diff options
author | Tanya Lattner <tonic@nondot.org> | 2007-05-23 18:12:40 +0000 |
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committer | Tanya Lattner <tonic@nondot.org> | 2007-05-23 18:12:40 +0000 |
commit | 738d0e3c6b1ae4de23c72e7c84ae00198de35d10 (patch) | |
tree | a2abaf2c3a2a4156b71cbb218044c0b191fdcdf4 | |
parent | eff75f4c9f2c3b8c4cccb825eb2310cbc5659275 (diff) |
2.0 Release docsrelease_20
git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/branches/release_20@37312 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
23 files changed, 5531 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/bugpoint.1 b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/bugpoint.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..422be7a2ee --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/bugpoint.1 @@ -0,0 +1,240 @@ +.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14 +.\" +.\" Standard preamble: +.\" ======================================================================== +.de Sh \" Subsection heading +.br +.if t .Sp +.ne 5 +.PP +\fB\\$1\fR +.PP +.. +.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) +.if t .sp .5v +.if n .sp +.. +.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text +.ft CW +.nf +.ne \\$1 +.. +.de Ve \" End verbatim text +.ft R +.fi +.. +.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will +.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left +.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a +.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to +.\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' +.\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. +.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr +.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' +.ie n \{\ +. ds -- \(*W- +. ds PI pi +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch +. ds L" "" +. ds R" "" +. ds C` "" +. ds C' "" +'br\} +.el\{\ +. ds -- \|\(em\| +. ds PI \(*p +. ds L" `` +. ds R" '' +'br\} +.\" +.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for +.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index +.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the +.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. +.if \nF \{\ +. de IX +. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" +.. +. nr % 0 +. rr F +.\} +.\" +.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes +.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. +.hy 0 +.if n .na +.\" +.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). +.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. +. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds #H 0 +. ds #V .8m +. ds #F .3m +. ds #[ \f1 +. ds #] \fP +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) +. ds #V .6m +. ds #F 0 +. ds #[ \& +. ds #] \& +.\} +. \" simple accents for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds ' \& +. ds ` \& +. ds ^ \& +. ds , \& +. ds ~ ~ +. ds / +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" +. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' +. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' +. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' +.\} +. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents +.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' +.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' +.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] +.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' +.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' +.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] +.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] +.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e +.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E +. \" corrections for vroff +.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' +.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' +. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) +.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ +\{\ +. ds : e +. ds 8 ss +. ds o a +. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga +. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy +. ds th \o'bp' +. ds Th \o'LP' +. ds ae ae +. ds Ae AE +.\} +.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C +.\" ======================================================================== +.\" +.IX Title "BUGPOINT 1" +.TH BUGPOINT 1 "2006-09-13" "CVS" "LLVM Command Guide" +.SH "NAME" +bugpoint \- automatic test case reduction tool +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.IX Header "SYNOPSIS" +\&\fBbugpoint\fR [\fIoptions\fR] [\fIinput \s-1LLVM\s0 ll/bc files\fR] [\fI\s-1LLVM\s0 passes\fR] \fB\-\-args\fR +\&\fIprogram arguments\fR +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +.IX Header "DESCRIPTION" +\&\fBbugpoint\fR narrows down the source of problems in \s-1LLVM\s0 tools and passes. It +can be used to debug three types of failures: optimizer crashes, miscompilations +by optimizers, or bad native code generation (including problems in the static +and \s-1JIT\s0 compilers). It aims to reduce large test cases to small, useful ones. +For more information on the design and inner workings of \fBbugpoint\fR, as well as +advice for using bugpoint, see \fIllvm/docs/Bugpoint.html\fR in the \s-1LLVM\s0 +distribution. +.SH "OPTIONS" +.IX Header "OPTIONS" +.IP "\fB\-\-additional\-so\fR \fIlibrary\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--additional-so library" +Load the dynamic shared object \fIlibrary\fR into the test program whenever it is +run. This is useful if you are debugging programs which depend on non-LLVM +libraries (such as the X or curses libraries) to run. +.IP "\fB\-\-args\fR \fIprogram args\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--args program args" +Pass all arguments specified after \-args to the test program whenever it runs. +Note that if any of the \fIprogram args\fR start with a '\-', you should use: +.Sp +.Vb 1 +\& bugpoint [bugpoint args] --args -- [program args] +.Ve +.Sp +The \*(L"\-\-\*(R" right after the \fB\-\-args\fR option tells \fBbugpoint\fR to consider any +options starting with \f(CW\*(C`\-\*(C'\fR to be part of the \fB\-\-args\fR option, not as options to +\&\fBbugpoint\fR itself. +.IP "\fB\-\-tool\-args\fR \fItool args\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--tool-args tool args" +Pass all arguments specified after \-\-tool\-args to the \s-1LLVM\s0 tool under test +(\fBllc\fR, \fBlli\fR, etc.) whenever it runs. You should use this option in the +following way: +.Sp +.Vb 1 +\& bugpoint [bugpoint args] --tool-args -- [tool args] +.Ve +.Sp +The \*(L"\-\-\*(R" right after the \fB\-\-tool\-args\fR option tells \fBbugpoint\fR to consider any +options starting with \f(CW\*(C`\-\*(C'\fR to be part of the \fB\-\-tool\-args\fR option, not as +options to \fBbugpoint\fR itself. (See \fB\-\-args\fR, above.) +.IP "\fB\-\-check\-exit\-code\fR=\fI{true,false}\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--check-exit-code={true,false}" +Assume a non-zero exit code or core dump from the test program is a failure. +Defaults to true. +.IP "\fB\-\-disable\-{dce,simplifycfg}\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--disable-{dce,simplifycfg}" +Do not run the specified passes to clean up and reduce the size of the test +program. By default, \fBbugpoint\fR uses these passes internally when attempting to +reduce test programs. If you're trying to find a bug in one of these passes, +\&\fBbugpoint\fR may crash. +.IP "\fB\-find\-bugs\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-find-bugs" +Continually randomize the specified passes and run them on the test program +until a bug is found or the user kills \fBbugpoint\fR. +.IP "\fB\-\-help\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--help" +Print a summary of command line options. +.IP "\fB\-\-input\fR \fIfilename\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--input filename" +Open \fIfilename\fR and redirect the standard input of the test program, whenever +it runs, to come from that file. +.IP "\fB\-\-load\fR \fIplugin\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--load plugin" +Load the dynamic object \fIplugin\fR into \fBbugpoint\fR itself. This object should +register new optimization passes. Once loaded, the object will add new command +line options to enable various optimizations. To see the new complete list of +optimizations, use the \fB\-\-help\fR and \fB\-\-load\fR options together; for example: +.Sp +.Vb 1 +\& bugpoint --load myNewPass.so --help +.Ve +.IP "\fB\-\-output\fR \fIfilename\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--output filename" +Whenever the test program produces output on its standard output stream, it +should match the contents of \fIfilename\fR (the \*(L"reference output\*(R"). If you +do not use this option, \fBbugpoint\fR will attempt to generate a reference output +by compiling the program with the C backend and running it. +.IP "\fB\-\-profile\-info\-file\fR \fIfilename\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--profile-info-file filename" +Profile file loaded by \fB\-\-profile\-loader\fR. +.IP "\fB\-\-run\-{int,jit,llc,cbe}\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--run-{int,jit,llc,cbe}" +Whenever the test program is compiled, \fBbugpoint\fR should generate code for it +using the specified code generator. These options allow you to choose the +interpreter, the \s-1JIT\s0 compiler, the static native code compiler, or the C +backend, respectively. +.IP "\fB\-\-enable\-valgrind\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--enable-valgrind" +Use valgrind to find faults in the optimization phase. This will allow +bugpoint to find otherwise asymptomatic problems caused by memory +mis\-management. +.SH "EXIT STATUS" +.IX Header "EXIT STATUS" +If \fBbugpoint\fR succeeds in finding a problem, it will exit with 0. Otherwise, +if an error occurs, it will exit with a non-zero value. +.SH "SEE ALSO" +.IX Header "SEE ALSO" +opt +.SH "AUTHOR" +.IX Header "AUTHOR" +Maintained by the \s-1LLVM\s0 Team (<http://llvm.org>). diff --git a/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llc.1 b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llc.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..81832b10a6 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llc.1 @@ -0,0 +1,277 @@ +.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14 +.\" +.\" Standard preamble: +.\" ======================================================================== +.de Sh \" Subsection heading +.br +.if t .Sp +.ne 5 +.PP +\fB\\$1\fR +.PP +.. +.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) +.if t .sp .5v +.if n .sp +.. +.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text +.ft CW +.nf +.ne \\$1 +.. +.de Ve \" End verbatim text +.ft R +.fi +.. +.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will +.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left +.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a +.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to +.\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' +.\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. +.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr +.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' +.ie n \{\ +. ds -- \(*W- +. ds PI pi +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch +. ds L" "" +. ds R" "" +. ds C` "" +. ds C' "" +'br\} +.el\{\ +. ds -- \|\(em\| +. ds PI \(*p +. ds L" `` +. ds R" '' +'br\} +.\" +.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for +.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index +.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the +.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. +.if \nF \{\ +. de IX +. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" +.. +. nr % 0 +. rr F +.\} +.\" +.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes +.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. +.hy 0 +.if n .na +.\" +.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). +.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. +. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds #H 0 +. ds #V .8m +. ds #F .3m +. ds #[ \f1 +. ds #] \fP +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) +. ds #V .6m +. ds #F 0 +. ds #[ \& +. ds #] \& +.\} +. \" simple accents for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds ' \& +. ds ` \& +. ds ^ \& +. ds , \& +. ds ~ ~ +. ds / +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" +. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' +. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' +. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' +.\} +. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents +.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' +.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' +.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] +.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' +.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' +.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] +.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] +.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e +.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E +. \" corrections for vroff +.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' +.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' +. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) +.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ +\{\ +. ds : e +. ds 8 ss +. ds o a +. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga +. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy +. ds th \o'bp' +. ds Th \o'LP' +. ds ae ae +. ds Ae AE +.\} +.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C +.\" ======================================================================== +.\" +.IX Title "LLC 1" +.TH LLC 1 "2006-03-13" "CVS" "LLVM Command Guide" +.SH "NAME" +llc \- LLVM static compiler +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.IX Header "SYNOPSIS" +\&\fBllc\fR [\fIoptions\fR] [\fIfilename\fR] +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +.IX Header "DESCRIPTION" +The \fBllc\fR command compiles \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode into assembly language for a +specified architecture. The assembly language output can then be passed through +a native assembler and linker to generate a native executable. +.PP +The choice of architecture for the output assembly code is automatically +determined from the input bytecode file, unless the \fB\-march\fR option is used to +override the default. +.SH "OPTIONS" +.IX Header "OPTIONS" +If \fIfilename\fR is \- or omitted, \fBllc\fR reads \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode from standard input. +Otherwise, it will read \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode from \fIfilename\fR. +.PP +If the \fB\-o\fR option is omitted, then \fBllc\fR will send its output to standard +output if the input is from standard input. If the \fB\-o\fR option specifies \-, +then the output will also be sent to standard output. +.PP +If no \fB\-o\fR option is specified and an input file other than \- is specified, +then \fBllc\fR creates the output filename by taking the input filename, +removing any existing \fI.bc\fR extension, and adding a \fI.s\fR suffix. +.PP +Other \fBllc\fR options are as follows: +.Sh "End-user Options" +.IX Subsection "End-user Options" +.IP "\fB\-\-help\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--help" +Print a summary of command line options. +.IP "\fB\-f\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-f" +Overwrite output files. By default, \fBllc\fR will refuse to overwrite +an output file which already exists. +.IP "\fB\-mtriple\fR=\fItarget triple\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-mtriple=target triple" +Override the target triple specified in the input bytecode file with the +specified string. +.IP "\fB\-march\fR=\fIarch\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-march=arch" +Specify the architecture for which to generate assembly, overriding the target +encoded in the bytecode file. See the output of \fBllc \-\-help\fR for a list of +valid architectures. By default this is inferred from the target triple or +autodetected to the current architecture. +.IP "\fB\-mcpu\fR=\fIcpuname\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-mcpu=cpuname" +Specify a specific chip in the current architecture to generate code for. +By default this is inferred from the target triple and autodetected to +the current architecture. For a list of available CPUs, use: +\&\fBllvm-as < /dev/null | llc \-march=xyz \-mcpu=help\fR +.IP "\fB\-mattr\fR=\fIa1,+a2,\-a3,...