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15<h1>
16  LLVM: Frequently Asked Questions
17</h1>
18
19<ol>
20  <li><a href="#license">License</a>
21  <ol>
22    <li>Why are the LLVM source code and the front-end distributed under
23        different licenses?</li>
24
25    <li>Does the University of Illinois Open Source License really qualify as an
26       "open source" license?</li>
27
28    <li>Can I modify LLVM source code and redistribute the modified source?</li>
29
30    <li>Can I modify LLVM source code and redistribute binaries or other tools
31        based on it, without redistributing the source?</li>
32  </ol></li>
33
34  <li><a href="#source">Source code</a>
35  <ol>
36    <li>In what language is LLVM written?</li>
37
38    <li>How portable is the LLVM source code?</li>
39  </ol></li>
40
41  <li><a href="#build">Build Problems</a>
42  <ol>
43    <li>When I run configure, it finds the wrong C compiler.</li>
44
45    <li>The <tt>configure</tt> script finds the right C compiler, but it uses
46        the LLVM linker from a previous build.  What do I do?</li>
47
48    <li>When creating a dynamic library, I get a strange GLIBC error.</li>
49
50    <li>I've updated my source tree from Subversion, and now my build is trying
51        to use a file/directory that doesn't exist.</li>
52
53    <li>I've modified a Makefile in my source tree, but my build tree keeps
54        using the old version.  What do I do?</li>
55
56    <li>I've upgraded to a new version of LLVM, and I get strange build
57        errors.</li>
58
59    <li>I've built LLVM and am testing it, but the tests freeze.</li>
60
61    <li>Why do test results differ when I perform different types of
62        builds?</li>
63
64    <li>Compiling LLVM with GCC 3.3.2 fails, what should I do?</li>
65
66    <li>Compiling LLVM with GCC succeeds, but the resulting tools do not work,
67        what can be wrong?</li>
68
69    <li>When I use the test suite, all of the C Backend tests fail.  What is
70        wrong?</li>
71
72    <li>After Subversion update, rebuilding gives the error "No rule to make
73        target".</li>
74
75    <li><a href="#srcdir-objdir">When I compile LLVM-GCC with srcdir == objdir,
76        it fails. Why?</a></li>
77  </ol></li>
78
79  <li><a href="#felangs">Source Languages</a>
80  <ol>
81    <li><a href="#langs">What source languages are supported?</a></li>
82
83    <li><a href="#langirgen">I'd like to write a self-hosting LLVM compiler. How
84        should I interface with the LLVM middle-end optimizers and back-end code
85        generators?</a></li>
86
87    <li><a href="#langhlsupp">What support is there for higher level source
88        language constructs for building a compiler?</a></li>
89
90    <li><a href="GetElementPtr.html">I don't understand the GetElementPtr
91      instruction. Help!</a></li>
92  </ol>
93
94  <li><a href="#cfe">Using the GCC Front End</a>
95  <ol>
96    <li>When I compile software that uses a configure script, the configure
97        script thinks my system has all of the header files and libraries it is
98        testing for.  How do I get configure to work correctly?</li>
99
100    <li>When I compile code using the LLVM GCC front end, it complains that it
101        cannot find libcrtend.a?</li>
102
103    <li>How can I disable all optimizations when compiling code using the LLVM
104        GCC front end?</li>
105
106    <li><a href="#translatecxx">Can I use LLVM to convert C++ code to C
107        code?</a></li>
108
109    <li><a href="#platformindependent">Can I compile C or C++ code to
110        platform-independent LLVM bitcode?</a></li>
111  </ol>
112  </li>
113
114  <li><a href="#cfe_code">Questions about code generated by the GCC front-end</a>
115  <ol>
116     <li><a href="#iosinit">What is this <tt>llvm.global_ctors</tt> and
117          <tt>_GLOBAL__I__tmp_webcompile...</tt> stuff that happens when I
118          #include &lt;iostream&gt;?</a></li>
119
120     <li><a href="#codedce">Where did all of my code go??</a></li>
121
122     <li><a href="#undef">What is this "<tt>undef</tt>" thing that shows up in
123         my code?</a></li>
124
125      <li><a href="#callconvwrong">Why does instcombine + simplifycfg turn
126   a call to a function with a mismatched calling convention into "unreachable"?
