| =pod |
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| =head1 NAME |
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| llvmc - The LLVM Compiler Driver |
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| =head1 SYNOPSIS |
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| B<llvmc> [I<options>] [I<filenames>...] |
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| =head1 DESCRIPTION |
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| The B<llvmc> command is a configurable driver for invoking other |
| LLVM (and non-LLVM) tools in order to compile, optimize and link software |
| for multiple languages. For those familiar with the GNU Compiler |
| Collection's B<gcc> tool, it is very similar. This tool has the |
| following main goals or purposes: |
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| =over |
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| =item * A Single point of access to the LLVM tool set. |
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| =item * Hide the complexities of the LLVM tools through a single interface. |
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| =item * Make integration of existing non-LLVM tools simple. |
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| =item * Extend the capabilities of minimal front ends. |
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| =item * Make the interface for compiling consistent for all languages. |
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| =back |
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| The tool itself does nothing with a user's program. It merely invokes other |
| tools to get the compilation tasks done. |
| |
| The options supported by B<llvmc> generalize the compilation process and |
| provide a consistent and simple interface for multiple programming languages. |
| This makes it easier for developers to get their software compiled with LLVM. |
| Without B<llvmc>, developers would need to understand how to invoke the |
| front-end compiler, optimizer, assembler, and linker in order to compile their |
| programs. B<llvmc>'s sole mission is to trivialize that process. |
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| =head2 Basic Operation |
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| B<llvmc> always takes the following basic actions: |
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| =over |
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| =item * Command line options and filenames are collected. |
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| The command line options provide the marching orders to B<llvmc> on what actions |
| it should perform. This is the I<request> the user is making of B<llvmc> and it |
| is interpreted first. |
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| =item * Configuration files are read. |
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| Based on the options and the suffixes of the filenames presented, a set of |
| configuration files are read to configure the actions B<llvmc> will take. |
| Configuration files are provided by either LLVM or the front end compiler tools |
| that B<llvmc> invokes. Users generally don't need to be concerned with the |
| contents of the configuration files. |
| |
| =item * Determine actions to take. |
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| The tool chain needed to complete the task is determined. This is the primary |
| work of B<llvmc>. It breaks the request specified by the command line options |
| into a set of basic actions to be done: |
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| =over |
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| =item * Pre-processing: gathering/filtering compiler input (optional). |
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| =item * Translation: source language to bytecode conversion. |
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| =item * Assembly: bytecode to native code conversion. |
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| =item * Optimization: conversion of bytecode to something that runs faster. |
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| =item * Linking: combining multiple bytecodes to produce executable program. |
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| =back |
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| =item * Execute actions. |
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| The actions determined previously are executed sequentially and then |
| B<llvmc> terminates. |
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| =back |
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| =head1 OPTIONS |
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| =head2 Control Options |
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| Control options tell B<llvmc> what to do at a high level. The |
| following control options are defined: |
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| =over |
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| =item B<-c> or B<--compile> |
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| This option specifies that the linking phase is not to be run. All |
| previous phases, if applicable will run. This is generally how a given |
| bytecode file is compiled and optimized for a source language module. |
| |
| =item B<-k> or B<--link> or default |
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| This option (or the lack of any control option) specifies that all stages |
| of compilation, optimization, and linking should be attempted. Source files |
| specified on the command line will be compiled and linked with objects and |
| libraries also specified. |
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| =item B<-S> or B<--assemble> |
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| This option specifies that compilation should end in the creation of |
| an LLVM assembly file that can be later converted to an LLVM object |
| file. |
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| =item B<-E> or B<--preprocess> |
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| This option specifies that no compilation or linking should be |
| performed. Only pre-processing, if applicable to the language being |
| compiled, is performed. For languages that support it, this will |
| result in the output containing the raw input to the compiler. |
