Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | ============================ |
| 2 | Clang Compiler User's Manual |
| 3 | ============================ |
| 4 | |
| 5 | .. contents:: |
| 6 | :local: |
| 7 | |
| 8 | Introduction |
| 9 | ============ |
| 10 | |
| 11 | The Clang Compiler is an open-source compiler for the C family of |
| 12 | programming languages, aiming to be the best in class implementation of |
| 13 | these languages. Clang builds on the LLVM optimizer and code generator, |
| 14 | allowing it to provide high-quality optimization and code generation |
| 15 | support for many targets. For more general information, please see the |
| 16 | `Clang Web Site <http://clang.llvm.org>`_ or the `LLVM Web |
| 17 | Site <http://llvm.org>`_. |
| 18 | |
| 19 | This document describes important notes about using Clang as a compiler |
| 20 | for an end-user, documenting the supported features, command line |
| 21 | options, etc. If you are interested in using Clang to build a tool that |
Dmitri Gribenko | d9d2607 | 2012-12-15 20:41:17 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 22 | processes code, please see :doc:`InternalsManual`. If you are interested in the |
| 23 | `Clang Static Analyzer <http://clang-analyzer.llvm.org>`_, please see its web |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 24 | page. |
| 25 | |
| 26 | Clang is designed to support the C family of programming languages, |
| 27 | which includes :ref:`C <c>`, :ref:`Objective-C <objc>`, :ref:`C++ <cxx>`, and |
| 28 | :ref:`Objective-C++ <objcxx>` as well as many dialects of those. For |
| 29 | language-specific information, please see the corresponding language |
| 30 | specific section: |
| 31 | |
| 32 | - :ref:`C Language <c>`: K&R C, ANSI C89, ISO C90, ISO C94 (C89+AMD1), ISO |
| 33 | C99 (+TC1, TC2, TC3). |
| 34 | - :ref:`Objective-C Language <objc>`: ObjC 1, ObjC 2, ObjC 2.1, plus |
| 35 | variants depending on base language. |
| 36 | - :ref:`C++ Language <cxx>` |
| 37 | - :ref:`Objective C++ Language <objcxx>` |
| 38 | |
| 39 | In addition to these base languages and their dialects, Clang supports a |
| 40 | broad variety of language extensions, which are documented in the |
| 41 | corresponding language section. These extensions are provided to be |
| 42 | compatible with the GCC, Microsoft, and other popular compilers as well |
| 43 | as to improve functionality through Clang-specific features. The Clang |
| 44 | driver and language features are intentionally designed to be as |
| 45 | compatible with the GNU GCC compiler as reasonably possible, easing |
| 46 | migration from GCC to Clang. In most cases, code "just works". |
Hans Wennborg | 2a6e6bc | 2013-10-10 01:15:16 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 47 | Clang also provides an alternative driver, :ref:`clang-cl`, that is designed |
| 48 | to be compatible with the Visual C++ compiler, cl.exe. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 49 | |
| 50 | In addition to language specific features, Clang has a variety of |
| 51 | features that depend on what CPU architecture or operating system is |
| 52 | being compiled for. Please see the :ref:`Target-Specific Features and |
| 53 | Limitations <target_features>` section for more details. |
| 54 | |
| 55 | The rest of the introduction introduces some basic :ref:`compiler |
| 56 | terminology <terminology>` that is used throughout this manual and |
| 57 | contains a basic :ref:`introduction to using Clang <basicusage>` as a |
| 58 | command line compiler. |
| 59 | |
| 60 | .. _terminology: |
| 61 | |
| 62 | Terminology |
| 63 | ----------- |
| 64 | |
| 65 | Front end, parser, backend, preprocessor, undefined behavior, |
| 66 | diagnostic, optimizer |
| 67 | |
| 68 | .. _basicusage: |
| 69 | |
| 70 | Basic Usage |
| 71 | ----------- |
| 72 | |
| 73 | Intro to how to use a C compiler for newbies. |
| 74 | |
| 75 | compile + link compile then link debug info enabling optimizations |
| 76 | picking a language to use, defaults to C99 by default. Autosenses based |
| 77 | on extension. using a makefile |
| 78 | |
| 79 | Command Line Options |
| 80 | ==================== |
| 81 | |
| 82 | This section is generally an index into other sections. It does not go |
| 83 | into depth on the ones that are covered by other sections. However, the |
| 84 | first part introduces the language selection and other high level |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 85 | options like :option:`-c`, :option:`-g`, etc. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 86 | |
| 87 | Options to Control Error and Warning Messages |
| 88 | --------------------------------------------- |
| 89 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 90 | .. option:: -Werror |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 91 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 92 | Turn warnings into errors. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 93 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 94 | .. This is in plain monospaced font because it generates the same label as |
| 95 | .. -Werror, and Sphinx complains. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 96 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 97 | ``-Werror=foo`` |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 98 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 99 | Turn warning "foo" into an error. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 100 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 101 | .. option:: -Wno-error=foo |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 102 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 103 | Turn warning "foo" into an warning even if :option:`-Werror` is specified. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 104 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 105 | .. option:: -Wfoo |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 106 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 107 | Enable warning "foo". |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 108 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 109 | .. option:: -Wno-foo |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 110 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 111 | Disable warning "foo". |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 112 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 113 | .. option:: -w |
| 114 | |
Tobias Grosser | 7416024 | 2014-02-28 09:11:08 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 115 | Disable all diagnostics. |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 116 | |
| 117 | .. option:: -Weverything |
| 118 | |
Tobias Grosser | 7416024 | 2014-02-28 09:11:08 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 119 | :ref:`Enable all diagnostics. <diagnostics_enable_everything>` |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 120 | |
| 121 | .. option:: -pedantic |
| 122 | |
| 123 | Warn on language extensions. |
| 124 | |
| 125 | .. option:: -pedantic-errors |
| 126 | |
| 127 | Error on language extensions. |
| 128 | |
| 129 | .. option:: -Wsystem-headers |
| 130 | |
| 131 | Enable warnings from system headers. |
| 132 | |
| 133 | .. option:: -ferror-limit=123 |
| 134 | |
| 135 | Stop emitting diagnostics after 123 errors have been produced. The default is |
| 136 | 20, and the error limit can be disabled with :option:`-ferror-limit=0`. |
| 137 | |
| 138 | .. option:: -ftemplate-backtrace-limit=123 |
| 139 | |
| 140 | Only emit up to 123 template instantiation notes within the template |
| 141 | instantiation backtrace for a single warning or error. The default is 10, and |
| 142 | the limit can be disabled with :option:`-ftemplate-backtrace-limit=0`. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 143 | |
| 144 | .. _cl_diag_formatting: |
| 145 | |
| 146 | Formatting of Diagnostics |
| 147 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 148 | |
| 149 | Clang aims to produce beautiful diagnostics by default, particularly for |
| 150 | new users that first come to Clang. However, different people have |
| 151 | different preferences, and sometimes Clang is driven by another program |
| 152 | that wants to parse simple and consistent output, not a person. For |
| 153 | these cases, Clang provides a wide range of options to control the exact |
| 154 | output format of the diagnostics that it generates. |
| 155 | |
| 156 | .. _opt_fshow-column: |
| 157 | |
| 158 | **-f[no-]show-column** |
| 159 | Print column number in diagnostic. |
| 160 | |
| 161 | This option, which defaults to on, controls whether or not Clang |
| 162 | prints the column number of a diagnostic. For example, when this is |
| 163 | enabled, Clang will print something like: |
| 164 | |
| 165 | :: |
| 166 | |
| 167 | test.c:28:8: warning: extra tokens at end of #endif directive [-Wextra-tokens] |
| 168 | #endif bad |
| 169 | ^ |
| 170 | // |
| 171 | |
| 172 | When this is disabled, Clang will print "test.c:28: warning..." with |
| 173 | no column number. |
| 174 | |
| 175 | The printed column numbers count bytes from the beginning of the |
| 176 | line; take care if your source contains multibyte characters. |
| 177 | |
| 178 | .. _opt_fshow-source-location: |
| 179 | |
| 180 | **-f[no-]show-source-location** |
| 181 | Print source file/line/column information in diagnostic. |
| 182 | |
| 183 | This option, which defaults to on, controls whether or not Clang |
| 184 | prints the filename, line number and column number of a diagnostic. |
| 185 | For example, when this is enabled, Clang will print something like: |
| 186 | |
| 187 | :: |
| 188 | |
| 189 | test.c:28:8: warning: extra tokens at end of #endif directive [-Wextra-tokens] |
| 190 | #endif bad |
| 191 | ^ |
| 192 | // |
| 193 | |
| 194 | When this is disabled, Clang will not print the "test.c:28:8: " |
| 195 | part. |
| 196 | |
| 197 | .. _opt_fcaret-diagnostics: |
| 198 | |
| 199 | **-f[no-]caret-diagnostics** |
| 200 | Print source line and ranges from source code in diagnostic. |
| 201 | This option, which defaults to on, controls whether or not Clang |
| 202 | prints the source line, source ranges, and caret when emitting a |
| 203 | diagnostic. For example, when this is enabled, Clang will print |
| 204 | something like: |
| 205 | |
| 206 | :: |
| 207 | |
| 208 | test.c:28:8: warning: extra tokens at end of #endif directive [-Wextra-tokens] |
| 209 | #endif bad |
| 210 | ^ |
| 211 | // |
| 212 | |
| 213 | **-f[no-]color-diagnostics** |
| 214 | This option, which defaults to on when a color-capable terminal is |
| 215 | detected, controls whether or not Clang prints diagnostics in color. |
| 216 | |
| 217 | When this option is enabled, Clang will use colors to highlight |
| 218 | specific parts of the diagnostic, e.g., |
| 219 | |
| 220 | .. nasty hack to not lose our dignity |
| 221 | |
| 222 | .. raw:: html |
| 223 | |
| 224 | <pre> |
| 225 | <b><span style="color:black">test.c:28:8: <span style="color:magenta">warning</span>: extra tokens at end of #endif directive [-Wextra-tokens]</span></b> |
| 226 | #endif bad |
| 227 | <span style="color:green">^</span> |
| 228 | <span style="color:green">//</span> |
| 229 | </pre> |
| 230 | |
| 231 | When this is disabled, Clang will just print: |
| 232 | |
| 233 | :: |
| 234 | |
| 235 | test.c:2:8: warning: extra tokens at end of #endif directive [-Wextra-tokens] |
| 236 | #endif bad |
| 237 | ^ |
| 238 | // |
| 239 | |
Nico Rieck | 7857d46 | 2013-09-11 00:38:02 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 240 | **-fansi-escape-codes** |
| 241 | Controls whether ANSI escape codes are used instead of the Windows Console |
| 242 | API to output colored diagnostics. This option is only used on Windows and |
| 243 | defaults to off. |
| 244 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 245 | .. option:: -fdiagnostics-format=clang/msvc/vi |
| 246 | |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 247 | Changes diagnostic output format to better match IDEs and command line tools. |
| 248 | |
| 249 | This option controls the output format of the filename, line number, |
| 250 | and column printed in diagnostic messages. The options, and their |
| 251 | affect on formatting a simple conversion diagnostic, follow: |
| 252 | |
| 253 | **clang** (default) |
| 254 | :: |
| 255 | |
| 256 | t.c:3:11: warning: conversion specifies type 'char *' but the argument has type 'int' |
| 257 | |
| 258 | **msvc** |
| 259 | :: |
| 260 | |
| 261 | t.c(3,11) : warning: conversion specifies type 'char *' but the argument has type 'int' |
| 262 | |
| 263 | **vi** |
| 264 | :: |
| 265 | |
| 266 | t.c +3:11: warning: conversion specifies type 'char *' but the argument has type 'int' |
| 267 | |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 268 | .. _opt_fdiagnostics-show-option: |
| 269 | |
| 270 | **-f[no-]diagnostics-show-option** |
| 271 | Enable ``[-Woption]`` information in diagnostic line. |
| 272 | |
| 273 | This option, which defaults to on, controls whether or not Clang |
| 274 | prints the associated :ref:`warning group <cl_diag_warning_groups>` |
| 275 | option name when outputting a warning diagnostic. For example, in |
| 276 | this output: |