127   Why not make the verifier reject it?</a></li>
128  </ol>
129  </li>
130</ol>
131
132<div class="doc_author">
133  <p>Written by <a href="http://llvm.org/">The LLVM Team</a></p>
134</div>
135
136
137<!-- *********************************************************************** -->
138<h2>
139  <a name="license">License</a>
140</h2>
141<!-- *********************************************************************** -->
142
143<div class="question">
144<p>Why are the LLVM source code and the front-end distributed under different
145   licenses?</p>
146</div>
147
148<div class="answer">
149<p>The C/C++ front-ends are based on GCC and must be distributed under the GPL.
150   Our aim is to distribute LLVM source code under a <em>much less
151   restrictive</em> license, in particular one that does not compel users who
152   distribute tools based on modifying the source to redistribute the modified
153   source code as well.</p>
154</div>
155
156<div class="question">
157<p>Does the University of Illinois Open Source License really qualify as an
158   "open source" license?</p>
159</div>
160
161<div class="answer">
162<p>Yes, the license
163   is <a href="http://www.opensource.org/licenses/UoI-NCSA.php">certified</a> by
164   the Open Source Initiative (OSI).</p>
165</div>
166
167<div class="question">
168<p>Can I modify LLVM source code and redistribute the modified source?</p>
169</div>
170
171<div class="answer">
172<p>Yes.  The modified source distribution must retain the copyright notice and
173   follow the three bulletted conditions listed in
174   the <a href="http://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk/LICENSE.TXT">LLVM
175   license</a>.</p>
176</div>
177
178<div class="question">
179<p>Can I modify LLVM source code and redistribute binaries or other tools based
180   on it, without redistributing the source?</p>
181</div>
182
183<div class="answer">
184<p>Yes. This is why we distribute LLVM under a less restrictive license than
185   GPL, as explained in the first question above.</p>
186</div>
187
188<!-- *********************************************************************** -->
189<h2>
190  <a name="source">Source Code</a>
191</h2>
192<!-- *********************************************************************** -->
193
194<div class="question">
195<p>In what language is LLVM written?</p>
196</div>
197
198<div class="answer">
199<p>All of the LLVM tools and libraries are written in C++ with extensive use of
200   the STL.</p>
201</div>
202
203<div class="question">
204<p>How portable is the LLVM source code?</p>
205</div>
206
207<div class="answer">
208<p>The LLVM source code should be portable to most modern UNIX-like operating
209systems.  Most of the code is written in standard C++ with operating system
210services abstracted to a support library.  The tools required to build and test
211LLVM have been ported to a plethora of platforms.</p>
212
213<p>Some porting problems may exist in the following areas:</p>
214
215<ul>
216  <li>The GCC front end code is not as portable as the LLVM suite, so it may not
217      compile as well on unsupported platforms.</li>
218
219  <li>The LLVM build system relies heavily on UNIX shell tools, like the Bourne
220      Shell and sed.  Porting to systems without these tools (MacOS 9, Plan 9)
221      will require more effort.</li>
222</ul>
223
224</div>
225
226<!-- *********************************************************************** -->
227<h2>
228  <a name="build">Build Problems</a>
229</h2>
230<!-- *********************************************************************** -->
231
232<div class="question">
233<p>When I run configure, it finds the wrong C compiler.</p>
234</div>
235
236<div class="answer">
237<p>The <tt>configure</tt> script attempts to locate first <tt>gcc</tt> and then
238   <tt>cc</tt>, unless it finds compiler paths set in <tt>CC</tt>
239   and <tt>CXX</tt> for the C and C++ compiler, respectively.</p>
240
241<p>If <tt>configure</tt> finds the wrong compiler, either adjust your
242   <tt>PATH</tt> environment variable or set <tt>CC</tt> and <tt>CXX</tt>
243   explicitly.</p>
244
245</div>
246
247<div class="question">
248<p>The <tt>configure</tt> script finds the right C compiler, but it uses the
249   LLVM linker from a previous build.  What do I do?</p>
250</div>
251
252<div class="answer">
253<p>The <tt>configure</tt> script uses the <tt>PATH</tt> to find executables, so
254   if it's grabbing the wrong linker/assembler/etc, there are two ways to fix
255   it:</p>
256
257<ol>
258  <li><p>Adjust your <tt>PATH</tt> environment variable so that the correct
259      program appears first in the <tt>PATH</tt>.  This may work, but may not be
260      convenient when you want them <i>first</i> in your path for other
261      work.</p></li>
262
263  <li><p>Run <tt>configure</tt> with an alternative <tt>PATH</tt> that is
264      correct. In a Borne compatible shell, the syntax would be:</p>
265
266<pre class="doc_code">
267% PATH=[the path without the bad program] ./configure ...