| |
| =back |
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| =head2 Optimization Options |
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| Optimization with B<llvmc> is based on goals and specified with |
| the following -O options. The specific details of which |
| optimizations run is controlled by the configuration files because |
| each source language will have different needs. |
| |
| =over |
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| =item B<-O1> or B<-O0> (default, fast compilation) |
| |
| Only those optimizations that will hasten the compilation (mostly by reducing |
| the output) are applied. In general these are extremely fast and simple |
| optimizations that reduce emitted code size. The goal here is not to make the |
| resulting program fast but to make the compilation fast. If not specified, |
| this is the default level of optimization. |
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| =item B<-O2> (basic optimization) |
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| This level of optimization specifies a balance between generating good code |
| that will execute reasonably quickly and not spending too much time optimizing |
| the code to get there. For example, this level of optimization may include |
| things like global common subexpression elimination, aggressive dead code |
| elimination, and scalar replication. |
| |
| =item B<-O3> (aggressive optimization) |
| |
| This level of optimization aggressively optimizes each set of files compiled |
| together. However, no link-time inter-procedural optimization is performed. |
| This level implies all the optimizations of the B<-O1> and B<-O2> optimization |
| levels, and should also provide loop optimizations and compile time |
| inter-procedural optimizations. Essentially, this level tries to do as much |
| as it can with the input it is given but doesn't do any link time IPO. |
| |
| =item B<-O4> (link time optimization) |
| |
| In addition to the previous three levels of optimization, this level of |
| optimization aggressively optimizes each program at link time. It employs |
| basic analysis and basic link-time inter-procedural optimizations, |
| considering the program as a whole. |
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| =item B<-O5> (aggressive link time optimization) |
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| This is the same as B<-O4> except it employs aggressive analyses and |
| aggressive inter-procedural optimization. |
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| =item B<-O6> (profile guided optimization: not implemented) |
| |
| This is the same as B<-O5> except that it employs profile-guided |
| re-optimization of the program after it has executed. Note that this implies |
| a single level of re-optimization based on runtime profile analysis. Once |
| the re-optimization has completed, the profiling instrumentation is |
| removed and final optimizations are employed. |
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| =item B<-O7> (lifelong optimization: not implemented) |
| |
| This is the same as B<-O5> and similar to B<-O6> except that re-optimization |
| is performed through the life of the program. That is, each run will update |
| the profile by which future re-optimizations are directed. |
| |
| =back |
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| =head2 Input Options |
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| =over |
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| =item B<-l> I<LIBRARY> |
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| This option instructs B<llvmc> to locate a library named I<LIBRARY> and search |
| it for unresolved symbols when linking the program. |
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| =item B<-L> F<path> |
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| This option instructs B<llvmc> to add F<path> to the list of places in which |
| the linker will |
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| =item B<-x> I<LANGUAGE> |
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| This option instructs B<llvmc> to regard the following input files as |
| containing programs in the language I<LANGUAGE>. Normally, input file languages |
| are identified by their suffix but this option will override that default |
| behavior. The B<-x> option stays in effect until the end of the options or |
| a new B<-x> option is encountered. |
| |
| =back |
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| =head2 Output Options |
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| =over |
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| =item B<-m>I<arch> |
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| This option selects the back end code generator to use. The I<arch> portion |
| of the option names the back end to use. |
| |
| =item B<--native> |
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| Normally, B<llvmc> produces bytecode files at most stages of compilation. |
| With this option, B<llvmc> will arrange for native object files to be |
| generated with the B<-c> option, native assembly files to be generated |
| with the B<-S> option, and native executables to be generated with the |
| B<--link> option. In the case of the B<-E> option, the output will not |
| differ as there is no I<native> version of pre-processed output. |
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| =item B<-o> F<filename> |
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| Specify the output file name. The contents of the file depend on other |
| options. |
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| =back |
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| =head2 Information Options |
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| =over |
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| =item B<-n> or B<--no-op> |
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| This option tells B<llvmc> to do everything but actually execute the |
| resulting tools. In combination with the B<-v> option, this causes B<llvmc> |
| to merely print out what it would have done. |
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| =item B<-v> or B<--verbose> |
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| This option will cause B<llvmc> to print out (on standard output) each of the |
| actions it takes to accomplish the objective. The output will immediately |