| 277 | |
| 278 | :: |
| 279 | |
| 280 | test.c:28:8: warning: extra tokens at end of #endif directive [-Wextra-tokens] |
| 281 | #endif bad |
| 282 | ^ |
| 283 | // |
| 284 | |
| 285 | Passing **-fno-diagnostics-show-option** will prevent Clang from |
| 286 | printing the [:ref:`-Wextra-tokens <opt_Wextra-tokens>`] information in |
| 287 | the diagnostic. This information tells you the flag needed to enable |
| 288 | or disable the diagnostic, either from the command line or through |
| 289 | :ref:`#pragma GCC diagnostic <pragma_GCC_diagnostic>`. |
| 290 | |
| 291 | .. _opt_fdiagnostics-show-category: |
| 292 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 293 | .. option:: -fdiagnostics-show-category=none/id/name |
| 294 | |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 295 | Enable printing category information in diagnostic line. |
| 296 | |
| 297 | This option, which defaults to "none", controls whether or not Clang |
| 298 | prints the category associated with a diagnostic when emitting it. |
| 299 | Each diagnostic may or many not have an associated category, if it |
| 300 | has one, it is listed in the diagnostic categorization field of the |
| 301 | diagnostic line (in the []'s). |
| 302 | |
| 303 | For example, a format string warning will produce these three |
| 304 | renditions based on the setting of this option: |
| 305 | |
| 306 | :: |
| 307 | |
| 308 | t.c:3:11: warning: conversion specifies type 'char *' but the argument has type 'int' [-Wformat] |
| 309 | t.c:3:11: warning: conversion specifies type 'char *' but the argument has type 'int' [-Wformat,1] |
| 310 | t.c:3:11: warning: conversion specifies type 'char *' but the argument has type 'int' [-Wformat,Format String] |
| 311 | |
| 312 | This category can be used by clients that want to group diagnostics |
| 313 | by category, so it should be a high level category. We want dozens |
| 314 | of these, not hundreds or thousands of them. |
| 315 | |
| 316 | .. _opt_fdiagnostics-fixit-info: |
| 317 | |
| 318 | **-f[no-]diagnostics-fixit-info** |
| 319 | Enable "FixIt" information in the diagnostics output. |
| 320 | |
| 321 | This option, which defaults to on, controls whether or not Clang |
| 322 | prints the information on how to fix a specific diagnostic |
| 323 | underneath it when it knows. For example, in this output: |
| 324 | |
| 325 | :: |
| 326 | |
| 327 | test.c:28:8: warning: extra tokens at end of #endif directive [-Wextra-tokens] |
| 328 | #endif bad |
| 329 | ^ |
| 330 | // |
| 331 | |
| 332 | Passing **-fno-diagnostics-fixit-info** will prevent Clang from |
| 333 | printing the "//" line at the end of the message. This information |
| 334 | is useful for users who may not understand what is wrong, but can be |
| 335 | confusing for machine parsing. |
| 336 | |
| 337 | .. _opt_fdiagnostics-print-source-range-info: |
| 338 | |
Nico Weber | 69dce49c7 | 2013-01-09 05:06:41 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 339 | **-fdiagnostics-print-source-range-info** |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 340 | Print machine parsable information about source ranges. |
Nico Weber | 69dce49c7 | 2013-01-09 05:06:41 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 341 | This option makes Clang print information about source ranges in a machine |
| 342 | parsable format after the file/line/column number information. The |
| 343 | information is a simple sequence of brace enclosed ranges, where each range |
| 344 | lists the start and end line/column locations. For example, in this output: |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 345 | |
| 346 | :: |
| 347 | |
| 348 | exprs.c:47:15:{47:8-47:14}{47:17-47:24}: error: invalid operands to binary expression ('int *' and '_Complex float') |
| 349 | P = (P-42) + Gamma*4; |
| 350 | ~~~~~~ ^ ~~~~~~~ |
| 351 | |
| 352 | The {}'s are generated by -fdiagnostics-print-source-range-info. |
| 353 | |
| 354 | The printed column numbers count bytes from the beginning of the |
| 355 | line; take care if your source contains multibyte characters. |
| 356 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 357 | .. option:: -fdiagnostics-parseable-fixits |
| 358 | |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 359 | Print Fix-Its in a machine parseable form. |
| 360 | |
| 361 | This option makes Clang print available Fix-Its in a machine |
| 362 | parseable format at the end of diagnostics. The following example |
| 363 | illustrates the format: |
| 364 | |
| 365 | :: |
| 366 | |
| 367 | fix-it:"t.cpp":{7:25-7:29}:"Gamma" |
| 368 | |
| 369 | The range printed is a half-open range, so in this example the |
| 370 | characters at column 25 up to but not including column 29 on line 7 |
| 371 | in t.cpp should be replaced with the string "Gamma". Either the |
| 372 | range or the replacement string may be empty (representing strict |
| 373 | insertions and strict erasures, respectively). Both the file name |
| 374 | and the insertion string escape backslash (as "\\\\"), tabs (as |
| 375 | "\\t"), newlines (as "\\n"), double quotes(as "\\"") and |
| 376 | non-printable characters (as octal "\\xxx"). |
| 377 | |
| 378 | The printed column numbers count bytes from the beginning of the |
| 379 | line; take care if your source contains multibyte characters. |
| 380 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 381 | .. option:: -fno-elide-type |
| 382 | |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 383 | Turns off elision in template type printing. |
| 384 | |
| 385 | The default for template type printing is to elide as many template |
| 386 | arguments as possible, removing those which are the same in both |
| 387 | template types, leaving only the differences. Adding this flag will |
| 388 | print all the template arguments. If supported by the terminal, |
| 389 | highlighting will still appear on differing arguments. |
| 390 | |
| 391 | Default: |
| 392 | |
| 393 | :: |
| 394 | |
| 395 | t.cc:4:5: note: candidate function not viable: no known conversion from 'vector<map<[...], map<float, [...]>>>' to 'vector<map<[...], map<double, [...]>>>' for 1st argument; |
| 396 | |
| 397 | -fno-elide-type: |
| 398 | |
| 399 | :: |
| 400 | |
| 401 | t.cc:4:5: note: candidate function not viable: no known conversion from 'vector<map<int, map<float, int>>>' to 'vector<map<int, map<double, int>>>' for 1st argument; |
| 402 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 403 | .. option:: -fdiagnostics-show-template-tree |
| 404 | |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 405 | Template type diffing prints a text tree. |
| 406 | |
| 407 | For diffing large templated types, this option will cause Clang to |
| 408 | display the templates as an indented text tree, one argument per |
| 409 | line, with differences marked inline. This is compatible with |
| 410 | -fno-elide-type. |
| 411 | |
| 412 | Default: |
| 413 | |
| 414 | :: |
| 415 | |
| 416 | t.cc:4:5: note: candidate function not viable: no known conversion from 'vector<map<[...], map<float, [...]>>>' to 'vector<map<[...], map<double, [...]>>>' for 1st argument; |
| 417 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 418 | With :option:`-fdiagnostics-show-template-tree`: |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 419 | |
| 420 | :: |
| 421 | |
| 422 | t.cc:4:5: note: candidate function not viable: no known conversion for 1st argument; |
| 423 | vector< |
| 424 | map< |
| 425 | [...], |
| 426 | map< |
Richard Trieu | 98ca59e | 2013-08-09 22:52:48 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 427 | [float != double], |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 428 | [...]>>> |
| 429 | |
| 430 | .. _cl_diag_warning_groups: |
| 431 | |
| 432 | Individual Warning Groups |
| 433 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 434 | |
| 435 | TODO: Generate this from tblgen. Define one anchor per warning group. |
| 436 | |
| 437 | .. _opt_wextra-tokens: |
| 438 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 439 | .. option:: -Wextra-tokens |
| 440 | |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 441 | Warn about excess tokens at the end of a preprocessor directive. |
| 442 | |
| 443 | This option, which defaults to on, enables warnings about extra |
| 444 | tokens at the end of preprocessor directives. For example: |
| 445 | |
| 446 | :: |
| 447 | |
| 448 | test.c:28:8: warning: extra tokens at end of #endif directive [-Wextra-tokens] |
| 449 | #endif bad |
| 450 | ^ |
| 451 | |
| 452 | These extra tokens are not strictly conforming, and are usually best |
| 453 | handled by commenting them out. |
| 454 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 455 | .. option:: -Wambiguous-member-template |
| 456 | |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 457 | Warn about unqualified uses of a member template whose name resolves to |
| 458 | another template at the location of the use. |
| 459 | |
| 460 | This option, which defaults to on, enables a warning in the |
| 461 | following code: |
| 462 | |
| 463 | :: |
| 464 | |
| 465 | template<typename T> struct set{}; |
| 466 | template<typename T> struct trait { typedef const T& type; }; |
| 467 | struct Value { |
| 468 | template<typename T> void set(typename trait<T>::type value) {} |
| 469 | }; |
| 470 | void foo() { |
| 471 | Value v; |
| 472 | v.set<double>(3.2); |
| 473 | } |
| 474 | |
| 475 | C++ [basic.lookup.classref] requires this to be an error, but, |
| 476 | because it's hard to work around, Clang downgrades it to a warning |
| 477 | as an extension. |
| 478 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 479 | .. option:: -Wbind-to-temporary-copy |
| 480 | |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 481 | Warn about an unusable copy constructor when binding a reference to a |
| 482 | temporary. |
| 483 | |
| 484 | This option, which defaults to on, enables warnings about binding a |
| 485 | reference to a temporary when the temporary doesn't have a usable |
| 486 | copy constructor. For example: |
| 487 | |
| 488 | :: |
| 489 | |
| 490 | struct NonCopyable { |
| 491 | NonCopyable(); |
| 492 | private: |
| 493 | NonCopyable(const NonCopyable&); |
| 494 | }; |
| 495 | void foo(const NonCopyable&); |
| 496 | void bar() { |
| 497 | foo(NonCopyable()); // Disallowed in C++98; allowed in C++11. |
| 498 | } |
| 499 | |
| 500 | :: |
| 501 | |
| 502 | struct NonCopyable2 { |
| 503 | NonCopyable2(); |
| 504 | NonCopyable2(NonCopyable2&); |
| 505 | }; |
| 506 | void foo(const NonCopyable2&); |
| 507 | void bar() { |
| 508 | foo(NonCopyable2()); // Disallowed in C++98; allowed in C++11. |
| 509 | } |
| 510 | |
| 511 | Note that if ``NonCopyable2::NonCopyable2()`` has a default argument |
| 512 | whose instantiation produces a compile error, that error will still |
| 513 | be a hard error in C++98 mode even if this warning is turned off. |
| 514 | |
| 515 | Options to Control Clang Crash Diagnostics |
| 516 | ------------------------------------------ |
| 517 | |
| 518 | As unbelievable as it may sound, Clang does crash from time to time. |
| 519 | Generally, this only occurs to those living on the `bleeding |
| 520 | edge <http://llvm.org/releases/download.html#svn>`_. Clang goes to great |
| 521 | lengths to assist you in filing a bug report. Specifically, Clang |
| 522 | generates preprocessed source file(s) and associated run script(s) upon |
| 523 | a crash. These files should be attached to a bug report to ease |
| 524 | reproducibility of the failure. Below are the command line options to |
| 525 | control the crash diagnostics. |
| 526 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 527 | .. option:: -fno-crash-diagnostics |
| 528 | |
| 529 | Disable auto-generation of preprocessed source files during a clang crash. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 530 | |
| 531 | The -fno-crash-diagnostics flag can be helpful for speeding the process |
| 532 | of generating a delta reduced test case. |
| 533 | |
Diego Novillo | 263ce21 | 2014-05-29 20:13:27 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 534 | Options to Emit Optimization Reports |
| 535 | ------------------------------------ |
| 536 | |
| 537 | Optimization reports trace, at a high-level, all the major decisions |
| 538 | done by compiler transformations. For instance, when the inliner |
| 539 | decides to inline function ``foo()`` into ``bar()``, or the loop unroller |
| 540 | decides to unroll a loop N times, or the vectorizer decides to |
| 541 | vectorize a loop body. |
| 542 | |
| 543 | Clang offers a family of flags which the optimizers can use to emit |
| 544 | a diagnostic in three cases: |
| 545 | |
| 546 | 1. When the pass makes a transformation (:option:`-Rpass`). |
| 547 | |
| 548 | 2. When the pass fails to make a transformation (:option:`-Rpass-missed`). |
| 549 | |
| 550 | 3. When the pass determines whether or not to make a transformation |
| 551 | (:option:`-Rpass-analysis`). |
| 552 | |
| 553 | NOTE: Although the discussion below focuses on :option:`-Rpass`, the exact |
| 554 | same options apply to :option:`-Rpass-missed` and :option:`-Rpass-analysis`. |
| 555 | |
| 556 | Since there are dozens of passes inside the compiler, each of these flags |