268</pre>
269
270      <p>This is still somewhat inconvenient, but it allows <tt>configure</tt>
271         to do its work without having to adjust your <tt>PATH</tt>
272         permanently.</p></li>
273</ol>
274</div>
275
276<div class="question">
277<p>When creating a dynamic library, I get a strange GLIBC error.</p>
278</div>
279
280<div class="answer">
281<p>Under some operating systems (i.e. Linux), libtool does not work correctly if
282   GCC was compiled with the --disable-shared option.  To work around this,
283   install your own version of GCC that has shared libraries enabled by
284   default.</p>
285</div>
286
287<div class="question">
288<p>I've updated my source tree from Subversion, and now my build is trying to
289   use a file/directory that doesn't exist.</p>
290</div>
291
292<div class="answer">
293<p>You need to re-run configure in your object directory.  When new Makefiles
294   are added to the source tree, they have to be copied over to the object tree
295   in order to be used by the build.</p>
296</div>
297
298<div class="question">
299<p>I've modified a Makefile in my source tree, but my build tree keeps using the
300   old version.  What do I do?</p>
301</div>
302
303<div class="answer">
304<p>If the Makefile already exists in your object tree, you can just run the
305   following command in the top level directory of your object tree:</p>
306
307<pre class="doc_code">
308% ./config.status &lt;relative path to Makefile&gt;
309</pre>
310
311<p>If the Makefile is new, you will have to modify the configure script to copy
312   it over.</p>
313</div>
314
315<div class="question">
316<p>I've upgraded to a new version of LLVM, and I get strange build errors.</p>
317</div>
318
319<div class="answer">
320
321<p>Sometimes, changes to the LLVM source code alters how the build system works.
322   Changes in libtool, autoconf, or header file dependencies are especially
323   prone to this sort of problem.</p>
324
325<p>The best thing to try is to remove the old files and re-build.  In most
326   cases, this takes care of the problem.  To do this, just type <tt>make
327   clean</tt> and then <tt>make</tt> in the directory that fails to build.</p>
328</div>
329
330<div class="question">
331<p>I've built LLVM and am testing it, but the tests freeze.</p>
332</div>
333
334<div class="answer">
335<p>This is most likely occurring because you built a profile or release
336   (optimized) build of LLVM and have not specified the same information on the
337   <tt>gmake</tt> command line.</p>
338
339<p>For example, if you built LLVM with the command:</p>
340
341<pre class="doc_code">
342% gmake ENABLE_PROFILING=1
343</pre>
344
345<p>...then you must run the tests with the following commands:</p>
346
347<pre class="doc_code">
348% cd llvm/test
349% gmake ENABLE_PROFILING=1
350</pre>
351</div>
352
353<div class="question">
354<p>Why do test results differ when I perform different types of builds?</p>
355</div>
356
357<div class="answer">
358<p>The LLVM test suite is dependent upon several features of the LLVM tools and
359   libraries.</p>
360
361<p>First, the debugging assertions in code are not enabled in optimized or
362   profiling builds.  Hence, tests that used to fail may pass.</p>
363
364<p>Second, some tests may rely upon debugging options or behavior that is only
365   available in the debug build.  These tests will fail in an optimized or
366   profile build.</p>
367</div>
368
369<div class="question">
370<p>Compiling LLVM with GCC 3.3.2 fails, what should I do?</p>
371</div>
372
373<div class="answer">
374<p>This is <a href="http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=13392">a bug in
375   GCC</a>, and affects projects other than LLVM.  Try upgrading or downgrading
376   your GCC.</p>
377</div>
378
379<div class="question">
380<p>Compiling LLVM with GCC succeeds, but the resulting tools do not work, what
381   can be wrong?</p>
382</div>
383
384<div class="answer">
385<p>Several versions of GCC have shown a weakness in miscompiling the LLVM
386   codebase. Please consult your compiler version (<tt>gcc --version</tt>) to
387   find out whether it is <a href="GettingStarted.html#brokengcc">broken</a>.