\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-mattr=a1,+a2,-a3,..." +Override or control specific attributes of the target, such as whether \s-1SIMD\s0 +operations are enabled or not. The default set of attributes is set by the +current \s-1CPU\s0. For a list of available attributes, use: +\&\fBllvm-as < /dev/null | llc \-march=xyz \-mattr=help\fR +.IP "\fB\-\-disable\-fp\-elim\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--disable-fp-elim" +Disable frame pointer elimination optimization. +.IP "\fB\-\-disable\-excess\-fp\-precision\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--disable-excess-fp-precision" +Disable optimizations that may produce excess precision for floating point. +Note that this option can dramatically slow down code on some systems +(e.g. X86). +.IP "\fB\-\-enable\-unsafe\-fp\-math\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--enable-unsafe-fp-math" +Enable optimizations that make unsafe assumptions about \s-1IEEE\s0 math (e.g. that +addition is associative) or may not work for all input ranges. These +optimizations allow the code generator to make use of some instructions which +would otherwise not be usable (such as fsin on X86). +.IP "\fB\-\-enable\-correct\-eh\-support\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--enable-correct-eh-support" +Instruct the \fBlowerinvoke\fR pass to insert code for correct exception handling +support. This is expensive and is by default omitted for efficiency. +.IP "\fB\-\-stats\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--stats" +Print statistics recorded by code-generation passes. +.IP "\fB\-\-time\-passes\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--time-passes" +Record the amount of time needed for each pass and print a report to standard +error. +.IP "\fB\-\-load\fR=\fIdso_path\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--load=dso_path" +Dynamically load \fIdso_path\fR (a path to a dynamically shared object) that +implements an \s-1LLVM\s0 target. This will permit the target name to be used with the +\&\fB\-march\fR option so that code can be generated for that target. +.Sh "Tuning/Configuration Options" +.IX Subsection "Tuning/Configuration Options" +.IP "\fB\-\-print\-machineinstrs\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--print-machineinstrs" +Print generated machine code between compilation phases (useful for debugging). +.IP "\fB\-\-regalloc\fR=\fIallocator\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--regalloc=allocator" +Specify the register allocator to use. The default \fIallocator\fR is \fIlocal\fR. +Valid register allocators are: +.RS 4 +.IP "\fIsimple\fR" 4 +.IX Item "simple" +Very simple \*(L"always spill\*(R" register allocator +.IP "\fIlocal\fR" 4 +.IX Item "local" +Local register allocator +.IP "\fIlinearscan\fR" 4 +.IX Item "linearscan" +Linear scan global register allocator +.IP "\fIiterativescan\fR" 4 +.IX Item "iterativescan" +Iterative scan global register allocator +.RE +.RS 4 +.RE +.IP "\fB\-\-spiller\fR=\fIspiller\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--spiller=spiller" +Specify the spiller to use for register allocators that support it. Currently +this option is used only by the linear scan register allocator. The default +\&\fIspiller\fR is \fIlocal\fR. Valid spillers are: +.RS 4 +.IP "\fIsimple\fR" 4 +.IX Item "simple" +Simple spiller +.IP "\fIlocal\fR" 4 +.IX Item "local" +Local spiller +.RE +.RS 4 +.RE +.Sh "Intel IA\-32\-specific Options" +.IX Subsection "Intel IA-32-specific Options" +.IP "\fB\-\-x86\-asm\-syntax=att|intel\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--x86-asm-syntax=att|intel" +Specify whether to emit assembly code in \s-1AT&T\s0 syntax (the default) or intel +syntax. +.SH "EXIT STATUS" +.IX Header "EXIT STATUS" +If \fBllc\fR succeeds, it will exit with 0. Otherwise, if an error occurs, +it will exit with a non-zero value. +.SH "SEE ALSO" +.IX Header "SEE ALSO" +lli +.SH "AUTHORS" +.IX Header "AUTHORS" +Maintained by the \s-1LLVM\s0 Team (<http://llvm.org>). diff --git a/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/lli.1 b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/lli.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..ee21774b88 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/lli.1 @@ -0,0 +1,206 @@ +.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14 +.\" +.\" Standard preamble: +.\" ======================================================================== +.de Sh \" Subsection heading +.br +.if t .Sp +.ne 5 +.PP +\fB\\$1\fR +.PP +.. +.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) +.if t .sp .5v +.if n .sp +.. +.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text +.ft CW +.nf +.ne \\$1 +.. +.de Ve \" End verbatim text +.ft R +.fi +.. +.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will +.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left +.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a +.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to +.\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' +.\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. +.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr +.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' +.ie n \{\ +. ds -- \(*W- +. ds PI pi +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch +. ds L" "" +. ds R" "" +. ds C` "" +. ds C' "" +'br\} +.el\{\ +. ds -- \|\(em\| +. ds PI \(*p +. ds L" `` +. ds R" '' +'br\} +.\" +.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for +.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index +.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the +.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. +.if \nF \{\ +. de IX +. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" +.. +. nr % 0 +. rr F +.\} +.\" +.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes +.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. +.hy 0 +.if n .na +.\" +.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). +.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. +. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds #H 0 +. ds #V .8m +. ds #F .3m +. ds #[ \f1 +. ds #] \fP +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) +. ds #V .6m +. ds #F 0 +. ds #[ \& +. ds #] \& +.\} +. \" simple accents for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds ' \& +. ds ` \& +. ds ^ \& +. ds , \& +. ds ~ ~ +. ds / +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" +. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' +. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' +. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' +.\} +. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents +.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' +.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' +.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] +.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' +.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' +.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] +.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] +.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e +.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E +. \" corrections for vroff +.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' +.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' +. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) +.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ +\{\ +. ds : e +. ds 8 ss +. ds o a +. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga +. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy +. ds th \o'bp' +. ds Th \o'LP' +. ds ae ae +. ds Ae AE +.\} +.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C +.\" ======================================================================== +.\" +.IX Title "LLI 1" +.TH LLI 1 "2006-03-13" "CVS" "LLVM Command Guide" +.SH "NAME" +lli \- directly execute programs from LLVM bytecode +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.IX Header "SYNOPSIS" +\&\fBlli\fR [\fIoptions\fR] [\fIfilename\fR] [\fIprogram args\fR] +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +.IX Header "DESCRIPTION" +\&\fBlli\fR directly executes programs in \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode format. It takes a program +in \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode format and executes it using a just-in-time compiler, if one is +available for the current architecture, or an interpreter. \fBlli\fR takes all of +the same code generator options as llc, but they are only effective when +\&\fBlli\fR is using the just-in-time compiler. +.PP +If \fIfilename\fR is not specified, then \fBlli\fR reads the \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode for the +program from standard input. +.PP +The optional \fIargs\fR specified on the command line are passed to the program as +arguments. +.SH "OPTIONS" +.IX Header "OPTIONS" +.IP "\fB\-help\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-help" +Print a summary of command line options. +.IP "\fB\-stats\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-stats" +Print statistics from the code-generation passes. This is only meaningful for +the just-in-time compiler, at present. +.IP "\fB\-time\-passes\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-time-passes" +Record the amount of time needed for each code-generation pass and print it to +standard error. +.IP "\fB\-mtriple\fR=\fItarget triple\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-mtriple=target triple" +Override the target triple specified in the input bytecode file with the +specified string. This may result in a crash if you pick an +architecture which is not compatible with the current system. +.IP "\fB\-march\fR=\fIarch\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-march=arch" +Specify the architecture for which to generate assembly, overriding the target +encoded in the bytecode file. See the output of \fBllc \-\-help\fR for a list of +valid architectures. By default this is inferred from the target triple or +autodetected to the current architecture. +.IP "\fB\-mcpu\fR=\fIcpuname\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-mcpu=cpuname" +Specify a specific chip in the current architecture to generate code for. +By default this is inferred from the target triple and autodetected to +the current architecture. For a list of available CPUs, use: +\&\fBllvm-as < /dev/null | llc \-march=xyz \-mcpu=help\fR +.IP "\fB\-mattr\fR=\fIa1,+a2,\-a3,...\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-mattr=a1,+a2,-a3,..." +Override or control specific attributes of the target, such as whether \s-1SIMD\s0 +operations are enabled or not. The default set of attributes is set by the +current \s-1CPU\s0. For a list of available attributes, use: +\&\fBllvm-as < /dev/null | llc \-march=xyz \-mattr=help\fR +.IP "\fB\-force\-interpreter\fR=\fI{false,true}\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-force-interpreter={false,true}" +If set to true, use the interpreter even if a just-in-time compiler is available +for this architecture. Defaults to false. +.IP "\fB\-f\fR=\fIname\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-f=name" +Call the function named \fIname\fR to start the program. Note: The +function is assumed to have the C signature \f(CW\*(C`int\*(C'\fR \fIname\fR \f(CW\*(C`(int, +char **, char **)\*(C'\fR. If you try to use this option to call a function of +incompatible type, undefined behavior may result. Defaults to \f(CW\*(C`main\*(C'\fR. +.SH "EXIT STATUS" +.IX Header "EXIT STATUS" +If \fBlli\fR fails to load the program, it will exit with an exit code of 1. +Otherwise, it will return the exit code of the program it executes. +.SH "SEE ALSO" +.IX Header "SEE ALSO" +llc +.SH "AUTHOR" +.IX Header "AUTHOR" +Maintained by the \s-1LLVM\s0 Team (<http://llvm.org>). diff --git a/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-ar.1 b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-ar.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..a624f46f9c --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-ar.1 @@ -0,0 +1,461 @@ +.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14 +.\" +.\" Standard preamble: +.\" ======================================================================== +.de Sh \" Subsection heading +.br +.if t .Sp +.ne 5 +.PP +\fB\\$1\fR +.PP +.. +.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) +.if t .sp .5v +.if n .sp +.. +.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text +.ft CW +.nf +.ne \\$1 +.. +.de Ve \" End verbatim text +.ft R +.fi +.. +.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will +.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left +.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a +.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to +.\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' +.\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. +.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr +.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' +.ie n \{\ +. ds -- \(*W- +. ds PI pi +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch +. ds L" "" +. ds R" "" +. ds C` "" +. ds C' "" +'br\} +.el\{\ +. ds -- \|\(em\| +. ds PI \(*p +. ds L" `` +. ds R" '' +'br\} +.\" +.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for +.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index +.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the +.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. +.if \nF \{\ +. de IX +. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" +.. +. nr % 0 +. rr F +.\} +.\" +.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes +.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. +.hy 0 +.if n .na +.\" +.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). +.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. +. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds #H 0 +. ds #V .8m +. ds #F .3m +. ds #[ \f1 +. ds #] \fP +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) +. ds #V .6m +. ds #F 0 +. ds #[ \& +. ds #] \& +.\} +. \" simple accents for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds ' \& +. ds ` \& +. ds ^ \& +. ds , \& +. ds ~ ~ +. ds / +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" +. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' +. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' +. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' +.\} +. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents +.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' +.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' +.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] +.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' +.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' +.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] +.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] +.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e +.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E +. \" corrections for vroff +.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' +.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' +. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) +.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ +\{\ +. ds : e +. ds 8 ss +. ds o a +. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga +. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy +. ds th \o'bp' +. ds Th \o'LP' +. ds ae ae +. ds Ae AE +.\} +.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C +.\" ======================================================================== +.