| 557 | take a regular expression that identifies the name of the pass which should |
| 558 | emit the associated diagnostic. For example, to get a report from the inliner, |
| 559 | compile the code with: |
| 560 | |
| 561 | .. code-block:: console |
| 562 | |
| 563 | $ clang -O2 -Rpass=inline code.cc -o code |
| 564 | code.cc:4:25: remark: foo inlined into bar [-Rpass=inline] |
| 565 | int bar(int j) { return foo(j, j - 2); } |
| 566 | ^ |
| 567 | |
| 568 | Note that remarks from the inliner are identified with `[-Rpass=inline]`. |
| 569 | To request a report from every optimization pass, you should use |
| 570 | :option:`-Rpass=.*` (in fact, you can use any valid POSIX regular |
| 571 | expression). However, do not expect a report from every transformation |
| 572 | made by the compiler. Optimization remarks do not really make sense |
| 573 | outside of the major transformations (e.g., inlining, vectorization, |
| 574 | loop optimizations) and not every optimization pass supports this |
| 575 | feature. |
| 576 | |
| 577 | Current limitations |
| 578 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 579 | |
| 580 | 1. For :option:`-Rpass` to provide source location information, you |
| 581 | need to enable debug line tables and column information. That is, |
| 582 | you need to add :option:`-gmlt` (or any of the debug-generating |
| 583 | flags) and :option:`-gcolumn-info`. If you omit these options, |
| 584 | every remark will be accompanied by a note stating that line number |
| 585 | information is missing. |
| 586 | |
| 587 | 2. Optimization remarks that refer to function names will display the |
| 588 | mangled name of the function. Since these remarks are emitted by the |
| 589 | back end of the compiler, it does not know anything about the input |
| 590 | language, nor its mangling rules. |
| 591 | |
| 592 | 3. Some source locations are not displayed correctly. The front end has |
| 593 | a more detailed source location tracking than the locations included |
| 594 | in the debug info (e.g., the front end can locate code inside macro |
| 595 | expansions). However, the locations used by :option:`-Rpass` are |
| 596 | translated from debug annotations. That translation can be lossy, |
| 597 | which results in some remarks having no location information. |
| 598 | |
| 599 | |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 600 | Language and Target-Independent Features |
| 601 | ======================================== |
| 602 | |
| 603 | Controlling Errors and Warnings |
| 604 | ------------------------------- |
| 605 | |
| 606 | Clang provides a number of ways to control which code constructs cause |
| 607 | it to emit errors and warning messages, and how they are displayed to |
| 608 | the console. |
| 609 | |
| 610 | Controlling How Clang Displays Diagnostics |
| 611 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 612 | |
| 613 | When Clang emits a diagnostic, it includes rich information in the |
| 614 | output, and gives you fine-grain control over which information is |
| 615 | printed. Clang has the ability to print this information, and these are |
| 616 | the options that control it: |
| 617 | |
| 618 | #. A file/line/column indicator that shows exactly where the diagnostic |
| 619 | occurs in your code [:ref:`-fshow-column <opt_fshow-column>`, |
| 620 | :ref:`-fshow-source-location <opt_fshow-source-location>`]. |
| 621 | #. A categorization of the diagnostic as a note, warning, error, or |
| 622 | fatal error. |
| 623 | #. A text string that describes what the problem is. |
| 624 | #. An option that indicates how to control the diagnostic (for |
| 625 | diagnostics that support it) |
| 626 | [:ref:`-fdiagnostics-show-option <opt_fdiagnostics-show-option>`]. |
| 627 | #. A :ref:`high-level category <diagnostics_categories>` for the diagnostic |
| 628 | for clients that want to group diagnostics by class (for diagnostics |
| 629 | that support it) |
| 630 | [:ref:`-fdiagnostics-show-category <opt_fdiagnostics-show-category>`]. |
| 631 | #. The line of source code that the issue occurs on, along with a caret |
| 632 | and ranges that indicate the important locations |
| 633 | [:ref:`-fcaret-diagnostics <opt_fcaret-diagnostics>`]. |
| 634 | #. "FixIt" information, which is a concise explanation of how to fix the |
| 635 | problem (when Clang is certain it knows) |
| 636 | [:ref:`-fdiagnostics-fixit-info <opt_fdiagnostics-fixit-info>`]. |
| 637 | #. A machine-parsable representation of the ranges involved (off by |
| 638 | default) |
| 639 | [:ref:`-fdiagnostics-print-source-range-info <opt_fdiagnostics-print-source-range-info>`]. |
| 640 | |
| 641 | For more information please see :ref:`Formatting of |
| 642 | Diagnostics <cl_diag_formatting>`. |
| 643 | |
| 644 | Diagnostic Mappings |
| 645 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 646 | |
| 647 | All diagnostics are mapped into one of these 5 classes: |
| 648 | |
| 649 | - Ignored |
| 650 | - Note |
Tobias Grosser | 7416024 | 2014-02-28 09:11:08 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 651 | - Remark |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 652 | - Warning |
| 653 | - Error |
| 654 | - Fatal |
| 655 | |
| 656 | .. _diagnostics_categories: |
| 657 | |
| 658 | Diagnostic Categories |
| 659 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 660 | |
| 661 | Though not shown by default, diagnostics may each be associated with a |
| 662 | high-level category. This category is intended to make it possible to |
| 663 | triage builds that produce a large number of errors or warnings in a |
| 664 | grouped way. |
| 665 | |
| 666 | Categories are not shown by default, but they can be turned on with the |
| 667 | :ref:`-fdiagnostics-show-category <opt_fdiagnostics-show-category>` option. |
| 668 | When set to "``name``", the category is printed textually in the |
| 669 | diagnostic output. When it is set to "``id``", a category number is |
| 670 | printed. The mapping of category names to category id's can be obtained |
| 671 | by running '``clang --print-diagnostic-categories``'. |
| 672 | |
| 673 | Controlling Diagnostics via Command Line Flags |
| 674 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 675 | |
| 676 | TODO: -W flags, -pedantic, etc |
| 677 | |
| 678 | .. _pragma_gcc_diagnostic: |
| 679 | |
| 680 | Controlling Diagnostics via Pragmas |
| 681 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 682 | |
| 683 | Clang can also control what diagnostics are enabled through the use of |
| 684 | pragmas in the source code. This is useful for turning off specific |
| 685 | warnings in a section of source code. Clang supports GCC's pragma for |
| 686 | compatibility with existing source code, as well as several extensions. |
| 687 | |
| 688 | The pragma may control any warning that can be used from the command |
| 689 | line. Warnings may be set to ignored, warning, error, or fatal. The |
| 690 | following example code will tell Clang or GCC to ignore the -Wall |
| 691 | warnings: |
| 692 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 693 | .. code-block:: c |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 694 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 695 | #pragma GCC diagnostic ignored "-Wall" |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 696 | |
| 697 | In addition to all of the functionality provided by GCC's pragma, Clang |
| 698 | also allows you to push and pop the current warning state. This is |
| 699 | particularly useful when writing a header file that will be compiled by |
| 700 | other people, because you don't know what warning flags they build with. |
| 701 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 702 | In the below example :option:`-Wmultichar` is ignored for only a single line of |
| 703 | code, after which the diagnostics return to whatever state had previously |
| 704 | existed. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 705 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 706 | .. code-block:: c |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 707 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 708 | #pragma clang diagnostic push |
| 709 | #pragma clang diagnostic ignored "-Wmultichar" |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 710 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 711 | char b = 'df'; // no warning. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 712 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 713 | #pragma clang diagnostic pop |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 714 | |
| 715 | The push and pop pragmas will save and restore the full diagnostic state |
| 716 | of the compiler, regardless of how it was set. That means that it is |
| 717 | possible to use push and pop around GCC compatible diagnostics and Clang |
| 718 | will push and pop them appropriately, while GCC will ignore the pushes |
| 719 | and pops as unknown pragmas. It should be noted that while Clang |
| 720 | supports the GCC pragma, Clang and GCC do not support the exact same set |
| 721 | of warnings, so even when using GCC compatible #pragmas there is no |
| 722 | guarantee that they will have identical behaviour on both compilers. |
| 723 | |
Andy Gibbs | 9c2ccd6 | 2013-04-17 16:16:16 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 724 | In addition to controlling warnings and errors generated by the compiler, it is |
| 725 | possible to generate custom warning and error messages through the following |
| 726 | pragmas: |
| 727 | |
| 728 | .. code-block:: c |
| 729 | |
| 730 | // The following will produce warning messages |
| 731 | #pragma message "some diagnostic message" |
| 732 | #pragma GCC warning "TODO: replace deprecated feature" |
| 733 | |
| 734 | // The following will produce an error message |
| 735 | #pragma GCC error "Not supported" |
| 736 | |
| 737 | These pragmas operate similarly to the ``#warning`` and ``#error`` preprocessor |
| 738 | directives, except that they may also be embedded into preprocessor macros via |
| 739 | the C99 ``_Pragma`` operator, for example: |
| 740 | |
| 741 | .. code-block:: c |
| 742 | |
| 743 | #define STR(X) #X |
| 744 | #define DEFER(M,...) M(__VA_ARGS__) |
| 745 | #define CUSTOM_ERROR(X) _Pragma(STR(GCC error(X " at line " DEFER(STR,__LINE__)))) |
| 746 | |
| 747 | CUSTOM_ERROR("Feature not available"); |
| 748 | |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 749 | Controlling Diagnostics in System Headers |
| 750 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 751 | |
| 752 | Warnings are suppressed when they occur in system headers. By default, |
| 753 | an included file is treated as a system header if it is found in an |
| 754 | include path specified by ``-isystem``, but this can be overridden in |
| 755 | several ways. |
| 756 | |
| 757 | The ``system_header`` pragma can be used to mark the current file as |
| 758 | being a system header. No warnings will be produced from the location of |
| 759 | the pragma onwards within the same file. |
| 760 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 761 | .. code-block:: c |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 762 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 763 | char a = 'xy'; // warning |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 764 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 765 | #pragma clang system_header |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 766 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 767 | char b = 'ab'; // no warning |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 768 | |
Alexander Kornienko | 18fa48c | 2014-03-26 01:39:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 769 | The :option:`--system-header-prefix=` and :option:`--no-system-header-prefix=` |
| 770 | command-line arguments can be used to override whether subsets of an include |
| 771 | path are treated as system headers. When the name in a ``#include`` directive |
| 772 | is found within a header search path and starts with a system prefix, the |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 773 | header is treated as a system header. The last prefix on the |
| 774 | command-line which matches the specified header name takes precedence. |
| 775 | For instance: |
| 776 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 777 | .. code-block:: console |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 778 | |
Alexander Kornienko | 18fa48c | 2014-03-26 01:39:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 779 | $ clang -Ifoo -isystem bar --system-header-prefix=x/ \ |
| 780 | --no-system-header-prefix=x/y/ |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 781 | |
| 782 | Here, ``#include "x/a.h"`` is treated as including a system header, even |
| 783 | if the header is found in ``foo``, and ``#include "x/y/b.h"`` is treated |
| 784 | as not including a system header, even if the header is found in |
| 785 | ``bar``. |
| 786 | |
| 787 | A ``#include`` directive which finds a file relative to the current |
| 788 | directory is treated as including a system header if the including file |
| 789 | is treated as a system header. |
| 790 | |
| 791 | .. _diagnostics_enable_everything: |