388   If so, your only option is to upgrade GCC to a known good version.</p>
389</div>
390
391<div class="question">
392<p>After Subversion update, rebuilding gives the error "No rule to make
393   target".</p>
394</div>
395
396<div class="answer">
397<p>If the error is of the form:</p>
398
399<pre class="doc_code">
400gmake[2]: *** No rule to make target `/path/to/somefile', needed by
401`/path/to/another/file.d'.<br>
402Stop.
403</pre>
404
405<p>This may occur anytime files are moved within the Subversion repository or
406   removed entirely.  In this case, the best solution is to erase all
407   <tt>.d</tt> files, which list dependencies for source files, and rebuild:</p>
408
409<pre class="doc_code">
410% cd $LLVM_OBJ_DIR
411% rm -f `find . -name \*\.d`
412% gmake
413</pre>
414
415<p>In other cases, it may be necessary to run <tt>make clean</tt> before
416   rebuilding.</p>
417</div>
418
419<div class="question">
420<p><a name="srcdir-objdir">When I compile LLVM-GCC with srcdir == objdir, it
421   fails. Why?</a></p>
422</div>
423
424<div class="answer">
425<p>The <tt>GNUmakefile</tt> in the top-level directory of LLVM-GCC is a special
426   <tt>Makefile</tt> used by Apple to invoke the <tt>build_gcc</tt> script after
427   setting up a special environment. This has the unfortunate side-effect that
428   trying to build LLVM-GCC with srcdir == objdir in a "non-Apple way" invokes
429   the <tt>GNUmakefile</tt> instead of <tt>Makefile</tt>. Because the
430   environment isn't set up correctly to do this, the build fails.</p>
431
432<p>People not building LLVM-GCC the "Apple way" need to build LLVM-GCC with
433   srcdir != objdir, or simply remove the GNUmakefile entirely.</p>
434
435<p>We regret the inconvenience.</p>
436</div>
437
438<!-- *********************************************************************** -->
439<h2>
440  <a name="felangs">Source Languages</a>
441</h2>
442
443<div class="question">
444<p><a name="langs">What source languages are supported?</a></p>
445</div>
446
447<div class="answer">
448<p>LLVM currently has full support for C and C++ source languages. These are
449   available through a special version of GCC that LLVM calls the
450   <a href="#cfe">C Front End</a></p>
451
452<p>There is an incomplete version of a Java front end available in the
453   <tt>java</tt> module. There is no documentation on this yet so you'll need to
454   download the code, compile it, and try it.</p>
455
456<p>The PyPy developers are working on integrating LLVM into the PyPy backend so
457   that PyPy language can translate to LLVM.</p>
458</div>
459
460<div class="question">
461<p><a name="langirgen">I'd like to write a self-hosting LLVM compiler. How
462   should I interface with the LLVM middle-end optimizers and back-end code
463   generators?</a></p>
464</div>
465
466<div class="answer">
467<p>Your compiler front-end will communicate with LLVM by creating a module in
468   the LLVM intermediate representation (IR) format. Assuming you want to write
469   your language's compiler in the language itself (rather than C++), there are
470   3 major ways to tackle generating LLVM IR from a front-end:</p>
471
472<ul>
473  <li><strong>Call into the LLVM libraries code using your language's FFI
474      (foreign function interface).</strong>
475
476    <ul>
477      <li><em>for:</em> best tracks changes to the LLVM IR, .ll syntax, and .bc
478          format</li>
479
480      <li><em>for:</em> enables running LLVM optimization passes without a
481          emit/parse overhead</li>
482
483      <li><em>for:</em> adapts well to a JIT context</li>
484
485      <li><em>against:</em> lots of ugly glue code to write</li>
486    </ul></li>
487
488  <li>  <strong>Emit LLVM assembly from your compiler's native language.</strong>