\" +.IX Title "LLVM-AR 1" +.TH LLVM-AR 1 "2006-11-20" "CVS" "LLVM Command Guide" +.SH "NAME" +llvm\-ar \- LLVM archiver +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.IX Header "SYNOPSIS" +\&\fBllvm-ar\fR [\-]{dmpqrtx}[Rabfikouz] [relpos] [count] <archive> [files...] +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +.IX Header "DESCRIPTION" +The \fBllvm-ar\fR command is similar to the common Unix utility, \f(CW\*(C`ar\*(C'\fR. It +archives several files together into a single file. The intent for this is +to produce archive libraries by \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode that can be linked into an +\&\s-1LLVM\s0 program. However, the archive can contain any kind of file. By default, +\&\fBllvm-ar\fR generates a symbol table that makes linking faster because +only the symbol table needs to be consulted, not each individual file member +of the archive. +.PP +The \fBllvm-ar\fR command can be used to \fIread\fR both \s-1SVR4\s0 and \s-1BSD\s0 style archive +files. However, it cannot be used to write them. While the \fBllvm-ar\fR command +produces files that are \fIalmost\fR identical to the format used by other \f(CW\*(C`ar\*(C'\fR +implementations, it has two significant departures in order to make the +archive appropriate for \s-1LLVM\s0. The first departure is that \fBllvm-ar\fR only +uses \s-1BSD4\s0.4 style long path names (stored immediately after the header) and +never contains a string table for long names. The second departure is that the +symbol table is formated for efficient construction of an in-memory data +structure that permits rapid (red\-black tree) lookups. Consequently, archives +produced with \fBllvm-ar\fR usually won't be readable or editable with any +\&\f(CW\*(C`ar\*(C'\fR implementation or useful for linking. Using the \f(CW\*(C`f\*(C'\fR modifier to flatten +file names will make the archive readable by other \f(CW\*(C`ar\*(C'\fR implementations +but not for linking because the symbol table format for \s-1LLVM\s0 is unique. If an +\&\s-1SVR4\s0 or \s-1BSD\s0 style archive is used with the \f(CW\*(C`r\*(C'\fR (replace) or \f(CW\*(C`q\*(C'\fR (quick +update) operations, the archive will be reconstructed in \s-1LLVM\s0 format. This +means that the string table will be dropped (in deference to \s-1BSD\s0 4.4 long names) +and an \s-1LLVM\s0 symbol table will be added (by default). The system symbol table +will be retained. +.PP +Here's where \fBllvm-ar\fR departs from previous \f(CW\*(C`ar\*(C'\fR implementations: +.IP "\fISymbol Table\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Symbol Table" +Since \fBllvm-ar\fR is intended to archive bytecode files, the symbol table +won't make much sense to anything but \s-1LLVM\s0. Consequently, the symbol table's +format has been simplified. It consists simply of a sequence of pairs +of a file member index number as an \s-1LSB\s0 4byte integer and a null-terminated +string. +.IP "\fILong Paths\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Long Paths" +Some \f(CW\*(C`ar\*(C'\fR implementations (\s-1SVR4\s0) use a separate file member to record long +path names (> 15 characters). \fBllvm-ar\fR takes the \s-1BSD\s0 4.4 and Mac \s-1OS\s0 X +approach which is to simply store the full path name immediately preceding +the data for the file. The path name is null terminated and may contain the +slash (/) character. +.IP "\fICompression\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Compression" +\&\fBllvm-ar\fR can compress the members of an archive to save space. The +compression used depends on what's available on the platform and what choices +the \s-1LLVM\s0 Compressor utility makes. It generally favors bzip2 but will select +between \*(L"no compression\*(R" or bzip2 depending on what makes sense for the +file's content. +.IP "\fIDirectory Recursion\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Directory Recursion" +Most \f(CW\*(C`ar\*(C'\fR implementations do not recurse through directories but simply +ignore directories if they are presented to the program in the \fIfiles\fR +option. \fBllvm-ar\fR, however, can recurse through directory structures and +add all the files under a directory, if requested. +.IP "\fI\s-1TOC\s0 Verbose Output\fR" 4 +.IX Item "TOC Verbose Output" +When \fBllvm-ar\fR prints out the verbose table of contents (\f(CW\*(C`tv\*(C'\fR option), it +precedes the usual output with a character indicating the basic kind of +content in the file. A blank means the file is a regular file. A 'Z' means +the file is compressed. A 'B' means the file is an \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode file. An +\&'S' means the file is the symbol table. +.SH "OPTIONS" +.IX Header "OPTIONS" +The options to \fBllvm-ar\fR are compatible with other \f(CW\*(C`ar\*(C'\fR implementations. +However, there are a few modifiers (\fIzR\fR) that are not found in other +\&\f(CW\*(C`ar\*(C'\fRs. The options to \fBllvm-ar\fR specify a single basic operation to +perform on the archive, a variety of modifiers for that operation, the +name of the archive file, and an optional list of file names. These options +are used to determine how \fBllvm-ar\fR should process the archive file. +.PP +The Operations and Modifiers are explained in the sections below. The minimal +set of options is at least one operator and the name of the archive. Typically +archive files end with a \f(CW\*(C`.a\*(C'\fR suffix, but this is not required. Following +the \fIarchive-name\fR comes a list of \fIfiles\fR that indicate the specific members +of the archive to operate on. If the \fIfiles\fR option is not specified, it +generally means either \*(L"none\*(R" or \*(L"all\*(R" members, depending on the operation. +.Sh "Operations" +.IX Subsection "Operations" +.IP "d" 4 +.IX Item "d" +Delete files from the archive. No modifiers are applicable to this operation. +The \fIfiles\fR options specify which members should be removed from the +archive. It is not an error if a specified file does not appear in the archive. +If no \fIfiles\fR are specified, the archive is not modified. +.IP "m[abi]" 4 +.IX Item "m[abi]" +Move files from one location in the archive to another. The \fIa\fR, \fIb\fR, and +\&\fIi\fR modifiers apply to this operation. The \fIfiles\fR will all be moved +to the location given by the modifiers. If no modifiers are used, the files +will be moved to the end of the archive. If no \fIfiles\fR are specified, the +archive is not modified. +.IP "p[k]" 4 +.IX Item "p[k]" +Print files to the standard output. The \fIk\fR modifier applies to this +operation. This operation simply prints the \fIfiles\fR indicated to the +standard output. If no \fIfiles\fR are specified, the entire archive is printed. +Printing bytecode files is ill-advised as they might confuse your terminal +settings. The \fIp\fR operation never modifies the archive. +.IP "q[Rfz]" 4 +.IX Item "q[Rfz]" +Quickly append files to the end of the archive. The \fIR\fR, \fIf\fR, and \fIz\fR +modifiers apply to this operation. This operation quickly adds the +\&\fIfiles\fR to the archive without checking for duplicates that should be +removed first. If no \fIfiles\fR are specified, the archive is not modified. +Because of the way that \fBllvm-ar\fR constructs the archive file, its dubious +whether the \fIq\fR operation is any faster than the \fIr\fR operation. +.IP "r[Rabfuz]" 4 +.IX Item "r[Rabfuz]" +Replace or insert file members. The \fIR\fR, \fIa\fR, \fIb\fR, \fIf\fR, \fIu\fR, and \fIz\fR +modifiers apply to this operation. This operation will replace existing +\&\fIfiles\fR or insert them at the end of the archive if they do not exist. If no +\&\fIfiles\fR are specified, the archive is not modified. +.IP "t[v]" 4 +.IX Item "t[v]" +Print the table of contents. Without any modifiers, this operation just prints +the names of the members to the standard output. With the \fIv\fR modifier, +\&\fBllvm-ar\fR also prints out the file type (B=bytecode, Z=compressed, S=symbol +table, blank=regular file), the permission mode, the owner and group, the +size, and the date. If any \fIfiles\fR are specified, the listing is only for +those files. If no \fIfiles\fR are specified, the table of contents for the +whole archive is printed. +.IP "x[oP]" 4 +.IX Item "x[oP]" +Extract archive members back to files. The \fIo\fR modifier applies to this +operation. This operation retrieves the indicated \fIfiles\fR from the archive +and writes them back to the operating system's file system. If no +\&\fIfiles\fR are specified, the entire archive is extract. +.Sh "Modifiers (operation specific)" +.IX Subsection "Modifiers (operation specific)" +The modifiers below are specific to certain operations. See the Operations +section (above) to determine which modifiers are applicable to which operations. +.IP "[a]" 4 +.IX Item "[a]" +When inserting or moving member files, this option specifies the destination of +the new files as being \f(CW\*(C`a\*(C'\fRfter the \fIrelpos\fR member. If \fIrelpos\fR is not found, +the files are placed at the end of the archive. +.IP "[b]" 4 +.IX Item "[b]" +When inserting or moving member files, this option specifies the destination of +the new files as being \f(CW\*(C`b\*(C'\fRefore the \fIrelpos\fR member. If \fIrelpos\fR is not +found, the files are placed at the end of the archive. This modifier is +identical to the the \fIi\fR modifier. +.IP "[f]" 4 +.IX Item "[f]" +Normally, \fBllvm-ar\fR stores the full path name to a file as presented to it on +the command line. With this option, truncated (15 characters max) names are +used. This ensures name compatibility with older versions of \f(CW\*(C`ar\*(C'\fR but may also +thwart correct extraction of the files (duplicates may overwrite). If used with +the \fIR\fR option, the directory recursion will be performed but the file names +will all be \f(CW\*(C`f\*(C'\fRlattened to simple file names. +.IP "[i]" 4 +.IX Item "[i]" +A synonym for the \fIb\fR option. +.IP "[k]" 4 +.IX Item "[k]" +Normally, \fBllvm-ar\fR will not print the contents of bytecode files when the +\&\fIp\fR operation is used. This modifier defeats the default and allows the +bytecode members to be printed. +.IP "[N]" 4 +.IX Item "[N]" +This option is ignored by \fBllvm-ar\fR but provided for compatibility. +.IP "[o]" 4 +.IX Item "[o]" +When extracting files, this option will cause \fBllvm-ar\fR to preserve the +original modification times of the files it writes. +.IP "[P]" 4 +.IX Item "[P]" +use full path names when matching +.IP "[R]" 4 +.IX Item "[R]" +This modifier instructions the \fIr\fR option to recursively process directories. +Without \fIR\fR, directories are ignored and only those \fIfiles\fR that refer to +files will be added to the archive. When \fIR\fR is used, any directories specified +with \fIfiles\fR will be scanned (recursively) to find files to be added to the +archive. Any file whose name begins with a dot will not be added. +.IP "[u]" 4 +.IX Item "[u]" +When replacing existing files in the archive, only replace those files that have +a time stamp than the time stamp of the member in the archive. +.IP "[z]" 4 +.IX Item "[z]" +When inserting or replacing any file in the archive, compress the file first. +This +modifier is safe to use when (previously) compressed bytecode files are added to +the archive; the compressed bytecode files will not be doubly compressed. +.Sh "Modifiers (generic)" +.IX Subsection "Modifiers (generic)" +The modifiers below may be applied to any operation. +.IP "[c]" 4 +.IX Item "[c]" +For all operations, \fBllvm-ar\fR will always create the archive if it doesn't +exist. Normally, \fBllvm-ar\fR will print a warning message indicating that the +archive is being created. Using this modifier turns off that warning. +.IP "[s]" 4 +.IX Item "[s]" +This modifier requests that an archive index (or symbol table) be added to the +archive. This is the default mode of operation. The symbol table will contain +all the externally visible functions and global variables defined by all the +bytecode files in the archive. Using this modifier is more efficient that using +llvm-ranlib which also creates the symbol table. +.IP "[S]" 4 +.IX Item "[S]" +This modifier is the opposite of the \fIs\fR modifier. It instructs \fBllvm-ar\fR to +not build the symbol table. If both \fIs\fR and \fIS\fR are used, the last modifier to +occur in the options will prevail. +.IP "[v]" 4 +.IX Item "[v]" +This modifier instructs \fBllvm-ar\fR to be verbose about what it is doing. Each +editing operation taken against the archive will produce a line of output saying +what is being done. +.SH "STANDARDS" +.IX Header "STANDARDS" +The \fBllvm-ar\fR utility is intended to provide a superset of the \s-1IEEE\s0 Std 1003.2 +(\s-1POSIX\s0.2) functionality for \f(CW\*(C`ar\*(C'\fR. \fBllvm-ar\fR can read both \s-1SVR4\s0 and \s-1BSD4\s0.4 (or +Mac \s-1OS\s0 X) archives. If the \f(CW\*(C`f\*(C'\fR modifier is given to the \f(CW\*(C`x\*(C'\fR or \f(CW\*(C`r\*(C'\fR operations +then \fBllvm-ar\fR will write \s-1SVR4\s0 compatible archives. Without this modifier, +\&\fBllvm-ar\fR will write \s-1BSD4\s0.4 compatible archives that have long names +immediately after the header and indicated using the \*(L"#1/ddd\*(R" notation for the +name in the header. +.SH "FILE FORMAT" +.IX Header "FILE FORMAT" +The file format for \s-1LLVM\s0 Archive files is similar to that of \s-1BSD\s0 4.4 or Mac \s-1OSX\s0 +archive files. In fact, except for the symbol table, the \f(CW\*(C`ar\*(C'\fR commands on those +operating systems should be able to read \s-1LLVM\s0 archive files. The details of the +file format follow. +.PP +Each archive begins with the archive magic number which is the eight printable +characters \*(L"!<arch>\en\*(R" where \en represents the newline character (0x0A). +Following the magic number, the file is composed of even length members that +begin with an archive header and end with a \en padding character if necessary +(to make the length even). Each file member is composed of a header (defined +below), an optional newline-terminated \*(L"long file name\*(R" and the contents of +the file. +.PP +The fields of the header are described in the items below. All fields of the +header contain only \s-1ASCII\s0 characters, are left justified and are right padded +with space characters. +.IP "name \- char[16]" 4 +.IX Item "name - char[16]" +This field of the header provides the name of the archive member. If the name is +longer than 15 characters or contains a slash (/) character, then this field +contains \f(CW\*(C`#1/nnn\*(C'\fR where \f(CW\*(C`nnn\*(C'\fR provides the length of the name and the \f(CW\*(C`#1/\*(C'\fR +is literal. In this case, the actual name of the file is provided in the \f(CW\*(C`nnn\*(C'\fR +bytes immediately following the header. If the name is 15 characters or less, it +is contained directly in this field and terminated with a slash (/) character. +.IP "date \- char[12]" 4 +.IX Item "date - char[12]" +This field provides the date of modification of the file in the form of a +decimal encoded number that provides the number of seconds since the epoch +(since 00:00:00 Jan 1, 1970) per Posix specifications. +.IP "uid \- char[6]" 4 +.IX Item "uid - char[6]" +This field provides the user id of the file encoded as a decimal \s-1ASCII\s0 string. +This field might not make much sense on non-Unix systems. On Unix, it is the +same value as the st_uid field of the stat structure returned by the \fIstat\fR\|(2) +operating system call. +.IP "gid \- char[6]" 4 +.IX Item "gid - char[6]" +This field provides the group id of the file encoded as a decimal \s-1ASCII\s0 string. +This field might not make much sense on non-Unix systems. On Unix, it is the +same value as the st_gid field of the stat structure returned by the \fIstat\fR\|(2) +operating system call. +.IP "mode \- char[8]" 4 +.IX Item "mode - char[8]" +This field provides the access mode of the file encoded as an octal \s-1ASCII\s0 +string. This field might not make much sense on non-Unix systems. On Unix, it +is the same value as the st_mode field of the stat structure returned by the +\&\fIstat\fR\|(2) operating system call. +.IP "size \- char[10]" 4 +.IX Item "size - char[10]" +This field provides the size of the file, in bytes, encoded as a decimal \s-1ASCII\s0 +string. If the size field is negative (starts with a minus sign, 0x02D), then +the archive member is stored in compressed form. The first byte of the archive +member's data indicates the compression type used. A value of 0 (0x30) indicates +that no compression was used. A value of 2 (0x32) indicates that bzip2 +compression was used. +.IP "fmag \- char[2]" 4 +.IX Item "fmag - char[2]" +This field is the archive file member magic number. Its content is always the +two characters back tick (0x60) and newline (0x0A). This provides some measure +utility in identifying archive files that have been corrupted. +.PP +The \s-1LLVM\s0 symbol table has the special name \*(L"#_LLVM_SYM_TAB_#\*(R". It is presumed +that no regular archive member file will want this name. The \s-1LLVM\s0 symbol table +is simply composed of a sequence of triplets: byte offset, length of symbol, +and the symbol itself. Symbols are not null or newline terminated. Here are +the details on each of these items: +.IP "offset \- vbr encoded 32\-bit integer" 4 +.IX Item "offset - vbr encoded 32-bit integer" +The offset item provides the offset into the archive file where the bytecode +member is stored that is associated with the symbol. The offset value is 0 +based at the start of the first \*(L"normal\*(R" file member. To derive the actual +file offset of the member, you must add the number of bytes occupied by the file +signature (8 bytes) and the symbol tables. The value of this item is encoded +using variable bit rate encoding to reduce the size of the symbol table. +Variable bit rate encoding uses the high bit (0x80) of each byte to indicate +if there are more bytes to follow. The remaining 7 bits in each byte carry bits +from the value. The final byte does not have the high bit set. +.IP "length \- vbr encoded 32\-bit integer" 4 +.IX Item "length - vbr encoded 32-bit integer" +The length item provides the length of the symbol that follows. Like this +\&\fIoffset\fR item, the length is variable bit rate encoded. +.IP "symbol \- character array" 4 +.IX Item "symbol - character array" +The symbol item provides the text of the symbol that is associated with the +\&\fIoffset\fR. The symbol is not terminated by any character. Its length is provided +by the \fIlength\fR field. Note that is allowed (but unwise) to use non-printing +characters (even 0x00) in the symbol. This allows for multiple encodings of +symbol names. +.SH "EXIT STATUS" +.IX Header "EXIT STATUS" +If \fBllvm-ar\fR succeeds, it will exit with 0. A usage error, results +in an exit code of 1. A hard (file system typically) error results in an +exit code of 2. Miscellaneous or unknown errors result in an +exit code of 3. +.SH "SEE ALSO" +.IX Header "SEE ALSO" +llvm-ranlib, \fIar\fR\|(1) +.SH "AUTHORS" +.IX Header "AUTHORS" +Maintained by the \s-1LLVM\s0 Team (<http://llvm.org>). diff --git a/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-as.1 b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-as.