| 792 | |
Tobias Grosser | 7416024 | 2014-02-28 09:11:08 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 793 | Enabling All Diagnostics |
| 794 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 795 | |
| 796 | In addition to the traditional ``-W`` flags, one can enable **all** |
Tobias Grosser | 7416024 | 2014-02-28 09:11:08 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 797 | diagnostics by passing :option:`-Weverything`. This works as expected |
| 798 | with |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 799 | :option:`-Werror`, and also includes the warnings from :option:`-pedantic`. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 800 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 801 | Note that when combined with :option:`-w` (which disables all warnings), that |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 802 | flag wins. |
| 803 | |
| 804 | Controlling Static Analyzer Diagnostics |
| 805 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 806 | |
| 807 | While not strictly part of the compiler, the diagnostics from Clang's |
| 808 | `static analyzer <http://clang-analyzer.llvm.org>`_ can also be |
| 809 | influenced by the user via changes to the source code. See the available |
| 810 | `annotations <http://clang-analyzer.llvm.org/annotations.html>`_ and the |
| 811 | analyzer's `FAQ |
| 812 | page <http://clang-analyzer.llvm.org/faq.html#exclude_code>`_ for more |
| 813 | information. |
| 814 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 7ac0cc3 | 2012-12-15 21:10:51 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 815 | .. _usersmanual-precompiled-headers: |
| 816 | |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 817 | Precompiled Headers |
| 818 | ------------------- |
| 819 | |
| 820 | `Precompiled headers <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precompiled_header>`__ |
| 821 | are a general approach employed by many compilers to reduce compilation |
| 822 | time. The underlying motivation of the approach is that it is common for |
| 823 | the same (and often large) header files to be included by multiple |
| 824 | source files. Consequently, compile times can often be greatly improved |
| 825 | by caching some of the (redundant) work done by a compiler to process |
| 826 | headers. Precompiled header files, which represent one of many ways to |
| 827 | implement this optimization, are literally files that represent an |
| 828 | on-disk cache that contains the vital information necessary to reduce |
| 829 | some of the work needed to process a corresponding header file. While |
| 830 | details of precompiled headers vary between compilers, precompiled |
| 831 | headers have been shown to be highly effective at speeding up program |
Nico Weber | ab88f0b | 2014-03-07 18:09:57 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 832 | compilation on systems with very large system headers (e.g., Mac OS X). |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 833 | |
| 834 | Generating a PCH File |
| 835 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 836 | |
| 837 | To generate a PCH file using Clang, one invokes Clang with the |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 838 | :option:`-x <language>-header` option. This mirrors the interface in GCC |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 839 | for generating PCH files: |
| 840 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 841 | .. code-block:: console |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 842 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 843 | $ gcc -x c-header test.h -o test.h.gch |
| 844 | $ clang -x c-header test.h -o test.h.pch |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 845 | |
| 846 | Using a PCH File |
| 847 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 848 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 849 | A PCH file can then be used as a prefix header when a :option:`-include` |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 850 | option is passed to ``clang``: |
| 851 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 852 | .. code-block:: console |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 853 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 854 | $ clang -include test.h test.c -o test |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 855 | |
| 856 | The ``clang`` driver will first check if a PCH file for ``test.h`` is |
| 857 | available; if so, the contents of ``test.h`` (and the files it includes) |
| 858 | will be processed from the PCH file. Otherwise, Clang falls back to |
| 859 | directly processing the content of ``test.h``. This mirrors the behavior |
| 860 | of GCC. |
| 861 | |
| 862 | .. note:: |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 863 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 864 | Clang does *not* automatically use PCH files for headers that are directly |
| 865 | included within a source file. For example: |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 866 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 867 | .. code-block:: console |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 868 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 869 | $ clang -x c-header test.h -o test.h.pch |
| 870 | $ cat test.c |
| 871 | #include "test.h" |
| 872 | $ clang test.c -o test |
| 873 | |
| 874 | In this example, ``clang`` will not automatically use the PCH file for |
| 875 | ``test.h`` since ``test.h`` was included directly in the source file and not |
| 876 | specified on the command line using :option:`-include`. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 877 | |
| 878 | Relocatable PCH Files |
| 879 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 880 | |
| 881 | It is sometimes necessary to build a precompiled header from headers |
| 882 | that are not yet in their final, installed locations. For example, one |
| 883 | might build a precompiled header within the build tree that is then |
| 884 | meant to be installed alongside the headers. Clang permits the creation |
| 885 | of "relocatable" precompiled headers, which are built with a given path |
| 886 | (into the build directory) and can later be used from an installed |
| 887 | location. |
| 888 | |
| 889 | To build a relocatable precompiled header, place your headers into a |
| 890 | subdirectory whose structure mimics the installed location. For example, |
| 891 | if you want to build a precompiled header for the header ``mylib.h`` |
| 892 | that will be installed into ``/usr/include``, create a subdirectory |
| 893 | ``build/usr/include`` and place the header ``mylib.h`` into that |
| 894 | subdirectory. If ``mylib.h`` depends on other headers, then they can be |
| 895 | stored within ``build/usr/include`` in a way that mimics the installed |
| 896 | location. |
| 897 | |
| 898 | Building a relocatable precompiled header requires two additional |
| 899 | arguments. First, pass the ``--relocatable-pch`` flag to indicate that |
| 900 | the resulting PCH file should be relocatable. Second, pass |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 901 | :option:`-isysroot /path/to/build`, which makes all includes for your library |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 902 | relative to the build directory. For example: |
| 903 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 904 | .. code-block:: console |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 905 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 906 | # clang -x c-header --relocatable-pch -isysroot /path/to/build /path/to/build/mylib.h mylib.h.pch |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 907 | |
| 908 | When loading the relocatable PCH file, the various headers used in the |
| 909 | PCH file are found from the system header root. For example, ``mylib.h`` |
| 910 | can be found in ``/usr/include/mylib.h``. If the headers are installed |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 911 | in some other system root, the :option:`-isysroot` option can be used provide |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 912 | a different system root from which the headers will be based. For |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 913 | example, :option:`-isysroot /Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.4u.sdk` will look for |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 914 | ``mylib.h`` in ``/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.4u.sdk/usr/include/mylib.h``. |
| 915 | |
| 916 | Relocatable precompiled headers are intended to be used in a limited |
| 917 | number of cases where the compilation environment is tightly controlled |
| 918 | and the precompiled header cannot be generated after headers have been |
Argyrios Kyrtzidis | f0ad09f | 2013-02-14 00:12:44 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 919 | installed. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 920 | |
| 921 | Controlling Code Generation |
| 922 | --------------------------- |
| 923 | |
| 924 | Clang provides a number of ways to control code generation. The options |
| 925 | are listed below. |
| 926 | |
Sean Silva | 4c280bd | 2013-06-21 23:50:58 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 927 | **-f[no-]sanitize=check1,check2,...** |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 928 | Turn on runtime checks for various forms of undefined or suspicious |
| 929 | behavior. |
| 930 | |
| 931 | This option controls whether Clang adds runtime checks for various |
| 932 | forms of undefined or suspicious behavior, and is disabled by |
| 933 | default. If a check fails, a diagnostic message is produced at |
| 934 | runtime explaining the problem. The main checks are: |
| 935 | |
Richard Smith | bb741f4 | 2012-12-13 07:29:23 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 936 | - .. _opt_fsanitize_address: |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 937 | |
Richard Smith | bb741f4 | 2012-12-13 07:29:23 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 938 | ``-fsanitize=address``: |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 939 | :doc:`AddressSanitizer`, a memory error |
| 940 | detector. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 941 | - ``-fsanitize=integer``: Enables checks for undefined or |
| 942 | suspicious integer behavior. |
Richard Smith | bb741f4 | 2012-12-13 07:29:23 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 943 | - .. _opt_fsanitize_thread: |
| 944 | |
Dmitry Vyukov | 42de108 | 2012-12-21 08:21:25 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 945 | ``-fsanitize=thread``: :doc:`ThreadSanitizer`, a data race detector. |
Evgeniy Stepanov | 17d5590 | 2012-12-21 10:50:00 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 946 | - .. _opt_fsanitize_memory: |
| 947 | |
| 948 | ``-fsanitize=memory``: :doc:`MemorySanitizer`, |
| 949 | an *experimental* detector of uninitialized reads. Not ready for |
| 950 | widespread use. |
Richard Smith | bb741f4 | 2012-12-13 07:29:23 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 951 | - .. _opt_fsanitize_undefined: |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 952 | |
Richard Smith | bb741f4 | 2012-12-13 07:29:23 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 953 | ``-fsanitize=undefined``: Fast and compatible undefined behavior |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 954 | checker. Enables the undefined behavior checks that have small |
| 955 | runtime cost and no impact on address space layout or ABI. This |
| 956 | includes all of the checks listed below other than |
| 957 | ``unsigned-integer-overflow``. |
| 958 | |
Richard Smith | b7f7faa | 2013-05-29 22:57:31 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 959 | - ``-fsanitize=undefined-trap``: This includes all sanitizers |
Chad Rosier | ae229d5 | 2013-01-29 23:31:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 960 | included by ``-fsanitize=undefined``, except those that require |
Richard Smith | b7f7faa | 2013-05-29 22:57:31 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 961 | runtime support. This group of sanitizers is intended to be |
| 962 | used in conjunction with the ``-fsanitize-undefined-trap-on-error`` |
| 963 | flag. This includes all of the checks listed below other than |
| 964 | ``unsigned-integer-overflow`` and ``vptr``. |
Peter Collingbourne | c377275 | 2013-08-07 22:47:34 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 965 | - ``-fsanitize=dataflow``: :doc:`DataFlowSanitizer`, a general data |
| 966 | flow analysis. |
Chad Rosier | ae229d5 | 2013-01-29 23:31:22 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 967 | |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 968 | The following more fine-grained checks are also available: |
| 969 | |
| 970 | - ``-fsanitize=alignment``: Use of a misaligned pointer or creation |
| 971 | of a misaligned reference. |
Richard Smith | 1629da9 | 2012-12-13 07:11:50 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 972 | - ``-fsanitize=bool``: Load of a ``bool`` value which is neither |