489    <ul>
490      <li><em>for:</em> very straightforward to get started</li>
491
492      <li><em>against:</em> the .ll parser is slower than the bitcode reader
493          when interfacing to the middle end</li>
494
495      <li><em>against:</em> you'll have to re-engineer the LLVM IR object model
496          and asm writer in your language</li>
497
498      <li><em>against:</em> it may be harder to track changes to the IR</li>
499    </ul></li>
500
501  <li><strong>Emit LLVM bitcode from your compiler's native language.</strong>
502
503    <ul>
504      <li><em>for:</em> can use the more-efficient bitcode reader when
505          interfacing to the middle end</li>
506
507      <li><em>against:</em> you'll have to re-engineer the LLVM IR object
508          model and bitcode writer in your language</li>
509
510      <li><em>against:</em> it may be harder to track changes to the IR</li>
511    </ul></li>
512</ul>
513
514<p>If you go with the first option, the C bindings in include/llvm-c should help
515   a lot, since most languages have strong support for interfacing with C. The
516   most common hurdle with calling C from managed code is interfacing with the
517   garbage collector. The C interface was designed to require very little memory
518   management, and so is straightforward in this regard.</p>
519</div>
520
521<div class="question">
522<p><a name="langhlsupp">What support is there for a higher level source language
523   constructs for building a compiler?</a></p>
524</div>
525
526<div class="answer">
527<p>Currently, there isn't much. LLVM supports an intermediate representation
528   which is useful for code representation but will not support the high level
529   (abstract syntax tree) representation needed by most compilers. There are no
530   facilities for lexical nor semantic analysis.</p>
531</div>
532
533<div class="question">
534<p><a name="getelementptr">I don't understand the GetElementPtr
535   instruction. Help!</a></p>
536</div>
537
538<div class="answer">
539<p>See <a href="GetElementPtr.html">The Often Misunderstood GEP
540   Instruction</a>.</p>
541</div>
542
543<!-- *********************************************************************** -->
544<h2>
545  <a name="cfe">Using the GCC Front End</a>
546</h2>
547
548<div class="question">
549<p>When I compile software that uses a configure script, the configure script
550   thinks my system has all of the header files and libraries it is testing for.
551   How do I get configure to work correctly?</p>
552</div>
553
554<div class="answer">
555<p>The configure script is getting things wrong because the LLVM linker allows
556   symbols to be undefined at link time (so that they can be resolved during JIT
557   or translation to the C back end).  That is why configure thinks your system
558   "has everything."</p>
559
560<p>To work around this, perform the following steps:</p>
561
562<ol>
563  <li>Make sure the CC and CXX environment variables contains the full path to
564      the LLVM GCC front end.</li>
565
566  <li>Make sure that the regular C compiler is first in your PATH. </li>
567
568  <li>Add the string "-Wl,-native" to your CFLAGS environment variable.</li>
569</ol>
570
571<p>This will allow the <tt>llvm-ld</tt> linker to create a native code
572   executable instead of shell script that runs the JIT.  Creating native code
573   requires standard linkage, which in turn will allow the configure script to
574   find out if code is not linking on your system because the feature isn't
575   available on your system.</p>
576</div>
577
578<div class="question">
579<p>When I compile code using the LLVM GCC front end, it complains that it cannot
580   find libcrtend.a.