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..fe17759761 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-as.1 @@ -0,0 +1,182 @@ +.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14 +.\" +.\" Standard preamble: +.\" ======================================================================== +.de Sh \" Subsection heading +.br +.if t .Sp +.ne 5 +.PP +\fB\\$1\fR +.PP +.. +.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) +.if t .sp .5v +.if n .sp +.. +.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text +.ft CW +.nf +.ne \\$1 +.. +.de Ve \" End verbatim text +.ft R +.fi +.. +.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will +.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left +.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a +.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to +.\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' +.\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. +.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr +.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' +.ie n \{\ +. ds -- \(*W- +. ds PI pi +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch +. ds L" "" +. ds R" "" +. ds C` "" +. ds C' "" +'br\} +.el\{\ +. ds -- \|\(em\| +. ds PI \(*p +. ds L" `` +. ds R" '' +'br\} +.\" +.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for +.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index +.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the +.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. +.if \nF \{\ +. de IX +. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" +.. +. nr % 0 +. rr F +.\} +.\" +.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes +.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. +.hy 0 +.if n .na +.\" +.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). +.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. +. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds #H 0 +. ds #V .8m +. ds #F .3m +. ds #[ \f1 +. ds #] \fP +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) +. ds #V .6m +. ds #F 0 +. ds #[ \& +. ds #] \& +.\} +. \" simple accents for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds ' \& +. ds ` \& +. ds ^ \& +. ds , \& +. ds ~ ~ +. ds / +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" +. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' +. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' +. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' +.\} +. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents +.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' +.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' +.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] +.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' +.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' +.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] +.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] +.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e +.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E +. \" corrections for vroff +.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' +.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' +. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) +.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ +\{\ +. ds : e +. ds 8 ss +. ds o a +. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga +. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy +. ds th \o'bp' +. ds Th \o'LP' +. ds ae ae +. ds Ae AE +.\} +.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C +.\" ======================================================================== +.\" +.IX Title "LLVM-AS 1" +.TH LLVM-AS 1 "2006-03-13" "CVS" "LLVM Command Guide" +.SH "NAME" +llvm\-as \- LLVM assembler +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.IX Header "SYNOPSIS" +\&\fBllvm-as\fR [\fIoptions\fR] [\fIfilename\fR] +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +.IX Header "DESCRIPTION" +\&\fBllvm-as\fR is the \s-1LLVM\s0 assembler. It reads a file containing human-readable +\&\s-1LLVM\s0 assembly language, translates it to \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode, and writes the result +into a file or to standard output. +.PP +If \fIfilename\fR is omitted or is \f(CW\*(C`\-\*(C'\fR, then \fBllvm-as\fR reads its input from +standard input. +.PP +If an output file is not specified with the \fB\-o\fR option, then +\&\fBllvm-as\fR sends its output to a file or standard output by following +these rules: +.IP "\(bu" 4 +If the input is standard input, then the output is standard output. +.IP "\(bu" 4 +If the input is a file that ends with \f(CW\*(C`.ll\*(C'\fR, then the output file is of +the same name, except that the suffix is changed to \f(CW\*(C`.bc\*(C'\fR. +.IP "\(bu" 4 +If the input is a file that does not end with the \f(CW\*(C`.ll\*(C'\fR suffix, then the +output file has the same name as the input file, except that the \f(CW\*(C`.bc\*(C'\fR +suffix is appended. +.SH "OPTIONS" +.IX Header "OPTIONS" +.IP "\fB\-f\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-f" +Force overwrite. Normally, \fBllvm-as\fR will refuse to overwrite an +output file that already exists. With this option, \fBllvm-as\fR +will overwrite the output file and replace it with new bytecode. +.IP "\fB\-\-help\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--help" +Print a summary of command line options. +.IP "\fB\-o\fR \fIfilename\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-o filename" +Specify the output file name. If \fIfilename\fR is \f(CW\*(C`\-\*(C'\fR, then \fBllvm-as\fR +sends its output to standard output. +.SH "EXIT STATUS" +.IX Header "EXIT STATUS" +If \fBllvm-as\fR succeeds, it will exit with 0. Otherwise, if an error +occurs, it will exit with a non-zero value. +.SH "SEE ALSO" +.IX Header "SEE ALSO" +llvm-dis, gccas +.SH "AUTHORS" +.IX Header "AUTHORS" +Maintained by the \s-1LLVM\s0 Team (<http://llvm.org>). diff --git a/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-bcanalyzer.1 b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-bcanalyzer.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..eeb6270fd3 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-bcanalyzer.1 @@ -0,0 +1,370 @@ +.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14 +.\" +.\" Standard preamble: +.\" ======================================================================== +.de Sh \" Subsection heading +.br +.if t .Sp +.ne 5 +.PP +\fB\\$1\fR +.PP +.. +.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) +.if t .sp .5v +.if n .sp +.. +.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text +.ft CW +.nf +.ne \\$1 +.. +.de Ve \" End verbatim text +.ft R +.fi +.. +.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will +.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left +.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a +.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to +.\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' +.\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. +.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr +.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' +.ie n \{\ +. ds -- \(*W- +. ds PI pi +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch +. ds L" "" +. ds R" "" +. ds C` "" +. ds C' "" +'br\} +.el\{\ +. ds -- \|\(em\| +. ds PI \(*p +. ds L" `` +. ds R" '' +'br\} +.\" +.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for +.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index +.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the +.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. +.if \nF \{\ +. de IX +. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" +.. +. nr % 0 +. rr F +.\} +.\" +.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes +.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. +.hy 0 +.if n .na +.\" +.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). +.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. +. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds #H 0 +. ds #V .8m +. ds #F .3m +. ds #[ \f1 +. ds #] \fP +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) +. ds #V .6m +. ds #F 0 +. ds #[ \& +. ds #] \& +.\} +. \" simple accents for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds ' \& +. ds ` \& +. ds ^ \& +. ds , \& +. ds ~ ~ +. ds / +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" +. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' +. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' +. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' +.\} +. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents +.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' +.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' +.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] +.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' +.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' +.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] +.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] +.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e +.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E +. \" corrections for vroff +.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' +.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' +. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) +.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ +\{\ +. ds : e +. ds 8 ss +. ds o a +. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga +. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy +. ds th \o'bp' +. ds Th \o'LP' +. ds ae ae +. ds Ae AE +.\} +.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C +.\" ======================================================================== +.\" +.IX Title "LLVM-BCANALYZER 1" +.TH LLVM-BCANALYZER 1 "2006-03-13" "CVS" "LLVM Command Guide" +.SH "NAME" +llvm\-bcanalyzer \- LLVM bytecode analyzer +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.IX Header "SYNOPSIS" +\&\fBllvm-bcanalyzer\fR [\fIoptions\fR] [\fIfilename\fR] +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +.IX Header "DESCRIPTION" +The \fBllvm-bcanalyzer\fR command is a small utility for analyzing bytecode files. +The tool reads a bytecode file (such as generated with the \fBllvm-as\fR tool) and +produces a statistical report on the contents of the byteocde file. The tool +can also dump a low level but human readable version of the bytecode file. +This tool is probably not of much interest or utility except for those working +directly with the bytecode file format. Most \s-1LLVM\s0 users can just ignore +this tool. +.PP +If \fIfilename\fR is omitted or is \f(CW\*(C`\-\*(C'\fR, then \fBllvm-bcanalyzer\fR reads its input +from standard input. This is useful for combining the tool into a pipeline. +Output is written to the standard output. +.SH "OPTIONS" +.IX Header "OPTIONS" +.IP "\fB\-nodetails\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-nodetails" +Causes \fBllvm-bcanalyzer\fR to abbreviate its output by writing out only a module +level summary. The details for individual functions are not displayed. +.IP "\fB\-dump\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-dump" +Causes \fBllvm-bcanalyzer\fR to dump the bytecode in a human readable format. This +format is significantly different from \s-1LLVM\s0 assembly and provides details about +the encoding of the bytecode file. +.IP "\fB\-verify\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-verify" +Causes \fBllvm-bcanalyzer\fR to verify the module produced by reading the +bytecode. This ensures that the statistics generated are based on a consistent +module. +.IP "\fB\-\-help\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--help" +Print a summary of command line options. +.SH "EXIT STATUS" +.IX Header "EXIT STATUS" +If \fBllvm-bcanalyzer\fR succeeds, it will exit with 0. Otherwise, if an error +occurs, it will exit with a non-zero value, usually 1. +.SH "SUMMARY OUTPUT DEFINITIONS" +.IX Header "SUMMARY OUTPUT DEFINITIONS" +The following items are always printed by llvm\-bcanalyzer. They comprize the +summary output. +.IP "\fBBytecode Analysis Of Module\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Bytecode Analysis Of Module" +This just provides the name of the module for which bytecode analysis is being +generated. +.IP "\fBBytecode Version Number\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Bytecode Version Number" +The bytecode version (not \s-1LLVM\s0 version) of the file read by the analyzer. +.IP "\fBFile Size\fR" 4 +.IX Item "File Size" +The size, in bytes, of the entire bytecode file. +.IP "\fBModule Bytes\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Module Bytes" +The size, in bytes, of the module block. Percentage is relative to File Size. +.IP "\fBFunction Bytes\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Function Bytes" +The size, in bytes, of all the function blocks. Percentage is relative to File +Size. +.IP "\fBGlobal Types Bytes\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Global Types Bytes" +The size, in bytes, of the Global Types Pool. Percentage is relative to File +Size. This is the size of the definitions of all types in the bytecode file. +.IP "\fBConstant Pool Bytes\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Constant Pool Bytes" +The size, in bytes, of the Constant Pool Blocks Percentage is relative to File +Size. +.IP "\fBModule Globals Bytes\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Module Globals Bytes" +Ths size, in bytes, of the Global Variable Definitions and their initializers. +Percentage is relative to File Size. +.IP "\fBInstruction List Bytes\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Instruction List Bytes" +The size, in bytes, of all the instruction lists in all the functions. +Percentage is relative to File Size. Note that this value is also included in +the Function Bytes. +.IP "\fBCompaction Table Bytes\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Compaction Table Bytes" +The size, in bytes, of all the compaction tables in all the functions. +Percentage is relative to File Size. Note that this value is also included in +the Function Bytes. +.IP "\fBSymbol Table Bytes\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Symbol Table Bytes" +The size, in bytes, of all the symbol tables in all the functions. Percentage is +relative to File Size. Note that this value is also included in the Function +Bytes. +.IP "\fBDependent Libraries Bytes\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Dependent Libraries Bytes" +The size, in bytes, of the list of dependent libraries in the module. Percentage +is relative to File Size. Note that this value is also included in the Module +Global Bytes. +.IP "\fBNumber Of Bytecode Blocks\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Number Of Bytecode Blocks" +The total number of blocks of any kind in the bytecode file. +.IP "\fBNumber Of Functions\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Number Of Functions" +The total number of function definitions in the bytecode file. +.IP "\fBNumber Of Types\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Number Of Types" +The total number of types defined in the Global Types Pool. +.IP "\fBNumber Of Constants\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Number Of Constants" +The total number of