| 973 | ``true`` nor ``false``. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 974 | - ``-fsanitize=bounds``: Out of bounds array indexing, in cases |
| 975 | where the array bound can be statically determined. |
Richard Smith | 1629da9 | 2012-12-13 07:11:50 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 976 | - ``-fsanitize=enum``: Load of a value of an enumerated type which |
| 977 | is not in the range of representable values for that enumerated |
| 978 | type. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 979 | - ``-fsanitize=float-cast-overflow``: Conversion to, from, or |
| 980 | between floating-point types which would overflow the |
| 981 | destination. |
| 982 | - ``-fsanitize=float-divide-by-zero``: Floating point division by |
| 983 | zero. |
Peter Collingbourne | b453cd6 | 2013-10-20 21:29:19 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 984 | - ``-fsanitize=function``: Indirect call of a function through a |
Peter Collingbourne | 6939d29 | 2013-10-26 00:21:57 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 985 | function pointer of the wrong type (Linux, C++ and x86/x86_64 only). |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 986 | - ``-fsanitize=integer-divide-by-zero``: Integer division by zero. |
| 987 | - ``-fsanitize=null``: Use of a null pointer or creation of a null |
| 988 | reference. |
| 989 | - ``-fsanitize=object-size``: An attempt to use bytes which the |
| 990 | optimizer can determine are not part of the object being |
| 991 | accessed. The sizes of objects are determined using |
| 992 | ``__builtin_object_size``, and consequently may be able to detect |
| 993 | more problems at higher optimization levels. |
| 994 | - ``-fsanitize=return``: In C++, reaching the end of a |
| 995 | value-returning function without returning a value. |
| 996 | - ``-fsanitize=shift``: Shift operators where the amount shifted is |
| 997 | greater or equal to the promoted bit-width of the left hand side |
| 998 | or less than zero, or where the left hand side is negative. For a |
| 999 | signed left shift, also checks for signed overflow in C, and for |
| 1000 | unsigned overflow in C++. |
| 1001 | - ``-fsanitize=signed-integer-overflow``: Signed integer overflow, |
| 1002 | including all the checks added by ``-ftrapv``, and checking for |
| 1003 | overflow in signed division (``INT_MIN / -1``). |
| 1004 | - ``-fsanitize=unreachable``: If control flow reaches |
| 1005 | ``__builtin_unreachable``. |
| 1006 | - ``-fsanitize=unsigned-integer-overflow``: Unsigned integer |
| 1007 | overflows. |
| 1008 | - ``-fsanitize=vla-bound``: A variable-length array whose bound |
| 1009 | does not evaluate to a positive value. |
| 1010 | - ``-fsanitize=vptr``: Use of an object whose vptr indicates that |
| 1011 | it is of the wrong dynamic type, or that its lifetime has not |
| 1012 | begun or has ended. Incompatible with ``-fno-rtti``. |
| 1013 | |
Alexey Samsonov | 2de6833 | 2013-08-07 08:23:32 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1014 | You can turn off or modify checks for certain source files, functions |
| 1015 | or even variables by providing a special file: |
| 1016 | |
| 1017 | - ``-fsanitize-blacklist=/path/to/blacklist/file``: disable or modify |
| 1018 | sanitizer checks for objects listed in the file. See |
| 1019 | :doc:`SanitizerSpecialCaseList` for file format description. |
| 1020 | - ``-fno-sanitize-blacklist``: don't use blacklist file, if it was |
| 1021 | specified earlier in the command line. |
| 1022 | |
Evgeniy Stepanov | 17d5590 | 2012-12-21 10:50:00 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1023 | Extra features of MemorySanitizer (require explicit |
| 1024 | ``-fsanitize=memory``): |
| 1025 | |
Evgeniy Stepanov | 2bfcaab | 2014-03-20 14:58:36 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1026 | - ``-fsanitize-memory-track-origins[=level]``: Enables origin tracking in |
Evgeniy Stepanov | acef0e6 | 2012-12-21 10:53:20 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1027 | MemorySanitizer. Adds a second section to MemorySanitizer |
| 1028 | reports pointing to the heap or stack allocation the |
| 1029 | uninitialized bits came from. Slows down execution by additional |
| 1030 | 1.5x-2x. |
Evgeniy Stepanov | 17d5590 | 2012-12-21 10:50:00 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1031 | |
Evgeniy Stepanov | 2bfcaab | 2014-03-20 14:58:36 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1032 | Possible values for level are 0 (off), 1 (default), 2. Level 2 adds more |
| 1033 | sections to MemorySanitizer reports describing the order of memory stores |
| 1034 | the uninitialized value went through. Beware, this mode may use a lot of |
| 1035 | extra memory. |
| 1036 | |
Richard Smith | b7f7faa | 2013-05-29 22:57:31 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1037 | Extra features of UndefinedBehaviorSanitizer: |
| 1038 | |
| 1039 | - ``-fno-sanitize-recover``: By default, after a sanitizer diagnoses |
| 1040 | an issue, it will attempt to continue executing the program if there |
| 1041 | is a reasonable behavior it can give to the faulting operation. This |
| 1042 | option causes the program to abort instead. |
| 1043 | - ``-fsanitize-undefined-trap-on-error``: Causes traps to be emitted |
| 1044 | rather than calls to runtime libraries when a problem is detected. |
| 1045 | This option is intended for use in cases where the sanitizer runtime |
| 1046 | cannot be used (for instance, when building libc or a kernel module). |
| 1047 | This is only compatible with the sanitizers in the ``undefined-trap`` |
| 1048 | group. |
| 1049 | |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1050 | The ``-fsanitize=`` argument must also be provided when linking, in |
Richard Smith | 83c728b | 2013-07-19 19:06:48 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1051 | order to link to the appropriate runtime library. When using |
| 1052 | ``-fsanitize=vptr`` (or a group that includes it, such as |
| 1053 | ``-fsanitize=undefined``) with a C++ program, the link must be |
| 1054 | performed by ``clang++``, not ``clang``, in order to link against the |
| 1055 | C++-specific parts of the runtime library. |
| 1056 | |
| 1057 | It is not possible to combine more than one of the ``-fsanitize=address``, |
| 1058 | ``-fsanitize=thread``, and ``-fsanitize=memory`` checkers in the same |
| 1059 | program. The ``-fsanitize=undefined`` checks can be combined with other |
| 1060 | sanitizers. |
| 1061 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1062 | .. option:: -fno-assume-sane-operator-new |
| 1063 | |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1064 | Don't assume that the C++'s new operator is sane. |
| 1065 | |
| 1066 | This option tells the compiler to do not assume that C++'s global |
| 1067 | new operator will always return a pointer that does not alias any |
| 1068 | other pointer when the function returns. |
| 1069 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1070 | .. option:: -ftrap-function=[name] |
| 1071 | |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1072 | Instruct code generator to emit a function call to the specified |
| 1073 | function name for ``__builtin_trap()``. |
| 1074 | |
| 1075 | LLVM code generator translates ``__builtin_trap()`` to a trap |
| 1076 | instruction if it is supported by the target ISA. Otherwise, the |
| 1077 | builtin is translated into a call to ``abort``. If this option is |
| 1078 | set, then the code generator will always lower the builtin to a call |
| 1079 | to the specified function regardless of whether the target ISA has a |
| 1080 | trap instruction. This option is useful for environments (e.g. |
| 1081 | deeply embedded) where a trap cannot be properly handled, or when |
| 1082 | some custom behavior is desired. |
| 1083 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1084 | .. option:: -ftls-model=[model] |
| 1085 | |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1086 | Select which TLS model to use. |
| 1087 | |
| 1088 | Valid values are: ``global-dynamic``, ``local-dynamic``, |
| 1089 | ``initial-exec`` and ``local-exec``. The default value is |
| 1090 | ``global-dynamic``. The compiler may use a different model if the |
| 1091 | selected model is not supported by the target, or if a more |
| 1092 | efficient model can be used. The TLS model can be overridden per |
| 1093 | variable using the ``tls_model`` attribute. |
| 1094 | |
Silviu Baranga | f9671dd | 2013-10-21 10:54:53 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1095 | .. option:: -mhwdiv=[values] |
| 1096 | |
| 1097 | Select the ARM modes (arm or thumb) that support hardware division |
| 1098 | instructions. |
| 1099 | |
| 1100 | Valid values are: ``arm``, ``thumb`` and ``arm,thumb``. |
| 1101 | This option is used to indicate which mode (arm or thumb) supports |
| 1102 | hardware division instructions. This only applies to the ARM |
| 1103 | architecture. |
| 1104 | |
Bernard Ogden | 18b5701 | 2013-10-29 09:47:51 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1105 | .. option:: -m[no-]crc |
| 1106 | |
| 1107 | Enable or disable CRC instructions. |
| 1108 | |
| 1109 | This option is used to indicate whether CRC instructions are to |
| 1110 | be generated. This only applies to the ARM architecture. |
| 1111 | |
| 1112 | CRC instructions are enabled by default on ARMv8. |
| 1113 | |
Amara Emerson | 05d816d | 2014-01-24 15:15:27 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1114 | .. option:: -mgeneral-regs-only |
Amara Emerson | 04e2ecf | 2014-01-23 15:48:30 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1115 | |
| 1116 | Generate code which only uses the general purpose registers. |
| 1117 | |
| 1118 | This option restricts the generated code to use general registers |
| 1119 | only. This only applies to the AArch64 architecture. |
| 1120 | |
Silviu Baranga | f9671dd | 2013-10-21 10:54:53 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1121 | |
Diego Novillo | a5256bf | 2014-04-23 15:21:07 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1122 | Using Sampling Profilers for Optimization |
| 1123 | ----------------------------------------- |
| 1124 | |
| 1125 | Sampling profilers are used to collect runtime information, such as |
| 1126 | hardware counters, while your application executes. They are typically |
Diego Novillo | 8ebff32 | 2014-04-23 15:21:20 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1127 | very efficient and do not incur a large runtime overhead. The |
Diego Novillo | a5256bf | 2014-04-23 15:21:07 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1128 | sample data collected by the profiler can be used during compilation |
Diego Novillo | 8ebff32 | 2014-04-23 15:21:20 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1129 | to determine what the most executed areas of the code are. |
Diego Novillo | a5256bf | 2014-04-23 15:21:07 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1130 | |
| 1131 | In particular, sample profilers can provide execution counts for all |
Diego Novillo | 8ebff32 | 2014-04-23 15:21:20 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1132 | instructions in the code and information on branches taken and function |
Diego Novillo | a5256bf | 2014-04-23 15:21:07 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1133 | invocation. The compiler can use this information in its optimization |
| 1134 | cost models. For example, knowing that a branch is taken very |
| 1135 | frequently helps the compiler make better decisions when ordering |
| 1136 | basic blocks. Knowing that a function ``foo`` is called more |
Diego Novillo | 8ebff32 | 2014-04-23 15:21:20 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1137 | frequently than another function ``bar`` helps the inliner. |
Diego Novillo | a5256bf | 2014-04-23 15:21:07 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1138 | |
| 1139 | Using the data from a sample profiler requires some changes in the way |
| 1140 | a program is built. Before the compiler can use profiling information, |
| 1141 | the code needs to execute under the profiler. The following is the |
| 1142 | usual build cycle when using sample profilers for optimization: |
| 1143 | |
| 1144 | 1. Build the code with source line table information. You can use all the |
| 1145 | usual build flags that you always build your application with. The only |
Diego Novillo | 8ebff32 | 2014-04-23 15:21:20 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1146 | requirement is that you add ``-gline-tables-only`` or ``-g`` to the |
Diego Novillo | a5256bf | 2014-04-23 15:21:07 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1147 | command line. This is important for the profiler to be able to map |
| 1148 | instructions back to source line locations. |
| 1149 | |
| 1150 | .. code-block:: console |
| 1151 | |
| 1152 | $ clang++ -O2 -gline-tables-only code.cc -o code |
| 1153 | |
| 1154 | 2. Run the executable under a sampling profiler. The specific profiler |
| 1155 | you use does not really matter, as long as its output can be converted |
| 1156 | into the format that the LLVM optimizer understands. Currently, there |
| 1157 | exists a conversion tool for the Linux Perf profiler |