581</p>
582</div>
583
584<div class="answer">
585<p>The only way this can happen is if you haven't installed the runtime
586   library. To correct this, do:</p>
587
588<pre class="doc_code">
589% cd llvm/runtime
590% make clean ; make install-bytecode
591</pre>
592</div>
593
594<div class="question">
595<p>How can I disable all optimizations when compiling code using the LLVM GCC
596   front end?</p>
597</div>
598
599<div class="answer">
600<p>Passing "-Wa,-disable-opt -Wl,-disable-opt" will disable *all* cleanup and
601   optimizations done at the llvm level, leaving you with the truly horrible
602   code that you desire.</p>
603</div>
604
605
606<div class="question">
607<p><a name="translatecxx">Can I use LLVM to convert C++ code to C code?</a></p>
608</div>
609
610<div class="answer">
611<p>Yes, you can use LLVM to convert code from any language LLVM supports to C.
612   Note that the generated C code will be very low level (all loops are lowered
613   to gotos, etc) and not very pretty (comments are stripped, original source
614   formatting is totally lost, variables are renamed, expressions are
615   regrouped), so this may not be what you're looking for. Also, there are
616   several limitations noted below.<p>
617
618<p>Use commands like this:</p>
619
620<ol>
621  <li><p>Compile your program with llvm-g++:</p>
622
623<pre class="doc_code">
624% llvm-g++ -emit-llvm x.cpp -o program.bc -c
625</pre>
626
627      <p>or:</p>
628
629<pre class="doc_code">
630% llvm-g++ a.cpp -c -emit-llvm
631% llvm-g++ b.cpp -c -emit-llvm
632% llvm-ld a.o b.o -o program
633</pre>
634
635   <p>This will generate program and program.bc.  The .bc
636      file is the LLVM version of the program all linked together.</p></li>
637
638  <li><p>Convert the LLVM code to C code, using the LLC tool with the C
639      backend:</p>
640
641<pre class="doc_code">
642% llc -march=c program.bc -o program.c
643</pre></li>
644
645  <li><p>Finally, compile the C file:</p>
646
647<pre class="doc_code">
648% cc x.c -lstdc++
649</pre></li>
650
651</ol>
652
653<p>Using LLVM does not eliminate the need for C++ library support.  If you use
654   the llvm-g++ front-end, the generated code will depend on g++'s C++ support
655   libraries in the same way that code generated from g++ would.  If you use
656   another C++ front-end, the generated code will depend on whatever library
657   that front-end would normally require.</p>
658
659<p>If you are working on a platform that does not provide any C++ libraries, you
660   may be able to manually compile libstdc++ to LLVM bitcode, statically link it
661   into your program, then use the commands above to convert the whole result
662   into C code.  Alternatively, you might compile the libraries and your
663   application into two different chunks of C code and link them.</p>
664
665<p>Note that, by default, the C back end does not support exception handling.