constants (of any type) defined in the Constant Pool. +.IP "\fBNumber Of Basic Blocks\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Number Of Basic Blocks" +The total number of basic blocks defined in all functions in the bytecode file. +.IP "\fBNumber Of Instructions\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Number Of Instructions" +The total number of instructions defined in all functions in the bytecode file. +.IP "\fBNumber Of Long Instructions\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Number Of Long Instructions" +The total number of long instructions defined in all functions in the bytecode +file. Long instructions are those taking greater than 4 bytes. Typically long +instructions are GetElementPtr with several indices, \s-1PHI\s0 nodes, and calls to +functions with large numbers of arguments. +.IP "\fBNumber Of Operands\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Number Of Operands" +The total number of operands used in all instructions in the bytecode file. +.IP "\fBNumber Of Compaction Tables\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Number Of Compaction Tables" +The total number of compaction tables in all functions in the bytecode file. +.IP "\fBNumber Of Symbol Tables\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Number Of Symbol Tables" +The total number of symbol tables in all functions in the bytecode file. +.IP "\fBNumber Of Dependent Libs\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Number Of Dependent Libs" +The total number of dependent libraries found in the bytecode file. +.IP "\fBTotal Instruction Size\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Total Instruction Size" +The total size of the instructions in all functions in the bytecode file. +.IP "\fBAverage Instruction Size\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Average Instruction Size" +The average number of bytes per instruction across all functions in the bytecode +file. This value is computed by dividing Total Instruction Size by Number Of +Instructions. +.IP "\fBMaximum Type Slot Number\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Maximum Type Slot Number" +The maximum value used for a type's slot number. Larger slot number values take +more bytes to encode. +.IP "\fBMaximum Value Slot Number\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Maximum Value Slot Number" +The maximum value used for a value's slot number. Larger slot number values take +more bytes to encode. +.IP "\fBBytes Per Value\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Bytes Per Value" +The average size of a Value definition (of any type). This is computed by +dividing File Size by the total number of values of any type. +.IP "\fBBytes Per Global\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Bytes Per Global" +The average size of a global definition (constants and global variables). +.IP "\fBBytes Per Function\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Bytes Per Function" +The average number of bytes per function definition. This is computed by +dividing Function Bytes by Number Of Functions. +.IP "\fB# of \s-1VBR\s0 32\-bit Integers\fR" 4 +.IX Item "# of VBR 32-bit Integers" +The total number of 32\-bit integers encoded using the Variable Bit Rate +encoding scheme. +.IP "\fB# of \s-1VBR\s0 64\-bit Integers\fR" 4 +.IX Item "# of VBR 64-bit Integers" +The total number of 64\-bit integers encoded using the Variable Bit Rate encoding +scheme. +.IP "\fB# of \s-1VBR\s0 Compressed Bytes\fR" 4 +.IX Item "# of VBR Compressed Bytes" +The total number of bytes consumed by the 32\-bit and 64\-bit integers that use +the Variable Bit Rate encoding scheme. +.IP "\fB# of \s-1VBR\s0 Expanded Bytes\fR" 4 +.IX Item "# of VBR Expanded Bytes" +The total number of bytes that would have been consumed by the 32\-bit and 64\-bit +integers had they not been compressed with the Variable Bit Rage encoding +scheme. +.IP "\fBBytes Saved With \s-1VBR\s0\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Bytes Saved With VBR" +The total number of bytes saved by using the Variable Bit Rate encoding scheme. +The percentage is relative to # of \s-1VBR\s0 Expanded Bytes. +.SH "DETAILED OUTPUT DEFINITIONS" +.IX Header "DETAILED OUTPUT DEFINITIONS" +The following definitions occur only if the \-nodetails option was not given. +The detailed output provides additional information on a per-function basis. +.IP "\fBType\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Type" +The type signature of the function. +.IP "\fBByte Size\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Byte Size" +The total number of bytes in the function's block. +.IP "\fBBasic Blocks\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Basic Blocks" +The number of basic blocks defined by the function. +.IP "\fBInstructions\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Instructions" +The number of instructions defined by the function. +.IP "\fBLong Instructions\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Long Instructions" +The number of instructions using the long instruction format in the function. +.IP "\fBOperands\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Operands" +The number of operands used by all instructions in the function. +.IP "\fBInstruction Size\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Instruction Size" +The number of bytes consumed by instructions in the function. +.IP "\fBAverage Instruction Size\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Average Instruction Size" +The average number of bytes consumed by the instructions in the funtion. This +value is computed by dividing Instruction Size by Instructions. +.IP "\fBBytes Per Instruction\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Bytes Per Instruction" +The average number of bytes used by the function per instruction. This value is +computed by dividing Byte Size by Instructions. Note that this is not the same +as Average Instruction Size. It computes a number relative to the total function +size not just the size of the instruction list. +.IP "\fBNumber of \s-1VBR\s0 32\-bit Integers\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Number of VBR 32-bit Integers" +The total number of 32\-bit integers found in this function (for any use). +.IP "\fBNumber of \s-1VBR\s0 64\-bit Integers\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Number of VBR 64-bit Integers" +The total number of 64\-bit integers found in this function (for any use). +.IP "\fBNumber of \s-1VBR\s0 Compressed Bytes\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Number of VBR Compressed Bytes" +The total number of bytes in this function consumed by the 32\-bit and 64\-bit +integers that use the Variable Bit Rate encoding scheme. +.IP "\fBNumber of \s-1VBR\s0 Expanded Bytes\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Number of VBR Expanded Bytes" +The total number of bytes in this function that would have been consumed by +the 32\-bit and 64\-bit integers had they not been compressed with the Variable +Bit Rate encoding scheme. +.IP "\fBBytes Saved With \s-1VBR\s0\fR" 4 +.IX Item "Bytes Saved With VBR" +The total number of bytes saved in this function by using the Variable Bit +Rate encoding scheme. The percentage is relative to # of \s-1VBR\s0 Expanded Bytes. +.SH "SEE ALSO" +.IX Header "SEE ALSO" +llvm-dis, <http://llvm.org/docs/BytecodeFormat.html> +.SH "AUTHORS" +.IX Header "AUTHORS" +Maintained by the \s-1LLVM\s0 Team (<http://llvm.org>). diff --git a/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-config.1 b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-config.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..5246ecaccb --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-config.1 @@ -0,0 +1,227 @@ +.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14 +.\" +.\" Standard preamble: +.\" ======================================================================== +.de Sh \" Subsection heading +.br +.if t .Sp +.ne 5 +.PP +\fB\\$1\fR +.PP +.. +.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) +.if t .sp .5v +.if n .sp +.. +.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text +.ft CW +.nf +.ne \\$1 +.. +.de Ve \" End verbatim text +.ft R +.fi +.. +.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will +.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left +.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a +.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to +.\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' +.\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. +.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr +.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' +.ie n \{\ +. ds -- \(*W- +. ds PI pi +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch +. ds L" "" +. ds R" "" +. ds C` "" +. ds C' "" +'br\} +.el\{\ +. ds -- \|\(em\| +. ds PI \(*p +. ds L" `` +. ds R" '' +'br\} +.\" +.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for +.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index +.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the +.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. +.if \nF \{\ +. de IX +. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" +.. +. nr % 0 +. rr F +.\} +.\" +.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes +.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. +.hy 0 +.if n .na +.\" +.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). +.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. +. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds #H 0 +. ds #V .8m +. ds #F .3m +. ds #[ \f1 +. ds #] \fP +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) +. ds #V .6m +. ds #F 0 +. ds #[ \& +. ds #] \& +.\} +. \" simple accents for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds ' \& +. ds ` \& +. ds ^ \& +. ds , \& +. ds ~ ~ +. ds / +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" +. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' +. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' +. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' +.\} +. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents +.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' +.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' +.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] +.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' +.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' +.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] +.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] +.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e +.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E +. \" corrections for vroff +.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' +.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' +. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) +.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ +\{\ +. ds : e +. ds 8 ss +. ds o a +. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga +. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy +. ds th \o'bp' +. ds Th \o'LP' +. ds ae ae +. ds Ae AE +.\} +.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C +.\" ======================================================================== +.\" +.IX Title "LLVM-CONFIG 1" +.TH LLVM-CONFIG 1 "2006-08-01" "CVS" "LLVM Command Guide" +.SH "NAME" +llvm\-config \- Print LLVM compilation options +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.IX Header "SYNOPSIS" +\&\fBllvm-config\fR \fIoption\fR [\fIcomponents\fR...] +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +.IX Header "DESCRIPTION" +\&\fBllvm-config\fR makes it easier to build applications that use \s-1LLVM\s0. It can +print the compiler flags, linker flags and object libraries needed to link +against \s-1LLVM\s0. +.SH "EXAMPLES" +.IX Header "EXAMPLES" +To link against the \s-1JIT:\s0 +.PP +.Vb 3 +\& g++ `llvm-config --cxxflags` -o HowToUseJIT.o -c HowToUseJIT.cpp +\& g++ `llvm-config --ldflags` -o HowToUseJIT HowToUseJIT.o \e +\& `llvm-config --libs engine bcreader scalaropts` +.Ve +.SH "OPTIONS" +.IX Header "OPTIONS" +.IP "\fB\-\-version\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--version" +Print the version number of \s-1LLVM\s0. +.IP "\fB\-\-help\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--help" +Print a summary of \fBllvm-config\fR arguments. +.IP "\fB\-\-prefix\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--prefix" +Print the installation prefix for \s-1LLVM\s0. +.IP "\fB\-\-src\-root\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--src-root" +Print the source root from which \s-1LLVM\s0 was built. +.IP "\fB\-\-obj\-root\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--obj-root" +Print the object root used to build \s-1LLVM\s0. +.IP "\fB\-\-bindir\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--bindir" +Print the installation directory for \s-1LLVM\s0 binaries. +.IP "\fB\-\-includedir\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--includedir" +Print the installation directory for \s-1LLVM\s0 headers. +.IP "\fB\-\-libdir\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--libdir" +Print the installation directory for \s-1LLVM\s0 libraries. +.IP "\fB\-\-cxxflags\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--cxxflags" +Print the \*(C+ compiler flags needed to use \s-1LLVM\s0 headers. +.IP "\fB\-\-ldflags\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--ldflags" +Print the flags needed to link against \s-1LLVM\s0 libraries. +.IP "\fB\-\-libs\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--libs" +Print all the libraries needed to link against the specified \s-1LLVM\s0 +\&\fIcomponents\fR, including any dependencies. +.IP "\fB\-\-libnames\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--libnames" +Similar to \fB\-\-libs\fR, but prints the bare filenames of the libraries +without \fB\-l\fR or pathnames. Useful for linking against a not-yet-installed +copy of \s-1LLVM\s0. +.IP "\fB\-\-libfiles\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--libfiles" +Similar to \fB\-\-libs\fR, but print the full path to each library file. This is +useful when creating makefile dependencies, to ensure that a tool is relinked if +any library it uses changes. +.IP "\fB\-\-components\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--components" +Print all valid component names. +.IP "\fB\-\-targets\-built\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--targets-built" +Print the component names for all targets supported by this copy of \s-1LLVM\s0. +.IP "\fB\-\-build\-mode\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--build-mode" +Print the build mode used when \s-1LLVM\s0 was built (e.g. Debug or Release) +.SH "COMPONENTS" +.IX Header "COMPONENTS" +To print a list of all available components, run \fBllvm-config +\&\-\-components\fR. In most cases, components correspond directly to \s-1LLVM\s0 +libraries. Useful \*(L"virtual\*(R" components include: +.IP "\fBall\fR" 4 +.IX Item "all" +Includes all \s-1LLVM\s0 libaries. The default if no components are specified. +.IP "\fBbackend\fR" 4 +.IX Item "backend" +Includes either a native backend or the C backend. +.IP "\fBengine\fR" 4 +.IX Item "engine" +Includes either a native \s-1JIT\s0 or the bytecode interpreter. +.SH "EXIT STATUS" +.IX Header "EXIT STATUS" +If \fBllvm-config\fR succeeds, it will exit with 0. Otherwise, if an error +occurs, it will exit with a non-zero value. +.SH "AUTHORS" +.IX Header "AUTHORS" +Maintained by the \s-1LLVM\s0 Team (<http://llvm.org>). diff --git a/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-db.1 b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-db.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..d27844360e --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-db.1 @@ -0,0 +1,141 @@ +.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14 +.\" +.\" Standard preamble: +.\" ======================================================================== +.de Sh \" Subsection heading +.br +.if t .Sp +.ne 5 +.PP +\fB\\$1\fR +.PP +.. +.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) +.if t .sp .5v +.if n .sp +.. +.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text +.ft CW +.nf +.ne \\$1 +.. +.de Ve \" End verbatim text +.ft R +.fi +.. +.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will +.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left +.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a +.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to +.\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' +.\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. +.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr +.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' +.ie n \{\ +. ds -- \(*W- +. ds PI pi +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch +. ds L" "" +. ds R" "" +. ds C` "" +. ds C' "" +'br\} +.el\{\ +. ds -- \|\(em\| +. ds PI \(*p +. ds L" `` +. ds R" '' +'br\} +.\" +.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for +.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index +.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the +.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. +.if \nF \{\ +. de IX +. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" +.. +. nr % 0 +. rr F +.\} +.\" +.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes +.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. +.hy 0 +.if n .na +.\" +.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). +.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. +. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds #H 0 +. ds #V .8m +. ds #F .3m +. ds #[ \f1 +. ds #] \fP +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) +. ds #V .6m +. ds #F 0 +. ds #[ \& +. ds #] \& +.\} +. \" simple accents for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds ' \& +. ds ` \& +. ds ^ \& +. ds , \& +. ds ~ ~ +. ds / +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" +. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' +. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' +. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' +.\} +. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents +.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' +.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' +.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] +.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' +.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' +.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] +.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] +.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e +.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E +. \" corrections for vroff +.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' +.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' +. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) +.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ +\{\ +. ds : e +. ds 8 ss +. ds o a +. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga +. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy +. ds th \o'bp' +. ds Th \o'LP' +. ds ae ae +. ds Ae AE +.\} +.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C +.\" ======================================================================== +.\" +.IX Title "LLVM-DB 1" +.TH LLVM-DB 1 "2006-03-13" "CVS" "LLVM Command Guide" +.SH "NAME" +llvm\-db \- LLVM debugger (alpha) +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.IX Header "SYNOPSIS" +Details coming soon. Please see +<http://llvm.org/docs/SourceLevelDebugging.html> in the meantime. +.SH "AUTHORS" +.IX Header "AUTHORS" +Maintained by the \s-1LLVM\s0 Team (<http://llvm.org>). diff --git a/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-dis.1 b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-dis.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..2633ad5d71 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-dis.1 @@ -0,0 +1,175 @@ +.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14 +.\" +.\" Standard preamble: +.\" ======================================================================== +.de Sh \" Subsection heading +.br +.if t .Sp +.ne 5 +.PP +\fB\\$1\fR +.PP +.. +.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) +.if t .sp .5v +.if n .sp +.. +.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text +.ft CW +.nf +.ne \\$1 +.. +.de Ve \" End verbatim text +.ft R +.fi +.. +.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will +.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left +.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a +.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to +.\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' +.\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. +.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr +.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' +.ie n \{\ +. ds -- \(*W- +. ds PI pi +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch +. ds L" "" +. ds R" "" +. ds C` "" +. ds C' "" +'br\} +.el\{\ +. ds -- \|\(em\| +. ds PI \(*p +. ds L" `` +. ds R" '' +'br\} +.\" +.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for +.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index +.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the +.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. +.if \nF \{\ +. de IX +. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" +.. +. nr % 0 +. rr F +.\} +.\" +.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes +.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. +.hy 0 +.if n .na +.\" +.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). +.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. +. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds #H 0 +. ds #V .8m +. ds #F .3m +. ds #[ \f1 +. ds #] \fP +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) +. ds #V .6m +. ds #F 0 +. ds #[ \& +. ds #] \& +.\} +. \" simple accents for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds ' \& +. ds ` \& +. ds ^ \& +. ds , \& +. ds ~ ~ +. ds / +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" +. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' +. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' +. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' +.\} +. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents +.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' +.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' +.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] +.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' +.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' +.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] +.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] +.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e +.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E +. \" corrections for vroff +.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' +.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' +. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) +.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ +\{\ +. ds : e +. ds 8 ss +. ds o a +. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga +. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy +. ds th \o'bp' +. ds Th \o'LP' +. ds ae ae +. ds Ae AE +.\} +.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C +.\" ======================================================================== +.\" +.IX Title "LLVM-DIS 1" +.TH LLVM-DIS 1 "2006-03-13" "CVS" "LLVM Command Guide" +.SH "NAME" +llvm\-dis \- LLVM disassembler +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.IX Header "SYNOPSIS" +\&\fBllvm-dis\fR [\fIoptions\fR] [\fIfilename\fR] +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +.IX Header "DESCRIPTION" +The \fBllvm-dis\fR command is the \s-1LLVM\s0 disassembler. It takes an \s-1LLVM\s0 +bytecode file and converts it into human-readable \s-1LLVM\s0 assembly language. +.PP +If filename is omitted or specified as \f(CW\*(C`\-\*(C'\fR, \fBllvm-dis\fR reads its +input from standard input. +.PP +If the input is being read from standard input, then \fBllvm-dis\fR +will send its output to standard output by default. Otherwise, the +output will be written to a file named after the input file, with +a \f(CW\*(C`.ll\*(C'\fR suffix added (any existing \f(CW\*(C`.bc\*(C'\fR suffix will first be +removed). You can override the choice of output file using the +\&\fB\-o\fR option. +.SH "OPTIONS" +.IX Header "OPTIONS" +.IP "\fB\-f\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-f" +Force overwrite. Normally, \fBllvm-dis\fR will refuse to overwrite +an output file that already exists. With this option, \fBllvm-dis\fR +will overwrite the output file. +.IP "\fB\-\-help\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--help" +Print a summary of command line options. +.IP "\fB\-o\fR \fIfilename\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-o filename" +Specify the output file name. If \fIfilename\fR is \-, then the output is sent +to standard output. +.SH "EXIT STATUS" +.IX Header "EXIT STATUS" +If \fBllvm-dis\fR succeeds, it will exit with 0. Otherwise, if an error +occurs, it will exit with a non-zero value. +.SH "SEE ALSO" +.IX Header "SEE ALSO" +llvm-as +.SH "AUTHORS" +.IX Header "AUTHORS" +Maintained by the \s-1LLVM\s0 Team (<http://llvm.org>). diff --git a/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-extract.1 b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-extract.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..fdbef37a3a --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-extract.1 @@ -0,0 +1,177 @@ +.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14 +.\" +.\" Standard preamble: +.\" ======================================================================== +.de Sh \" Subsection heading +.br +.if t .Sp +.ne 5 +.PP +\fB\\$1\fR +.PP +.. +.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) +.if t .sp .5v +.if n .sp +.. +.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text +.ft CW +.nf +.ne \\$1 +.. +.de Ve \" End verbatim text +.ft R +.fi +.. +.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will +.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left +.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a +.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to +.\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' +.\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. +.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr +.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' +.ie n \{\ +. ds -- \(*W- +. ds PI pi +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch +. ds L" "" +. ds R" "" +. ds C` "" +. ds C' "" +'br\} +.el\{\ +. ds -- \|\(em\| +. ds PI \(*p +. ds L" `` +. ds R" '' +'br\} +.\" +.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for +.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index +.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the +.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. +.if \nF \{\ +. de IX +. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" +.. +. nr % 0 +. rr F +.\} +.\" +.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes +.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. +.hy 0 +.if n .na +.\" +.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). +.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. +. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds #H 0 +. ds #V .8m +. ds #F .3m +. ds #[ \f1 +. ds #] \fP +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) +. ds #V .6m +. ds #F 0 +. ds #[ \& +. ds #] \& +.\} +. \" simple accents for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds ' \& +. ds ` \& +. ds ^ \& +. ds , \& +. ds ~ ~ +. ds / +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" +. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' +. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' +. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' +.\} +. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents +.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' +.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' +.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] +.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' +.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' +.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] +.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] +.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e +.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E +. \" corrections for vroff +.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' +.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' +. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) +.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ +\{\ +. ds : e +. ds 8 ss +. ds o a +. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga +. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy +. ds th \o'bp' +. ds Th \o'LP' +. ds ae ae +. ds Ae AE +.\} +.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C +.\" ======================================================================== +.\" +.IX Title "LLVM-EXTRACT 1" +.TH LLVM-EXTRACT 1 "2006-03-13" "CVS" "LLVM Command Guide" +.SH "NAME" +llvm\-extract \- extract a function from an LLVM module +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.IX Header "SYNOPSIS" +\&\fBllvm-extract\fR [\fIoptions\fR] \fB\-\-func\fR \fIfunction-name\fR [\fIfilename\fR] +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +.IX Header "DESCRIPTION" +The \fBllvm-extract\fR command takes the name of a function and extracts it from +the specified \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode file. It is primarily used as a debugging tool to +reduce test cases from larger programs that are triggering a bug. +.PP +In addition to extracting the bytecode of the specified function, +\&\fBllvm-extract\fR will also remove unreachable global variables, prototypes, and +unused types. +.PP +The \fBllvm-extract\fR command reads its input from standard input if filename is +omitted or if filename is \-. The output is always written to standard output, +unless the \fB\-o\fR option is specified (see below). +.SH "OPTIONS" +.IX Header "OPTIONS" +.IP "\fB\-f\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-f" +Force overwrite. Normally, \fBllvm-extract\fR will refuse to overwrite an +output file that already exists. With this option, \fBllvm-extract\fR +will overwrite the output file and replace it with new bytecode. +.IP "\fB\-\-func\fR \fIfunction-name\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--func function-name" +Extract the function named \fIfunction-name\fR from the \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode. +.IP "\fB\-\-help\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--help" +Print a summary of command line options. +.IP "\fB\-o\fR \fIfilename\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-o filename" +Specify the output filename. If filename is \*(L"\-\*(R" (the default), then +\&\fBllvm-extract\fR sends its output to standard output. +.SH "EXIT STATUS" +.IX Header "EXIT STATUS" +If \fBllvm-extract\fR succeeds, it will exit with 0. Otherwise, if an error +occurs, it will exit with a non-zero value. +.SH "SEE ALSO" +.IX Header "SEE ALSO" +bugpoint +.SH "AUTHORS" +.IX Header "AUTHORS" +Maintained by the \s-1LLVM\s0 Team (<http://llvm.org>). diff --git a/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-ld.1 b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-ld.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..cd079b5994 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-ld.1 @@ -0,0 +1,348 @@ +.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14 +.\" +.\" Standard preamble: +.\" ======================================================================== +.de Sh \" Subsection heading +.br +.if t .Sp +.ne 5 +.PP +\fB\\$1\fR +.PP +.. +.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) +.if t .sp .5v +.if n .sp +.. +.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text +.ft CW +.nf +.ne \\$1 +.. +.de Ve \" End verbatim text +.ft R +.fi +.. +.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will +.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left +.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a +.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to +.\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' +.\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. +.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr +.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' +.ie n \{\ +. ds -- \(*W- +. ds PI pi +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch +. ds L" "" +. ds R" "" +. ds C` "" +. ds C' "" +'br\} +.el\{\ +. ds -- \|\(em\| +. ds PI \(*p +. ds L" `` +. ds R" '' +'br\} +.\" +.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for +.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index +.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the +.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. +.if \nF \{\ +. de IX +. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" +.. +. nr % 0 +. rr F +.\} +.\" +.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes +.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. +.hy 0 +.if n .na +.\" +.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). +.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. +. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds #H 0 +. ds #V .8m +. ds #F .3m +. ds #[ \f1 +. ds #] \fP +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) +. ds #V .6m +. ds #F 0 +. ds #[ \& +. ds #] \& +.\} +. \" simple accents for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds ' \& +. ds ` \& +. ds ^ \& +. ds , \& +. ds ~ ~ +. ds / +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" +. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' +. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' +. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' +.\} +. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents +.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' +.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' +.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] +.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' +.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' +.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] +.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] +.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e +.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E +. \" corrections for vroff +.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' +.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' +. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) +.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ +\{\ +. ds : e +. ds 8 ss +. ds o a +. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga +. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy +. ds th \o'bp' +. ds Th \o'LP' +. ds ae ae +. ds Ae AE +.\} +.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C +.\" ======================================================================== +.\" +.IX Title "LLVM-LD 1" +.TH LLVM-LD 1 "2007-05-06" "CVS" "LLVM Command Guide" +.SH "NAME" +llvm\-ld \- LLVM linker +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.IX Header "SYNOPSIS" +\&\fBllvm-ld\fR <options> <files> +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +.IX Header "DESCRIPTION" +The \fBllvm-ld\fR tool takes a set of \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode files and links them +together into a single \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode file. The output bytecode file can be +another bytecode file or an executable bytecode program. Using additional +options, \fBllvm-ld\fR is able to produce native code executables. +.PP +The \fBllvm-ld\fR tool is the main linker for \s-1LLVM\s0. It is used to link together +the output of \s-1LLVM\s0 front-end compilers and run \*(L"link time\*(R" optimizations (mostly +the inter-procedural kind). +.PP +The \fBllvm-ld\fR tools attemps to mimic the interface provided by the default +system linker so that it can act as a \fIdrop-in\fR replacement. +.Sh "Search Order" +.IX Subsection "Search Order" +When looking for objects specified on the command line, \fBllvm-ld\fR will search +for the object first in the current directory and then in the directory +specified by the \fB\s-1LLVM_LIB_SEARCH_PATH\s0\fR environment variable. If it cannot +find the object, it fails. +.PP +When looking for a library specified with the \fB\-l\fR option, \fBllvm-ld\fR first +attempts to load a file with that name from the current directory. If that +fails, it looks for lib\fIlibrary\fR.bc, lib\fIlibrary\fR.a, or lib\fIlibrary\fR.\fIshared +library extension\fR, in that order, in each directory added to the library search +path with the \fB\-L\fR option. These directories are searched in the order they +are specified. If the library cannot be located, then \fBllvm-ld\fR looks in the +directory specified by the \fB\s-1LLVM_LIB_SEARCH_PATH\s0\fR environment variable. If it +does not find a library there, it fails. +.PP +The \fIshared library extension\fR may be \fI.so\fR, \fI.dyld\fR, \fI.dll\fR, or something +different, depending upon the system. +.PP +The \fB\-L\fR option is global. It does not matter where it is specified in the +list of command line arguments; the directory is simply added to the search path +and is applied to all libraries, preceding or succeeding, in the command line. +.Sh "Link order" +.IX Subsection "Link order" +All object and bytecode files are linked first in the order they were +specified on the command line. All library files are linked next. +Some libraries may not be linked into the object program; see below. +.Sh "Library Linkage" +.IX Subsection "Library Linkage" +Object files and static bytecode objects are always linked into the output +file. Library archives (.a files) load only the objects within the archive +that define symbols needed by the output file. Hence, libraries should be +listed after the object files and libraries which need them; otherwise, the +library may not be linked in, and the dependent library will not have its +undefined symbols defined. +.Sh "Native code generation" +.IX Subsection "Native code generation" +The \fBllvm-ld\fR program has limited support for native code generation, when +using the \fB\-native\fR or \fB\-native\-cbe\fR options. Native code generation is +perfomed by converting the linked bytecode into native assembly (.s) or C code +and running the system compiler (typically gcc) on the result. +.SH "OPTIONS" +.IX Header "OPTIONS" +.Sh "General Options" +.IX Subsection "General Options" +.IP "\fB\-help\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-help" +Print a summary of command line options. +.IP "\fB\-v\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-v" +Specifies verbose mode. In this mode the linker will print additional +information about the actions it takes, programs it executes, etc. +.IP "\fB\-stats\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-stats" +Print statistics. +.IP "\fB\-time\-passes\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-time-passes" +Record the amount of time needed for each pass and print it to standard +error. +.Sh "Input/Output Options" +.IX Subsection "Input/Output Options" +.IP "\fB\-o\fR \fIfilename\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-o filename" +This overrides the default output file and specifies the name of the file that +should be generated by the linker. By default, \fBllvm-ld\fR generates a file named +\&\fIa.out\fR for compatibility with \fBld\fR. The output will be written to +\&\fIfilename\fR. +.IP "\fB\-l\fR\fIname\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-lname" +This option specifies the \fIname\fR of a library to search when resolving symbols +for the program. Only the base name should be specified as \fIname\fR, without a +\&\fIlib\fR prefix or any suffix. +.IP "\fB\-L\fR\fIPath\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-LPath" +This option tells \fBllvm-ld\fR to look in \fIPath\fR to find any library subsequently +specified with the \fB\-l\fR option. The paths will be searched in the order in +which they are specified on the command line. If the library is still not found, +a small set of system specific directories will also be searched. Note that +libraries specified with the \fB\-l\fR option that occur \fIbefore\fR any \fB\-L\fR options +will not search the paths given by the \fB\-L\fR options following it. +.IP "\fB\-link\-as\-library\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-link-as-library" +Link the bytecode files together as a library, not an executable. In this mode, +undefined symbols will be permitted. +.IP "\fB\-r\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-r" +An alias for \-link\-as\-library. +.ie n .IP "\fB\-march=\fR""target""" 4 +.el .IP "\fB\-march=\fR\f(CWtarget\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-march=target" +Specifies the kind of machine for which code or assembly should be generated. +.IP "\fB\-native\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-native" +Generate a native machine code executable. +.Sp +When generating native executables, \fBllvm-ld\fR first checks for a bytecode +version of the library and links it in, if necessary. If the library is +missing, \fBllvm-ld\fR skips it. Then, \fBllvm-ld\fR links in the same +libraries as native code. +.Sp +In this way, \fBllvm-ld\fR should be able to link in optimized bytecode +subsets of common libraries and then link in any part of the library that +hasn't been converted to bytecode. +.IP "\fB\-native\-cbe\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-native-cbe" +Generate a native machine code executable with the \s-1LLVM\s0 C backend. +.Sp +This option is identical to the \fB\-native\fR option, but uses the +C backend to generate code for the program instead of an \s-1LLVM\s0 native +code generator. +.Sh "Optimization Options" +.IX Subsection "Optimization Options" +.IP "\fB\-O0\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-O0" +An alias for the \-O1 option. +.IP "\fB\-O1\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-O1" +Optimize for linking speed, not execution speed. The optimizer will attempt to +reduce the size of the linked program to reduce I/O but will not otherwise +perform any link-time optimizations. +.IP "\fB\-O2\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-O2" +Perform only the minimal or required set of scalar optimizations. +.IP "\fB\-03\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-03" +An alias for the \-O2 option. +.IP "\fB\-04\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-04" +Perform the standard link time inter-procedural optimizations. This will +attempt to optimize the program taking the entire program into consideration. +.IP "\fB\-O5\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-O5" +Perform aggressive link time optimizations. This is the same as \-O4 but works +more aggressively to optimize the program. +.IP "\fB\-disable\-inlining\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-disable-inlining" +Do not run the inlining pass. Functions will not be inlined into other +functions. +.IP "\fB\-disable\-opt\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-disable-opt" +Completely disable optimization. The various \fB\-On\fR options will be ignored and +no link time optimization passes will be run. +.IP "\fB\-disable\-internalize\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-disable-internalize" +Do not mark all symbols as internal. +.IP "\fB\-verify\-each\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-verify-each" +Run the verification pass after each of the passes to verify intermediate +results. +.IP "\fB\-strip\-all\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-strip-all" +Strip all debug and symbol information from the executable to make it smaller. +.IP "\fB\-strip\-debug\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-strip-debug" +Strip all debug information from the executable to make it smaller. +.IP "\fB\-s\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-s" +An alias for \fB\-strip\-all\fR. +.IP "\fB\-S\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-S" +An alias for \fB\-strip\-debug\fR. +.IP "\fB\-export\-dynamic\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-export-dynamic" +An alias for \fB\-disable\-internalize\fR +.IP "\fB\-load\fR \fImodule\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-load module" +Load an optimization module, \fImodule\fR, which is expected to be a dynamic +library that provides the function name \f(CW\*(C`RunOptimizations\*(C'\fR. This function will +be passed the PassManager, and the optimization level (values 0\-5 based on the +\&\fB\-On\fR option). This function may add passes to the PassManager that should be +run. This feature allows the optimization passes of \fBllvm-ld\fR to be extended. +.IP "\fB\-post\-link\-opt\fR\fIPath\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-post-link-optPath" +Run post-link optimization program. After linking is completed a bytecode file +will be generated. It will be passed to the program specified by \fIPath\fR as the +first argument. The second argument to the program will be the name of a +temporary file into which the program should place its optimized output. For +example, the \*(L"no\-op optimization\*(R" would be a simple shell script: +.Sp +.Vb 2 +\& #!/bin/bash +\& cp $1 $2 +.Ve +.SH "EXIT STATUS" +.IX Header "EXIT STATUS" +If \fBllvm-ld\fR succeeds, it will exit with 0 return code. If an error occurs, +it will exit with a non-zero return code. +.SH "ENVIRONMENT" +.IX Header "ENVIRONMENT" +The \f(CW\*(C`LLVM_LIB_SEARCH_PATH\*(C'\fR environment variable is used to find bytecode +libraries. Any paths specified in this variable will be searched after the \f(CW\*(C`\-L\*(C'\fR +options. +.SH "SEE ALSO" +.IX Header "SEE ALSO" +llvm-link +.SH "AUTHORS" +.IX Header "AUTHORS" +Maintained by the \s-1LLVM\s0 Team (<http://llvm.org>). diff --git a/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-link.1 b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-link.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..1702dbe392 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-link.1 @@ -0,0 +1,186 @@ +.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14 +.\" +.\" Standard preamble: +.\" ======================================================================== +.de Sh \" Subsection heading +.br +.if t .Sp +.ne 5 +.PP +\fB\\$1\fR +.PP +.. +.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) +.if t .sp .5v +.if n .sp +.. +.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text +.ft CW +.nf +.ne \\$1 +.. +.de Ve \" End verbatim text +.ft R +.fi +.. +.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will +.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left +.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a +.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to +.\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' +.\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. +.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr +.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' +.ie n \{\ +. ds -- \(*W- +. ds PI pi +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch +. ds L" "" +. ds R" "" +. ds C` "" +. ds C' "" +'br\} +.el\{\ +. ds -- \|\(em\| +. ds PI \(*p +. ds L" `` +. ds R" '' +'br\} +.\" +.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for +.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index +.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the +.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. +.if \nF \{\ +. de IX +. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" +.. +. nr % 0 +. rr F +.\} +.\" +.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes +.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. +.hy 0 +.if n .na +.\" +.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). +.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. +. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds #H 0 +. ds #V .8m +. ds #F .3m +. ds #[ \f1 +. ds #] \fP +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) +. ds #V .6m +. ds #F 0 +. ds #[ \& +. ds #] \& +.\} +. \" simple accents for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds ' \& +. ds ` \& +. ds ^ \& +. ds , \& +. ds ~ ~ +. ds / +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" +. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' +. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' +. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' +.\} +. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents +.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' +.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' +.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] +.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' +.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' +.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] +.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] +.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e +.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E +. \" corrections for vroff +.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' +.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' +. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) +.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ +\{\ +. ds : e +. ds 8 ss +. ds o a +. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga +. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy +. ds th \o'bp' +. ds Th \o'LP' +. ds ae ae +. ds Ae AE +.\} +.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C +.\" ======================================================================== +.\" +.IX Title "LLVM-LINK 1" +.TH LLVM-LINK 1 "2006-03-13" "CVS" "LLVM Command Guide" +.SH "NAME" +llvm\-link \- LLVM linker +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.IX Header "SYNOPSIS" +\&\fBllvm-link\fR [\fIoptions\fR] \fIfilename ...