| 1158 | (https://perf.wiki.kernel.org/), so these examples assume that you |
| 1159 | are using Linux Perf to profile your code. |
| 1160 | |
| 1161 | .. code-block:: console |
| 1162 | |
| 1163 | $ perf record -b ./code |
| 1164 | |
| 1165 | Note the use of the ``-b`` flag. This tells Perf to use the Last Branch |
| 1166 | Record (LBR) to record call chains. While this is not strictly required, |
| 1167 | it provides better call information, which improves the accuracy of |
| 1168 | the profile data. |
| 1169 | |
| 1170 | 3. Convert the collected profile data to LLVM's sample profile format. |
| 1171 | This is currently supported via the AutoFDO converter ``create_llvm_prof``. |
| 1172 | It is available at http://github.com/google/autofdo. Once built and |
| 1173 | installed, you can convert the ``perf.data`` file to LLVM using |
| 1174 | the command: |
| 1175 | |
| 1176 | .. code-block:: console |
| 1177 | |
| 1178 | $ create_llvm_prof --binary=./code --out=code.prof |
| 1179 | |
Diego Novillo | 9e43084 | 2014-04-23 15:21:23 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1180 | This will read ``perf.data`` and the binary file ``./code`` and emit |
Diego Novillo | a5256bf | 2014-04-23 15:21:07 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1181 | the profile data in ``code.prof``. Note that if you ran ``perf`` |
| 1182 | without the ``-b`` flag, you need to use ``--use_lbr=false`` when |
| 1183 | calling ``create_llvm_prof``. |
| 1184 | |
| 1185 | 4. Build the code again using the collected profile. This step feeds |
| 1186 | the profile back to the optimizers. This should result in a binary |
Diego Novillo | 8ebff32 | 2014-04-23 15:21:20 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1187 | that executes faster than the original one. Note that you are not |
| 1188 | required to build the code with the exact same arguments that you |
| 1189 | used in the first step. The only requirement is that you build the code |
| 1190 | with ``-gline-tables-only`` and ``-fprofile-sample-use``. |
Diego Novillo | a5256bf | 2014-04-23 15:21:07 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1191 | |
| 1192 | .. code-block:: console |
| 1193 | |
| 1194 | $ clang++ -O2 -gline-tables-only -fprofile-sample-use=code.prof code.cc -o code |
| 1195 | |
| 1196 | |
| 1197 | Sample Profile Format |
| 1198 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1199 | |
| 1200 | If you are not using Linux Perf to collect profiles, you will need to |
| 1201 | write a conversion tool from your profiler to LLVM's format. This section |
| 1202 | explains the file format expected by the backend. |
| 1203 | |
| 1204 | Sample profiles are written as ASCII text. The file is divided into sections, |
| 1205 | which correspond to each of the functions executed at runtime. Each |
| 1206 | section has the following format (taken from |
| 1207 | https://github.com/google/autofdo/blob/master/profile_writer.h): |
| 1208 | |
| 1209 | .. code-block:: console |
| 1210 | |
| 1211 | function1:total_samples:total_head_samples |
| 1212 | offset1[.discriminator]: number_of_samples [fn1:num fn2:num ... ] |
| 1213 | offset2[.discriminator]: number_of_samples [fn3:num fn4:num ... ] |
| 1214 | ... |
| 1215 | offsetN[.discriminator]: number_of_samples [fn5:num fn6:num ... ] |
| 1216 | |
Diego Novillo | 9e43084 | 2014-04-23 15:21:23 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1217 | The file may contain blank lines between sections and within a |
Diego Novillo | 8ebff32 | 2014-04-23 15:21:20 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1218 | section. However, the spacing within a single line is fixed. Additional |
| 1219 | spaces will result in an error while reading the file. |
| 1220 | |
Diego Novillo | a5256bf | 2014-04-23 15:21:07 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1221 | Function names must be mangled in order for the profile loader to |
| 1222 | match them in the current translation unit. The two numbers in the |
| 1223 | function header specify how many total samples were accumulated in the |
| 1224 | function (first number), and the total number of samples accumulated |
Diego Novillo | 8ebff32 | 2014-04-23 15:21:20 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1225 | in the prologue of the function (second number). This head sample |
| 1226 | count provides an indicator of how frequently the function is invoked. |
Diego Novillo | a5256bf | 2014-04-23 15:21:07 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1227 | |
| 1228 | Each sampled line may contain several items. Some are optional (marked |
| 1229 | below): |
| 1230 | |
| 1231 | a. Source line offset. This number represents the line number |
| 1232 | in the function where the sample was collected. The line number is |
| 1233 | always relative to the line where symbol of the function is |
| 1234 | defined. So, if the function has its header at line 280, the offset |
| 1235 | 13 is at line 293 in the file. |
| 1236 | |
Diego Novillo | 897c59c | 2014-04-23 15:21:21 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1237 | Note that this offset should never be a negative number. This could |
| 1238 | happen in cases like macros. The debug machinery will register the |
| 1239 | line number at the point of macro expansion. So, if the macro was |
| 1240 | expanded in a line before the start of the function, the profile |
| 1241 | converter should emit a 0 as the offset (this means that the optimizers |
| 1242 | will not be able to associate a meaningful weight to the instructions |
| 1243 | in the macro). |
| 1244 | |
Diego Novillo | a5256bf | 2014-04-23 15:21:07 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1245 | b. [OPTIONAL] Discriminator. This is used if the sampled program |
| 1246 | was compiled with DWARF discriminator support |
Diego Novillo | 8ebff32 | 2014-04-23 15:21:20 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1247 | (http://wiki.dwarfstd.org/index.php?title=Path_Discriminators). |
Diego Novillo | 897c59c | 2014-04-23 15:21:21 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1248 | DWARF discriminators are unsigned integer values that allow the |
| 1249 | compiler to distinguish between multiple execution paths on the |
| 1250 | same source line location. |
Diego Novillo | a5256bf | 2014-04-23 15:21:07 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1251 | |
Diego Novillo | 8ebff32 | 2014-04-23 15:21:20 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1252 | For example, consider the line of code ``if (cond) foo(); else bar();``. |
| 1253 | If the predicate ``cond`` is true 80% of the time, then the edge |
| 1254 | into function ``foo`` should be considered to be taken most of the |
| 1255 | time. But both calls to ``foo`` and ``bar`` are at the same source |
| 1256 | line, so a sample count at that line is not sufficient. The |
| 1257 | compiler needs to know which part of that line is taken more |
| 1258 | frequently. |
| 1259 | |
| 1260 | This is what discriminators provide. In this case, the calls to |
| 1261 | ``foo`` and ``bar`` will be at the same line, but will have |
| 1262 | different discriminator values. This allows the compiler to correctly |
| 1263 | set edge weights into ``foo`` and ``bar``. |
| 1264 | |
| 1265 | c. Number of samples. This is an integer quantity representing the |
| 1266 | number of samples collected by the profiler at this source |
| 1267 | location. |
Diego Novillo | a5256bf | 2014-04-23 15:21:07 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1268 | |
| 1269 | d. [OPTIONAL] Potential call targets and samples. If present, this |
| 1270 | line contains a call instruction. This models both direct and |
Diego Novillo | a5256bf | 2014-04-23 15:21:07 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1271 | number of samples. For example, |
| 1272 | |
| 1273 | .. code-block:: console |
| 1274 | |
| 1275 | 130: 7 foo:3 bar:2 baz:7 |
| 1276 | |
| 1277 | The above means that at relative line offset 130 there is a call |
Diego Novillo | 8ebff32 | 2014-04-23 15:21:20 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1278 | instruction that calls one of ``foo()``, ``bar()`` and ``baz()``, |
| 1279 | with ``baz()`` being the relatively more frequently called target. |
Diego Novillo | a5256bf | 2014-04-23 15:21:07 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1280 | |
| 1281 | |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1282 | Controlling Size of Debug Information |
| 1283 | ------------------------------------- |
| 1284 | |
| 1285 | Debug info kind generated by Clang can be set by one of the flags listed |
| 1286 | below. If multiple flags are present, the last one is used. |
| 1287 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1288 | .. option:: -g0 |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1289 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1290 | Don't generate any debug info (default). |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1291 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1292 | .. option:: -gline-tables-only |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1293 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1294 | Generate line number tables only. |
| 1295 | |
| 1296 | This kind of debug info allows to obtain stack traces with function names, |
| 1297 | file names and line numbers (by such tools as ``gdb`` or ``addr2line``). It |
| 1298 | doesn't contain any other data (e.g. description of local variables or |
| 1299 | function parameters). |
| 1300 | |
Adrian Prantl | 4ad03dc | 2014-06-13 23:35:54 +0000 | [diff] [blame^] | 1301 | .. option:: -fstandalone-debug |
Adrian Prantl | 36b8067 | 2014-06-13 21:12:31 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1302 | |
| 1303 | Clang supports a number of optimizations to reduce the size of debug |
| 1304 | information in the binary. They work based on the assumption that |
| 1305 | the debug type information can be spread out over multiple |
| 1306 | compilation units. For instance, Clang will not emit type |
| 1307 | definitions for types that are not needed by a module and could be |
| 1308 | replaced with a forward declaration. Further, Clang will only emit |
| 1309 | type info for a dynamic C++ class in the module that contains the |
| 1310 | vtable for the class. |
| 1311 | |
Adrian Prantl | 4ad03dc | 2014-06-13 23:35:54 +0000 | [diff] [blame^] | 1312 | The **-fstandalone-debug** option turns off these optimizations. |
Adrian Prantl | 36b8067 | 2014-06-13 21:12:31 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1313 | This is useful when working with 3rd-party libraries that don't come |
| 1314 | with debug information. Note that Clang will never emit type |
| 1315 | information for types that are not referenced at all by the program. |
| 1316 | |
Adrian Prantl | 4ad03dc | 2014-06-13 23:35:54 +0000 | [diff] [blame^] | 1317 | .. option:: -fno-standalone-debug |
| 1318 | |
| 1319 | On Darwin **-fstandalone-debug** is enabled by default. The |
| 1320 | **-fno-standalone-debug** option can be used to get to turn on the |
| 1321 | vtable-based optimization described above. |
| 1322 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1323 | .. option:: -g |
| 1324 | |
| 1325 | Generate complete debug info. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1326 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | a7d16ce | 2013-04-10 15:35:17 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1327 | Comment Parsing Options |
Dmitri Gribenko | 28bfb48 | 2014-03-06 16:32:09 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1328 | ----------------------- |
Dmitri Gribenko | a7d16ce | 2013-04-10 15:35:17 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1329 | |
| 1330 | Clang parses Doxygen and non-Doxygen style documentation comments and attaches |
| 1331 | them to the appropriate declaration nodes. By default, it only parses |
| 1332 | Doxygen-style comments and ignores ordinary comments starting with ``//`` and |
| 1333 | ``/*``. |
| 1334 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 28bfb48 | 2014-03-06 16:32:09 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1335 | .. option:: -Wdocumentation |
| 1336 | |
| 1337 | Emit warnings about use of documentation comments. This warning group is off |
| 1338 | by default. |
| 1339 | |
| 1340 | This includes checking that ``\param`` commands name parameters that actually |
| 1341 | present in the function signature, checking that ``\returns`` is used only on |
| 1342 | functions that actually return a value etc. |
| 1343 | |
| 1344 | .. option:: -Wno-documentation-unknown-command |
| 1345 | |
| 1346 | Don't warn when encountering an unknown Doxygen command. |
| 1347 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | a7d16ce | 2013-04-10 15:35:17 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1348 | .. option:: -fparse-all-comments |
| 1349 | |
| 1350 | Parse all comments as documentation comments (including ordinary comments |
| 1351 | starting with ``//`` and ``/*``). |
| 1352 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 28bfb48 | 2014-03-06 16:32:09 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1353 | .. option:: -fcomment-block-commands=[commands] |
| 1354 | |