666   If you want/need it for a certain program, you can enable it by passing
667   "-enable-correct-eh-support" to the llc program.  The resultant code will use
668   setjmp/longjmp to implement exception support that is relatively slow, and
669   not C++-ABI-conforming on most platforms, but otherwise correct.</p>
670
671<p>Also, there are a number of other limitations of the C backend that cause it
672   to produce code that does not fully conform to the C++ ABI on most
673   platforms. Some of the C++ programs in LLVM's test suite are known to fail
674   when compiled with the C back end because of ABI incompatibilities with
675   standard C++ libraries.</p>
676</div>
677
678<div class="question">
679<p><a name="platformindependent">Can I compile C or C++ code to
680   platform-independent LLVM bitcode?</a></p>
681</div>
682
683<div class="answer">
684<p>No. C and C++ are inherently platform-dependent languages. The most obvious
685   example of this is the preprocessor. A very common way that C code is made
686   portable is by using the preprocessor to include platform-specific code. In
687   practice, information about other platforms is lost after preprocessing, so
688   the result is inherently dependent on the platform that the preprocessing was
689   targeting.</p>
690
691<p>Another example is <tt>sizeof</tt>. It's common for <tt>sizeof(long)</tt> to
692   vary between platforms. In most C front-ends, <tt>sizeof</tt> is expanded to
693   a constant immediately, thus hard-wiring a platform-specific detail.</p>
694
695<p>Also, since many platforms define their ABIs in terms of C, and since LLVM is
696   lower-level than C, front-ends currently must emit platform-specific IR in
697   order to have the result conform to the platform ABI.</p>
698</div>
699
700<!-- *********************************************************************** -->
701<h2>
702  <a name="cfe_code">Questions about code generated by the GCC front-end</a>
703</h2>
704
705<div class="question">
706<p><a name="iosinit">What is this <tt>llvm.global_ctors</tt> and
707   <tt>_GLOBAL__I__tmp_webcompile...</tt> stuff that happens when I <tt>#include
708   &lt;iostream&gt;</tt>?</a></p>
709</div>
710
711<div class="answer">
712<p>If you <tt>#include</tt> the <tt>&lt;iostream&gt;</tt> header into a C++
713   translation unit, the file will probably use
714   the <tt>std::cin</tt>/<tt>std::cout</tt>/... global objects.  However, C++
715   does not guarantee an order of initialization between static objects in
716   different translation units, so if a static ctor/dtor in your .cpp file
717   used <tt>std::cout</tt>, for example, the object would not necessarily be
718   automatically initialized before your use.</p>
719
720<p>To make <tt>std::cout</tt> and friends work correctly in these scenarios, the
721   STL that we use declares a static object that gets created in every
722   translation unit that includes <tt>&lt;iostream&gt;</tt>.  This object has a
723   static constructor and destructor that initializes and destroys the global
724   iostream objects before they could possibly be used in the file.  The code
725   that you see in the .ll file corresponds to the constructor and destructor
726   registration code.
727</p>
728
729<p>If you would like to make it easier to <b>understand</b> the LLVM code
730   generated by the compiler in the demo page, consider using <tt>printf()</tt>
731   instead of <tt>iostream</tt>s to print values.</p>
732</div>
733
734<!--=========================================================================-->
735
736<div class="question">
737<p><a name="codedce">Where did all of my code go??</a></p>
738</div>
739
740<div class="answer">
741<p>If you are using the LLVM demo page, you may often wonder what happened to
742   all of the code that you typed in.  Remember that the demo script is running
743   the code through the LLVM optimizers, so if your code doesn't actually do
744   anything useful, it might all be deleted.</p>
745
746<p>To prevent this, make sure that the code is actually needed.  For example, if
747   you are computing some expression, return the value from the function instead
748   of leaving it in a local variable.  If you really want to constrain the
749   optimizer, you can read from and assign to <tt>volatile</tt> global
750   variables.</p>
751</div>
752
753<!--=========================================================================-->
754
755<div class="question">
756<p><a name="undef">What is this "<tt>undef</tt>" thing that shows up in my
757   code?</a></p>
758</div>
759
760<div class="answer">
761<p><a href="LangRef.html#undef"><tt>undef</tt></a> is the LLVM way of
762   representing a value that is not defined.  You can get these if you do not
763   initialize a variable before you use it.  For example, the C function:</p>
764
765<pre class="doc_code">
766int X() { int i; return i; }
767</pre>
768
769<p>Is compiled to "<tt>ret i32 undef</tt>" because "<tt>i</tt>" never has a
770   value specified for it.</p>
771</div>
772
773<!--=========================================================================-->
774
775<div class="question">
776<p><a name="callconvwrong">Why does instcombine + simplifycfg turn
777   a call to a function with a mismatched calling convention into "unreachable"?