| precede the invocation of other tools. |
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| =item B<--stats> |
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| Print all statistics gathered during the compilation to the standard error. |
| Note that this option is merely passed through to the sub-tools to do with |
| as they please. |
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| =item B<--time-passes> |
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| Record the amount of time needed for each optimization pass and print it |
| to standard error. Like B<--stats> this option is just passed through to |
| the sub-tools to do with as they please. |
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| =item B<--time-programs> |
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| Record the amount of time each program (compilation tool) takes and print |
| it to the standard error. |
| |
| =back |
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| =head2 Language Specific Options |
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| =over |
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| =item B<-T,pp>=I<options> |
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| Pass an arbitrary option to the pre-processor. |
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| =item B<-T,opt>=I<options> |
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| Pass an arbitrary option to the optimizer. |
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| =item B<-T,link>=I<options> |
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| Pass an arbitrary option to the linker. |
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| =item B<-T,asm>=I<options> |
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| Pass an arbitrary option to the code generator. |
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| =back |
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| =head3 C/C++ Specific Options |
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| =over |
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| =item B<-I>F<path> |
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| This option is just passed through to a C or C++ front end compiler to tell it |
| where include files can be found. |
| |
| =back |
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| =head2 Miscellaneous Options |
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| =over |
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| =item B<--help> |
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| Print a summary of command line options. |
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| =item B<-V> or B<--version> |
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| This option will cause B<llvmc> to print out its version number |
| and terminate. |
| |
| =back |
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| =head2 Advanced Options |
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| You better know what you're doing if you use these options. Improper use |
| of these options can produce drastically wrong results. |
| |
| =over |
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| =item B<--show-config> I<[suffixes...]> |
| |
| When this option is given, the only action taken by B<llvmc> is to show its |
| final configuration state in the form of a configuration file. No compilation |
| tasks will be conducted when this option is given; processing will stop once |
| the configuration has been printed. The optional (comma separated) list of |
| suffixes controls what is printed. Without any suffixes, the configuration |
| for all languages is printed. With suffixes, only the languages pertaining |
| to those file suffixes will be printed. The configuration information is |
| printed after all command line options and configuration files have been |
| read and processed. This allows the user to verify that the correct |
| configuration data has been read by B<llvmc>. |
| |
| =item B<--config> :I<section>:I<name>=I<value> |
| |
| This option instructs B<llvmc> to accept I<value> as the value for configuration |
| item I<name> in the section named I<section>. This is a quick way to override |
| a configuration item on the command line without resorting to changing the |
| configuration files. |
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| =item B<--config-file> F<dirname> |
| |
| This option tells B<llvmc> to read configuration data from the I<directory> |
| named F<dirname>. Data from such directories will be read in the order |
| specified on the command line after all other standard configuration files have |
| been read. This allows users or groups of users to conveniently create |
| their own configuration directories in addition to the standard ones to which |
| they may not have write access. |
| |
| =item B<--config-only-from> F<dirname> |
| |
| This option tells B<llvmc> to skip the normal processing of configuration |
| files and only configure from the contents of the F<dirname> directory. Multiple |
| B<--config-only-from> options may be given in which case the directories are |
| read in the order given on the command line. |
| |
| |
| =item B<--emit-raw-code> |
| |
| No optimization is done whatsoever. The compilers invoked by B<llvmc> with |
| this option given will be instructed to produce raw, unoptimized code. This |
| option is useful only to front end language developers and therefore does not |
| participate in the list of B<-O> options. This is distinctly different from |
| the B<-O0> option (a synonym for B<-O1>) because those optimizations will |
| reduce code size to make compilation faster. With B<--emit-raw-code>, only |
| the full raw code produced by the compiler will be generated. |
| |
| =back |
| |
| |
| =head1 EXIT STATUS |
| |
| If B<llvmc> succeeds, it will exit with 0. Otherwise, if an error |
| occurs, it will exit with a non-zero value and no compilation actions |
| will be taken. If one of the compilation tools returns a non-zero |
| status, pending actions will be discarded and B<llvmc> will return the |
| same result code as the failing compilation tool. |
| |
| =head1 SEE ALSO |
| |
| L<gccas|gccas>, L<gccld|gccld>, L<llvm-as|llvm-as>, L<llvm-dis|llvm-dis>, |
| L<llc|llc>, L<llvm-link|llvm-link> |
| |
| =head1 AUTHORS |
| |
| Reid Spencer, L<rspencer@x10sys.com> |
| |
| =cut |