| 1355 | Define custom documentation commands as block commands. This allows Clang to |
| 1356 | construct the correct AST for these custom commands, and silences warnings |
| 1357 | about unknown commands. Several commands must be separated by a comma |
| 1358 | *without trailing space*; e.g. ``-fcomment-block-commands=foo,bar`` defines |
| 1359 | custom commands ``\foo`` and ``\bar``. |
| 1360 | |
| 1361 | It is also possible to use ``-fcomment-block-commands`` several times; e.g. |
| 1362 | ``-fcomment-block-commands=foo -fcomment-block-commands=bar`` does the same |
| 1363 | as above. |
| 1364 | |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1365 | .. _c: |
| 1366 | |
| 1367 | C Language Features |
| 1368 | =================== |
| 1369 | |
| 1370 | The support for standard C in clang is feature-complete except for the |
| 1371 | C99 floating-point pragmas. |
| 1372 | |
| 1373 | Extensions supported by clang |
| 1374 | ----------------------------- |
| 1375 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1376 | See :doc:`LanguageExtensions`. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1377 | |
| 1378 | Differences between various standard modes |
| 1379 | ------------------------------------------ |
| 1380 | |
| 1381 | clang supports the -std option, which changes what language mode clang |
| 1382 | uses. The supported modes for C are c89, gnu89, c94, c99, gnu99 and |
| 1383 | various aliases for those modes. If no -std option is specified, clang |
| 1384 | defaults to gnu99 mode. |
| 1385 | |
| 1386 | Differences between all ``c*`` and ``gnu*`` modes: |
| 1387 | |
| 1388 | - ``c*`` modes define "``__STRICT_ANSI__``". |
| 1389 | - Target-specific defines not prefixed by underscores, like "linux", |
| 1390 | are defined in ``gnu*`` modes. |
| 1391 | - Trigraphs default to being off in ``gnu*`` modes; they can be enabled by |
| 1392 | the -trigraphs option. |
| 1393 | - The parser recognizes "asm" and "typeof" as keywords in ``gnu*`` modes; |
| 1394 | the variants "``__asm__``" and "``__typeof__``" are recognized in all |
| 1395 | modes. |
| 1396 | - The Apple "blocks" extension is recognized by default in ``gnu*`` modes |
| 1397 | on some platforms; it can be enabled in any mode with the "-fblocks" |
| 1398 | option. |
| 1399 | - Arrays that are VLA's according to the standard, but which can be |
| 1400 | constant folded by the frontend are treated as fixed size arrays. |
| 1401 | This occurs for things like "int X[(1, 2)];", which is technically a |
| 1402 | VLA. ``c*`` modes are strictly compliant and treat these as VLAs. |
| 1403 | |
| 1404 | Differences between ``*89`` and ``*99`` modes: |
| 1405 | |
| 1406 | - The ``*99`` modes default to implementing "inline" as specified in C99, |
| 1407 | while the ``*89`` modes implement the GNU version. This can be |
| 1408 | overridden for individual functions with the ``__gnu_inline__`` |
| 1409 | attribute. |
| 1410 | - Digraphs are not recognized in c89 mode. |
| 1411 | - The scope of names defined inside a "for", "if", "switch", "while", |
| 1412 | or "do" statement is different. (example: "``if ((struct x {int |
| 1413 | x;}*)0) {}``".) |
| 1414 | - ``__STDC_VERSION__`` is not defined in ``*89`` modes. |
| 1415 | - "inline" is not recognized as a keyword in c89 mode. |
| 1416 | - "restrict" is not recognized as a keyword in ``*89`` modes. |
| 1417 | - Commas are allowed in integer constant expressions in ``*99`` modes. |
| 1418 | - Arrays which are not lvalues are not implicitly promoted to pointers |
| 1419 | in ``*89`` modes. |
| 1420 | - Some warnings are different. |
| 1421 | |
| 1422 | c94 mode is identical to c89 mode except that digraphs are enabled in |
| 1423 | c94 mode (FIXME: And ``__STDC_VERSION__`` should be defined!). |
| 1424 | |
| 1425 | GCC extensions not implemented yet |
| 1426 | ---------------------------------- |
| 1427 | |
| 1428 | clang tries to be compatible with gcc as much as possible, but some gcc |
| 1429 | extensions are not implemented yet: |
| 1430 | |
| 1431 | - clang does not support #pragma weak (`bug |
| 1432 | 3679 <http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=3679>`_). Due to the uses |
| 1433 | described in the bug, this is likely to be implemented at some point, |
| 1434 | at least partially. |
| 1435 | - clang does not support decimal floating point types (``_Decimal32`` and |
| 1436 | friends) or fixed-point types (``_Fract`` and friends); nobody has |
| 1437 | expressed interest in these features yet, so it's hard to say when |
| 1438 | they will be implemented. |
| 1439 | - clang does not support nested functions; this is a complex feature |
| 1440 | which is infrequently used, so it is unlikely to be implemented |
| 1441 | anytime soon. In C++11 it can be emulated by assigning lambda |
| 1442 | functions to local variables, e.g: |
| 1443 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1444 | .. code-block:: cpp |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1445 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1446 | auto const local_function = [&](int parameter) { |
| 1447 | // Do something |
| 1448 | }; |
| 1449 | ... |
| 1450 | local_function(1); |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1451 | |
| 1452 | - clang does not support global register variables; this is unlikely to |
| 1453 | be implemented soon because it requires additional LLVM backend |
| 1454 | support. |
| 1455 | - clang does not support static initialization of flexible array |
| 1456 | members. This appears to be a rarely used extension, but could be |
| 1457 | implemented pending user demand. |
| 1458 | - clang does not support |
| 1459 | ``__builtin_va_arg_pack``/``__builtin_va_arg_pack_len``. This is |
| 1460 | used rarely, but in some potentially interesting places, like the |
| 1461 | glibc headers, so it may be implemented pending user demand. Note |
| 1462 | that because clang pretends to be like GCC 4.2, and this extension |
| 1463 | was introduced in 4.3, the glibc headers will not try to use this |
| 1464 | extension with clang at the moment. |
| 1465 | - clang does not support the gcc extension for forward-declaring |
| 1466 | function parameters; this has not shown up in any real-world code |
| 1467 | yet, though, so it might never be implemented. |
| 1468 | |
| 1469 | This is not a complete list; if you find an unsupported extension |
| 1470 | missing from this list, please send an e-mail to cfe-dev. This list |
| 1471 | currently excludes C++; see :ref:`C++ Language Features <cxx>`. Also, this |
| 1472 | list does not include bugs in mostly-implemented features; please see |
| 1473 | the `bug |
| 1474 | tracker <http://llvm.org/bugs/buglist.cgi?quicksearch=product%3Aclang+component%3A-New%2BBugs%2CAST%2CBasic%2CDriver%2CHeaders%2CLLVM%2BCodeGen%2Cparser%2Cpreprocessor%2CSemantic%2BAnalyzer>`_ |
| 1475 | for known existing bugs (FIXME: Is there a section for bug-reporting |
| 1476 | guidelines somewhere?). |
| 1477 | |
| 1478 | Intentionally unsupported GCC extensions |
| 1479 | ---------------------------------------- |
| 1480 | |
| 1481 | - clang does not support the gcc extension that allows variable-length |
| 1482 | arrays in structures. This is for a few reasons: one, it is tricky to |
| 1483 | implement, two, the extension is completely undocumented, and three, |
| 1484 | the extension appears to be rarely used. Note that clang *does* |
| 1485 | support flexible array members (arrays with a zero or unspecified |
| 1486 | size at the end of a structure). |
| 1487 | - clang does not have an equivalent to gcc's "fold"; this means that |
| 1488 | clang doesn't accept some constructs gcc might accept in contexts |
| 1489 | where a constant expression is required, like "x-x" where x is a |
| 1490 | variable. |
| 1491 | - clang does not support ``__builtin_apply`` and friends; this extension |
| 1492 | is extremely obscure and difficult to implement reliably. |
| 1493 | |
| 1494 | .. _c_ms: |
| 1495 | |
| 1496 | Microsoft extensions |
| 1497 | -------------------- |
| 1498 | |
| 1499 | clang has some experimental support for extensions from Microsoft Visual |
Richard Smith | 48d1b65 | 2013-12-12 02:42:17 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1500 | C++; to enable it, use the ``-fms-extensions`` command-line option. This is |
Reid Kleckner | d128f8a | 2013-09-20 17:51:00 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1501 | the default for Windows targets. Note that the support is incomplete. |
Richard Smith | 48d1b65 | 2013-12-12 02:42:17 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1502 | Some constructs such as ``dllexport`` on classes are ignored with a warning, |
Reid Kleckner | d128f8a | 2013-09-20 17:51:00 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1503 | and others such as `Microsoft IDL annotations |
Reid Kleckner | eb248d7 | 2013-09-20 17:54:39 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1504 | <http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/8tesw2eh.aspx>`_ are silently |
Reid Kleckner | d128f8a | 2013-09-20 17:51:00 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1505 | ignored. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1506 | |
Richard Smith | 48d1b65 | 2013-12-12 02:42:17 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1507 | clang has a ``-fms-compatibility`` flag that makes clang accept enough |
Reid Kleckner | 993e72a | 2013-09-20 17:04:25 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1508 | invalid C++ to be able to parse most Microsoft headers. For example, it |
| 1509 | allows `unqualified lookup of dependent base class members |
Reid Kleckner | eb248d7 | 2013-09-20 17:54:39 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1510 | <http://clang.llvm.org/compatibility.html#dep_lookup_bases>`_, which is |
| 1511 | a common compatibility issue with clang. This flag is enabled by default |
Reid Kleckner | 993e72a | 2013-09-20 17:04:25 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1512 | for Windows targets. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1513 | |
Richard Smith | 48d1b65 | 2013-12-12 02:42:17 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1514 | ``-fdelayed-template-parsing`` lets clang delay parsing of function template |
| 1515 | definitions until the end of a translation unit. This flag is enabled by |
| 1516 | default for Windows targets. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1517 | |
| 1518 | - clang allows setting ``_MSC_VER`` with ``-fmsc-version=``. It defaults to |
Reid Kleckner | 1784d2f | 2013-09-20 18:01:52 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1519 | 1700 which is the same as Visual C/C++ 2012. Any number is supported |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1520 | and can greatly affect what Windows SDK and c++stdlib headers clang |
Reid Kleckner | 1784d2f | 2013-09-20 18:01:52 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1521 | can compile. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1522 | - clang does not support the Microsoft extension where anonymous record |
| 1523 | members can be declared using user defined typedefs. |
Reid Kleckner | 1784d2f | 2013-09-20 18:01:52 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1524 | - clang supports the Microsoft ``#pragma pack`` feature for controlling |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1525 | record layout. GCC also contains support for this feature, however |
| 1526 | where MSVC and GCC are incompatible clang follows the MSVC |
| 1527 | definition. |
Reid Kleckner | 78fb10f | 2013-05-08 14:40:51 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1528 | - clang supports the Microsoft ``#pragma comment(lib, "foo.lib")`` feature for |
| 1529 | automatically linking against the specified library. Currently this feature |
| 1530 | only works with the Visual C++ linker. |
| 1531 | - clang supports the Microsoft ``#pragma comment(linker, "/flag:foo")`` feature |
| 1532 | for adding linker flags to COFF object files. The user is responsible for |
| 1533 | ensuring that the linker understands the flags. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1534 | - clang defaults to C++11 for Windows targets. |
| 1535 | |
| 1536 | .. _cxx: |
| 1537 | |
| 1538 | C++ Language Features |
| 1539 | ===================== |
| 1540 | |
| 1541 | clang fully implements all of standard C++98 except for exported |
Richard Smith | 48d1b65 | 2013-12-12 02:42:17 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1542 | templates (which were removed in C++11), and all of standard C++11 |
| 1543 | and the current draft standard for C++1y. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1544 | |
| 1545 | Controlling implementation limits |
| 1546 | --------------------------------- |
| 1547 | |
Richard Smith | b3a1452 | 2013-02-22 01:59:51 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1548 | .. option:: -fbracket-depth=N |
| 1549 | |
| 1550 | Sets the limit for nested parentheses, brackets, and braces to N. The |
| 1551 | default is 256. |
| 1552 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1553 | .. option:: -fconstexpr-depth=N |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1554 | |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1555 | Sets the limit for recursive constexpr function invocations to N. The |
