $
   1874 </address>
   1875 </body>
   1876 </html>
   1877