778   Why not make the verifier reject it?</a></p>
779</div>
780
781<div class="answer">
782<p>This is a common problem run into by authors of front-ends that are using
783custom calling conventions: you need to make sure to set the right calling
784convention on both the function and on each call to the function.  For example,
785this code:</p>
786
787<pre class="doc_code">
788define fastcc void @foo() {
789        ret void
790}
791define void @bar() {
792        call void @foo()
793        ret void
794}
795</pre>
796
797<p>Is optimized to:</p>
798
799<pre class="doc_code">
800define fastcc void @foo() {
801	ret void
802}
803define void @bar() {
804	unreachable
805}
806</pre>
807
808<p>... with "opt -instcombine -simplifycfg".  This often bites people because
809"all their code disappears".  Setting the calling convention on the caller and
810callee is required for indirect calls to work, so people often ask why not make
811the verifier reject this sort of thing.</p>
812
813<p>The answer is that this code has undefined behavior, but it is not illegal.
814If we made it illegal, then every transformation that could potentially create
815this would have to ensure that it doesn't, and there is valid code that can
816create this sort of construct (in dead code).  The sorts of things that can
817cause this to happen are fairly contrived, but we still need to accept them.
818Here's an example:</p>
819
820<pre class="doc_code">
821define fastcc void @foo() {
822        ret void
823}
824define internal void @bar(void()* %FP, i1 %cond) {
825        br i1 %cond, label %T, label %F
826T:
827        call void %FP()
828        ret void
829F:
830        call fastcc void %FP()
831        ret void
832}
833define void @test() {
834        %X = or i1 false, false
835        call void @bar(void()* @foo, i1 %X)
836        ret void
837}
838</pre>
839
840<p>In this example, "test" always passes @foo/false into bar, which ensures that
841   it is dynamically called with the right calling conv (thus, the code is
842   perfectly well defined).  If you run this through the inliner, you get this
843   (the explicit "or" is there so that the inliner doesn't dead code eliminate
844   a bunch of stuff):
845</p>
846
847<pre class="doc_code">
848define fastcc void @foo() {
849	ret void
850}
851define void @test() {
852	%X = or i1 false, false
853	br i1 %X, label %T.i, label %F.i
854T.i:
855	call void @foo()
856	br label %bar.exit
857F.i:
858	call fastcc void @foo()
859	br label %bar.exit
860bar.exit:
861	ret void
862}
863</pre>
864
865<p>Here you can see that the inlining pass made an undefined call to @foo with
866  the wrong calling convention.  We really don't want to make the inliner have
867  to know about this sort of thing, so it needs to be valid code.  In this case,
868  dead code elimination can trivially remove the undefined code.  However, if %X
869  was an input argument to @test, the inliner would produce this:
870</p>
871
872<pre class="doc_code">
873define fastcc void @foo() {
874	ret void
875}
876
877define void @test(i1 %X) {
878	br i1 %X, label %T.i, label %F.i
879T.i:
880	call void @foo()
881	br label %bar.exit
882F.i:
883	call fastcc void @foo()
884	br label %bar.exit
885bar.exit:
886	ret void
887}
888</pre>
889
890<p>The interesting thing about this is that %X <em>must</em> be false for the
891code to be well-defined, but no amount of dead code elimination will be able to
892delete the broken call as unreachable.  However, since instcombine/simplifycfg
893turns the undefined call into unreachable, we end up with a branch on a
894condition that goes to unreachable: a branch to unreachable can never happen, so
895"-inline -instcombine -simplifycfg" is able to produce:</p>
896
897<pre class="doc_code">
898define fastcc void @foo() {
899	ret void
900}
901define void @test(i1 %X) {
902F.i:
903	call fastcc void @foo()
904	ret void
905}
906</pre>
907
908</div>
909
910<!-- *********************************************************************** -->
911
912<hr>
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919  <a href="http://llvm.org/">LLVM Compiler Infrastructure</a><br>
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