| 1556 | default is 512. |
| 1557 | |
| 1558 | .. option:: -ftemplate-depth=N |
| 1559 | |
| 1560 | Sets the limit for recursively nested template instantiations to N. The |
Richard Smith | 79c927b | 2013-11-06 19:31:51 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1561 | default is 256. |
| 1562 | |
| 1563 | .. option:: -foperator-arrow-depth=N |
| 1564 | |
| 1565 | Sets the limit for iterative calls to 'operator->' functions to N. The |
| 1566 | default is 256. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1567 | |
| 1568 | .. _objc: |
| 1569 | |
| 1570 | Objective-C Language Features |
| 1571 | ============================= |
| 1572 | |
| 1573 | .. _objcxx: |
| 1574 | |
| 1575 | Objective-C++ Language Features |
| 1576 | =============================== |
| 1577 | |
| 1578 | |
| 1579 | .. _target_features: |
| 1580 | |
| 1581 | Target-Specific Features and Limitations |
| 1582 | ======================================== |
| 1583 | |
| 1584 | CPU Architectures Features and Limitations |
| 1585 | ------------------------------------------ |
| 1586 | |
| 1587 | X86 |
| 1588 | ^^^ |
| 1589 | |
| 1590 | The support for X86 (both 32-bit and 64-bit) is considered stable on |
Nico Weber | ab88f0b | 2014-03-07 18:09:57 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1591 | Darwin (Mac OS X), Linux, FreeBSD, and Dragonfly BSD: it has been tested |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1592 | to correctly compile many large C, C++, Objective-C, and Objective-C++ |
| 1593 | codebases. |
| 1594 | |
Richard Smith | 48d1b65 | 2013-12-12 02:42:17 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1595 | On ``x86_64-mingw32``, passing i128(by value) is incompatible with the |
David Woodhouse | ddf8985 | 2014-01-23 14:32:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1596 | Microsoft x64 calling convention. You might need to tweak |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1597 | ``WinX86_64ABIInfo::classify()`` in lib/CodeGen/TargetInfo.cpp. |
| 1598 | |
David Woodhouse | ddf8985 | 2014-01-23 14:32:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1599 | For the X86 target, clang supports the :option:`-m16` command line |
| 1600 | argument which enables 16-bit code output. This is broadly similar to |
| 1601 | using ``asm(".code16gcc")`` with the GNU toolchain. The generated code |
| 1602 | and the ABI remains 32-bit but the assembler emits instructions |
| 1603 | appropriate for a CPU running in 16-bit mode, with address-size and |
| 1604 | operand-size prefixes to enable 32-bit addressing and operations. |
| 1605 | |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1606 | ARM |
| 1607 | ^^^ |
| 1608 | |
| 1609 | The support for ARM (specifically ARMv6 and ARMv7) is considered stable |
| 1610 | on Darwin (iOS): it has been tested to correctly compile many large C, |
| 1611 | C++, Objective-C, and Objective-C++ codebases. Clang only supports a |
| 1612 | limited number of ARM architectures. It does not yet fully support |
| 1613 | ARMv5, for example. |
| 1614 | |
Roman Divacky | 786d32e | 2013-09-11 17:12:49 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1615 | PowerPC |
| 1616 | ^^^^^^^ |
| 1617 | |
| 1618 | The support for PowerPC (especially PowerPC64) is considered stable |
| 1619 | on Linux and FreeBSD: it has been tested to correctly compile many |
| 1620 | large C and C++ codebases. PowerPC (32bit) is still missing certain |
| 1621 | features (e.g. PIC code on ELF platforms). |
| 1622 | |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1623 | Other platforms |
| 1624 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1625 | |
Roman Divacky | 786d32e | 2013-09-11 17:12:49 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1626 | clang currently contains some support for other architectures (e.g. Sparc); |
| 1627 | however, significant pieces of code generation are still missing, and they |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1628 | haven't undergone significant testing. |
| 1629 | |
| 1630 | clang contains limited support for the MSP430 embedded processor, but |
| 1631 | both the clang support and the LLVM backend support are highly |
| 1632 | experimental. |
| 1633 | |
| 1634 | Other platforms are completely unsupported at the moment. Adding the |
| 1635 | minimal support needed for parsing and semantic analysis on a new |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1636 | platform is quite easy; see ``lib/Basic/Targets.cpp`` in the clang source |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1637 | tree. This level of support is also sufficient for conversion to LLVM IR |
| 1638 | for simple programs. Proper support for conversion to LLVM IR requires |
Dmitri Gribenko | 1436ff2 | 2012-12-19 22:06:59 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1639 | adding code to ``lib/CodeGen/CGCall.cpp`` at the moment; this is likely to |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1640 | change soon, though. Generating assembly requires a suitable LLVM |
| 1641 | backend. |
| 1642 | |
| 1643 | Operating System Features and Limitations |
| 1644 | ----------------------------------------- |
| 1645 | |
Nico Weber | ab88f0b | 2014-03-07 18:09:57 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1646 | Darwin (Mac OS X) |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1647 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1648 | |
Nico Weber | c7cb940 | 2014-03-07 18:11:40 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1649 | Thread Sanitizer is not supported. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1650 | |
| 1651 | Windows |
| 1652 | ^^^^^^^ |
| 1653 | |
Richard Smith | 48d1b65 | 2013-12-12 02:42:17 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1654 | Clang has experimental support for targeting "Cygming" (Cygwin / MinGW) |
| 1655 | platforms. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1656 | |
Reid Kleckner | 725b7b3 | 2013-09-05 21:29:35 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1657 | See also :ref:`Microsoft Extensions <c_ms>`. |
Sean Silva | bf9b4cd | 2012-12-13 01:10:46 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1658 | |
| 1659 | Cygwin |
| 1660 | """""" |
| 1661 | |
| 1662 | Clang works on Cygwin-1.7. |
| 1663 | |
| 1664 | MinGW32 |
| 1665 | """"""" |
| 1666 | |
| 1667 | Clang works on some mingw32 distributions. Clang assumes directories as |
| 1668 | below; |
| 1669 | |
| 1670 | - ``C:/mingw/include`` |
| 1671 | - ``C:/mingw/lib`` |
| 1672 | - ``C:/mingw/lib/gcc/mingw32/4.[3-5].0/include/c++`` |
| 1673 | |
| 1674 | On MSYS, a few tests might fail. |
| 1675 | |
| 1676 | MinGW-w64 |
| 1677 | """"""""" |
| 1678 | |
| 1679 | For 32-bit (i686-w64-mingw32), and 64-bit (x86\_64-w64-mingw32), Clang |
| 1680 | assumes as below; |
| 1681 | |
| 1682 | - ``GCC versions 4.5.0 to 4.5.3, 4.6.0 to 4.6.2, or 4.7.0 (for the C++ header search path)`` |
| 1683 | - ``some_directory/bin/gcc.exe`` |
| 1684 | - ``some_directory/bin/clang.exe`` |
| 1685 | - ``some_directory/bin/clang++.exe`` |
| 1686 | - ``some_directory/bin/../include/c++/GCC_version`` |
| 1687 | - ``some_directory/bin/../include/c++/GCC_version/x86_64-w64-mingw32`` |
| 1688 | - ``some_directory/bin/../include/c++/GCC_version/i686-w64-mingw32`` |
| 1689 | - ``some_directory/bin/../include/c++/GCC_version/backward`` |
| 1690 | - ``some_directory/bin/../x86_64-w64-mingw32/include`` |
| 1691 | - ``some_directory/bin/../i686-w64-mingw32/include`` |
| 1692 | - ``some_directory/bin/../include`` |
| 1693 | |
| 1694 | This directory layout is standard for any toolchain you will find on the |
| 1695 | official `MinGW-w64 website <http://mingw-w64.sourceforge.net>`_. |
| 1696 | |
| 1697 | Clang expects the GCC executable "gcc.exe" compiled for |
| 1698 | ``i686-w64-mingw32`` (or ``x86_64-w64-mingw32``) to be present on PATH. |
| 1699 | |
| 1700 | `Some tests might fail <http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=9072>`_ on |
| 1701 | ``x86_64-w64-mingw32``. |
Hans Wennborg | 2a6e6bc | 2013-10-10 01:15:16 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1702 | |
| 1703 | .. _clang-cl: |
| 1704 | |
| 1705 | clang-cl |
| 1706 | ======== |
| 1707 | |
| 1708 | clang-cl is an alternative command-line interface to Clang driver, designed for |
| 1709 | compatibility with the Visual C++ compiler, cl.exe. |
| 1710 | |
| 1711 | To enable clang-cl to find system headers, libraries, and the linker when run |
| 1712 | from the command-line, it should be executed inside a Visual Studio Native Tools |
| 1713 | Command Prompt or a regular Command Prompt where the environment has been set |
| 1714 | up using e.g. `vcvars32.bat <http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/f2ccy3wt.aspx>`_. |
| 1715 | |
| 1716 | clang-cl can also be used from inside Visual Studio by using an LLVM Platform |
| 1717 | Toolset. |
| 1718 | |
| 1719 | Command-Line Options |
| 1720 | -------------------- |
| 1721 | |
| 1722 | To be compatible with cl.exe, clang-cl supports most of the same command-line |
| 1723 | options. Those options can start with either ``/`` or ``-``. It also supports |
| 1724 | some of Clang's core options, such as the ``-W`` options. |
| 1725 | |
| 1726 | Options that are known to clang-cl, but not currently supported, are ignored |
| 1727 | with a warning. For example: |
| 1728 | |
| 1729 | :: |
| 1730 | |
| 1731 | clang-cl.exe: warning: argument unused during compilation: '/Zi' |
| 1732 | |
| 1733 | To suppress warnings about unused arguments, use the ``-Qunused-arguments`` option. |
| 1734 | |
| 1735 | Options that are not known to clang-cl will cause errors. If they are spelled with a |
| 1736 | leading ``/``, they will be mistaken for a filename: |
| 1737 | |
| 1738 | :: |
| 1739 | |
| 1740 | clang-cl.exe: error: no such file or directory: '/foobar' |
| 1741 | |
| 1742 | Please `file a bug <http://llvm.org/bugs/enter_bug.cgi?product=clang&component=Driver>`_ |
| 1743 | for any valid cl.exe flags that clang-cl does not understand. |
| 1744 | |
| 1745 | Execute ``clang-cl /?`` to see a list of supported options: |
| 1746 | |
| 1747 | :: |
| 1748 | |
| 1749 | /? Display available options |
| 1750 | /c Compile only |
| 1751 | /D <macro[=value]> Define macro |
| 1752 | /fallback Fall back to cl.exe if clang-cl fails to compile |
Hans Wennborg | 2c21f74 | 2013-10-17 16:16:23 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1753 | /FA Output assembly code file during compilation |
| 1754 | /Fa<file or directory> Output assembly code to this file during compilation |
Hans Wennborg | 2a6e6bc | 2013-10-10 01:15:16 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1755 | /Fe<file or directory> Set output executable file or directory (ends in / or \) |
| 1756 | /FI<value> Include file before parsing |
| 1757 | /Fo<file or directory> Set output object file, or directory (ends in / or \) |
| 1758 | /GF- Disable string pooling |
| 1759 | /GR- Disable RTTI |
| 1760 | /GR Enable RTTI |
| 1761 | /help Display available options |
| 1762 | /I <dir> Add directory to include search path |
| 1763 | /J Make char type unsigned |
| 1764 | /LDd Create debug DLL |
| 1765 | /LD Create DLL |
| 1766 | /link <options> Forward options to the linker |
| 1767 | /MDd Use DLL debug run-time |
| 1768 | /MD Use DLL run-time |
| 1769 | /MTd Use static debug run-time |
| 1770 | /MT Use static run-time |
| 1771 | /Ob0 Disable inlining |
| 1772 | /Od Disable optimization |
| 1773 | /Oi- Disable use of builtin functions |
| 1774 | /Oi Enable use of builtin functions |
| 1775 | /Os Optimize for size |
| 1776 | /Ot Optimize for speed |
| 1777 | /Ox Maximum optimization |
| 1778 | /Oy- Disable frame pointer omission |
| 1779 | /Oy Enable frame pointer omission |
| 1780 | /O<n> Optimization level |
| 1781 | /P Only run the preprocessor |
| 1782 | /showIncludes Print info about included files to stderr |
| 1783 | /TC Treat all source files as C |
| 1784 | /Tc <filename> Specify a C source file |
| 1785 | /TP Treat all source files as C++ |
| 1786 | /Tp <filename> Specify a C++ source file |
| 1787 | /U <macro> Undefine macro |
| 1788 | /W0 Disable all warnings |
| 1789 | /W1 Enable -Wall |
| 1790 | /W2 Enable -Wall |
| 1791 | /W3 Enable -Wall |
| 1792 | /W4 Enable -Wall |
| 1793 | /Wall Enable -Wall |
| 1794 | /WX- Do not treat warnings as errors |
| 1795 | /WX Treat warnings as errors |
| 1796 | /w Disable all warnings |
| 1797 | /Zs Syntax-check only |
| 1798 | |
| 1799 | The /fallback Option |
| 1800 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
| 1801 | |
| 1802 | When clang-cl is run with the ``/fallback`` option, it will first try to |
| 1803 | compile files itself. For any file that it fails to compile, it will fall back |
| 1804 | and try to compile the file by invoking cl.exe. |
| 1805 | |
| 1806 | This option is intended to be used as a temporary means to build projects where |
| 1807 | clang-cl cannot successfully compile all the files. clang-cl may fail to compile |
| 1808 | a file either because it cannot generate code for some C++ feature, or because |
| 1809 | it cannot parse some Microsoft language extension. |