\fR +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +.IX Header "DESCRIPTION" +\&\fBllvm-link\fR takes several \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode files and links them together into a +single \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode file. It writes the output file to standard output, unless +the \fB\-o\fR option is used to specify a filename. +.PP +\&\fBllvm-link\fR attempts to load the input files from the current directory. If +that fails, it looks for each file in each of the directories specified by the +\&\fB\-L\fR options on the command line. The library search paths are global; each +one is searched for every input file if necessary. The directories are searched +in the order they were specified on the command line. +.SH "OPTIONS" +.IX Header "OPTIONS" +.IP "\fB\-L\fR \fIdirectory\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-L directory" +Add the specified \fIdirectory\fR to the library search path. When looking for +libraries, \fBllvm-link\fR will look in pathname for libraries. This option can be +specified multiple times; \fBllvm-link\fR will search inside these directories in +the order in which they were specified on the command line. +.IP "\fB\-f\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-f" +Overwrite output files. By default, \fBllvm-link\fR will not overwrite an output +file if it alreadys exists. +.IP "\fB\-o\fR \fIfilename\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-o filename" +Specify the output file name. If \fIfilename\fR is \f(CW\*(C`\-\*(C'\fR, then \fBllvm-link\fR will +write its output to standard output. +.IP "\fB\-d\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-d" +If specified, \fBllvm-link\fR prints a human-readable version of the output +bytecode file to standard error. +.IP "\fB\-\-help\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--help" +Print a summary of command line options. +.IP "\fB\-v\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-v" +Verbose mode. Print information about what \fBllvm-link\fR is doing. This +typically includes a message for each bytecode file linked in and for each +library found. +.SH "EXIT STATUS" +.IX Header "EXIT STATUS" +If \fBllvm-link\fR succeeds, it will exit with 0. Otherwise, if an error +occurs, it will exit with a non-zero value. +.SH "SEE ALSO" +.IX Header "SEE ALSO" +gccld +.SH "AUTHORS" +.IX Header "AUTHORS" +Maintained by the \s-1LLVM\s0 Team (<http://llvm.org>). diff --git a/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-nm.1 b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-nm.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..386d9e6e3c --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-nm.1 @@ -0,0 +1,219 @@ +.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14 +.\" +.\" Standard preamble: +.\" ======================================================================== +.de Sh \" Subsection heading +.br +.if t .Sp +.ne 5 +.PP +\fB\\$1\fR +.PP +.. +.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) +.if t .sp .5v +.if n .sp +.. +.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text +.ft CW +.nf +.ne \\$1 +.. +.de Ve \" End verbatim text +.ft R +.fi +.. +.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will +.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left +.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a +.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to +.\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' +.\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. +.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr +.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' +.ie n \{\ +. ds -- \(*W- +. ds PI pi +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch +. ds L" "" +. ds R" "" +. ds C` "" +. ds C' "" +'br\} +.el\{\ +. ds -- \|\(em\| +. ds PI \(*p +. ds L" `` +. ds R" '' +'br\} +.\" +.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for +.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index +.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the +.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. +.if \nF \{\ +. de IX +. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" +.. +. nr % 0 +. rr F +.\} +.\" +.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes +.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. +.hy 0 +.if n .na +.\" +.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). +.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. +. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds #H 0 +. ds #V .8m +. ds #F .3m +. ds #[ \f1 +. ds #] \fP +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) +. ds #V .6m +. ds #F 0 +. ds #[ \& +. ds #] \& +.\} +. \" simple accents for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds ' \& +. ds ` \& +. ds ^ \& +. ds , \& +. ds ~ ~ +. ds / +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" +. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' +. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' +. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' +.\} +. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents +.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' +.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' +.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] +.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' +.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' +.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] +.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] +.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e +.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E +. \" corrections for vroff +.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' +.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' +. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) +.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ +\{\ +. ds : e +. ds 8 ss +. ds o a +. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga +. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy +. ds th \o'bp' +. ds Th \o'LP' +. ds ae ae +. ds Ae AE +.\} +.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C +.\" ======================================================================== +.\" +.IX Title "LLVM-NM 1" +.TH LLVM-NM 1 "2006-11-20" "CVS" "LLVM Command Guide" +.SH "NAME" +llvm\-nm \- list LLVM bytecode file's symbol table +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.IX Header "SYNOPSIS" +\&\fBllvm-nm\fR [\fIoptions\fR] [\fIfilenames...\fR] +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +.IX Header "DESCRIPTION" +The \fBllvm-nm\fR utility lists the names of symbols from the \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode files, +or \fBar\fR archives containing \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode files, named on the command line. +Each symbol is listed along with some simple information about its provenance. +If no filename is specified, or \fI\-\fR is used as a filename, \fBllvm-nm\fR will +process a bytecode file on its standard input stream. +.PP +\&\fBllvm-nm\fR's default output format is the traditional \s-1BSD\s0 \fBnm\fR output format. +Each such output record consists of an (optional) 8\-digit hexadecimal address, +followed by a type code character, followed by a name, for each symbol. One +record is printed per line; fields are separated by spaces. When the address is +omitted, it is replaced by 8 spaces. +.PP +Type code characters currently supported, and their meanings, are as follows: +.IP "U" 4 +.IX Item "U" +Named object is referenced but undefined in this bytecode file +.IP "C" 4 +.IX Item "C" +Common (multiple defs link together into one def) +.IP "W" 4 +.IX Item "W" +Weak reference (multiple defs link together into zero or one defs) +.IP "t" 4 +.IX Item "t" +Local function (text) object +.IP "T" 4 +.IX Item "T" +Global function (text) object +.IP "d" 4 +.IX Item "d" +Local data object +.IP "D" 4 +.IX Item "D" +Global data object +.IP "?" 4 +Something unrecognizable +.PP +Because \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode files typically contain objects that are not considered to +have addresses until they are linked into an executable image or dynamically +compiled \*(L"just\-in\-time\*(R", \fBllvm-nm\fR does not print an address for any symbol, +even symbols which are defined in the bytecode file. +.SH "OPTIONS" +.IX Header "OPTIONS" +.IP "\fB\-P\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-P" +Use \s-1POSIX\s0.2 output format. Alias for \fB\-\-format=posix\fR. +.IP "\fB\-B\fR (default)" 4 +.IX Item "-B (default)" +Use \s-1BSD\s0 output format. Alias for \fB\-\-format=bsd\fR. +.IP "\fB\-\-help\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--help" +Print a summary of command-line options and their meanings. +.IP "\fB\-\-defined\-only\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--defined-only" +Print only symbols defined in this bytecode file (as opposed to +symbols which may be referenced by objects in this file, but not +defined in this file.) +.IP "\fB\-\-extern\-only\fR, \fB\-g\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--extern-only, -g" +Print only symbols whose definitions are external; that is, accessible +from other bytecode files. +.IP "\fB\-\-undefined\-only\fR, \fB\-u\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--undefined-only, -u" +Print only symbols referenced but not defined in this bytecode file. +.IP "\fB\-\-format=\fR\fIfmt\fR, \fB\-f\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--format=fmt, -f" +Select an output format; \fIfmt\fR may be \fIsysv\fR, \fIposix\fR, or \fIbsd\fR. The +default is \fIbsd\fR. +.SH "BUGS" +.IX Header "BUGS" +\&\fBllvm-nm\fR cannot demangle \*(C+ mangled names, like \s-1GNU\s0 \fBnm\fR can. +.SH "EXIT STATUS" +.IX Header "EXIT STATUS" +\&\fBllvm-nm\fR exits with an exit code of zero. +.SH "SEE ALSO" +.IX Header "SEE ALSO" +llvm-dis, \fIar\fR\|(1), \fInm\fR\|(1) +.SH "AUTHOR" +.IX Header "AUTHOR" +Maintained by the \s-1LLVM\s0 Team (<http://llvm.org>). diff --git a/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-prof.1 b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-prof.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..d7d765163a --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-prof.1 @@ -0,0 +1,173 @@ +.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14 +.\" +.\" Standard preamble: +.\" ======================================================================== +.de Sh \" Subsection heading +.br +.if t .Sp +.ne 5 +.PP +\fB\\$1\fR +.PP +.. +.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) +.if t .sp .5v +.if n .sp +.. +.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text +.ft CW +.nf +.ne \\$1 +.. +.de Ve \" End verbatim text +.ft R +.fi +.. +.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will +.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left +.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a +.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to +.\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' +.\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. +.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr +.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' +.ie n \{\ +. ds -- \(*W- +. ds PI pi +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch +. ds L" "" +. ds R" "" +. ds C` "" +. ds C' "" +'br\} +.el\{\ +. ds -- \|\(em\| +. ds PI \(*p +. ds L" `` +. ds R" '' +'br\} +.\" +.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for +.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index +.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the +.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. +.if \nF \{\ +. de IX +. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" +.. +. nr % 0 +. rr F +.\} +.\" +.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes +.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. +.hy 0 +.if n .na +.\" +.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). +.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. +. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds #H 0 +. ds #V .8m +. ds #F .3m +. ds #[ \f1 +. ds #] \fP +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) +. ds #V .6m +. ds #F 0 +. ds #[ \& +. ds #] \& +.\} +. \" simple accents for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds ' \& +. ds ` \& +. ds ^ \& +. ds , \& +. ds ~ ~ +. ds / +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" +. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' +. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' +. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' +.\} +. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents +.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' +.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' +.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] +.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' +.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' +.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] +.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] +.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e +.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E +. \" corrections for vroff +.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' +.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' +. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) +.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ +\{\ +. ds : e +. ds 8 ss +. ds o a +. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga +. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy +. ds th \o'bp' +. ds Th \o'LP' +. ds ae ae +. ds Ae AE +.\} +.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C +.\" ======================================================================== +.\" +.IX Title "LLVM-PROF 1" +.TH LLVM-PROF 1 "2006-03-13" "CVS" "LLVM Command Guide" +.SH "NAME" +llvm\-prof \- print execution profile of LLVM program +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.IX Header "SYNOPSIS" +\&\fBllvm-prof\fR [\fIoptions\fR] [\fIbytecode file\fR] [\fIllvmprof.out\fR] +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +.IX Header "DESCRIPTION" +The \fBllvm-prof\fR tool reads in an \fIllvmprof.out\fR file (which can +optionally use a specific file with the third program argument), a bytecode file +for the program, and produces a human readable report, suitable for determining +where the program hotspots are. +.PP +This program is often used in conjunction with the \fIutils/profile.pl\fR +script. This script automatically instruments a program, runs it with the \s-1JIT\s0, +then runs \fBllvm-prof\fR to format a report. To get more information about +\&\fIutils/profile.pl\fR, execute it with the \fB\-\-help\fR option. +.SH "OPTIONS" +.IX Header "OPTIONS" +.IP "\fB\-\-annotated\-llvm\fR or \fB\-A\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--annotated-llvm or -A" +In addition to the normal report printed, print out the code for the +program, annotated with execution frequency information. This can be +particularly useful when trying to visualize how frequently basic blocks +are executed. This is most useful with basic block profiling +information or better. +.IP "\fB\-\-print\-all\-code\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--print-all-code" +Using this option enables the \fB\-\-annotated\-llvm\fR option, but it +prints the entire module, instead of just the most commonly executed +functions. +.IP "\fB\-\-time\-passes\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--time-passes" +Record the amount of time needed for each pass and print it to standard +error. +.SH "EXIT STATUS" +.IX Header "EXIT STATUS" +\&\fBllvm-prof\fR returns 1 if it cannot load the bytecode file or the profile +information. Otherwise, it exits with zero. +.SH "AUTHOR" +.IX Header "AUTHOR" +\&\fBllvm-prof\fR is maintained by the \s-1LLVM\s0 Team (<http://llvm.org>). diff --git a/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-ranlib.1 b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-ranlib.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..daccd0e0ef --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-ranlib.1 @@ -0,0 +1,167 @@ +.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14 +.\" +.\" Standard preamble: +.\" ======================================================================== +.de Sh \" Subsection heading +.br +.if t .Sp +.ne 5 +.PP +\fB\\$1\fR +.PP +.. +.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) +.if t .sp .5v +.if n .sp +.. +.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text +.ft CW +.nf +.ne \\$1 +.. +.de Ve \" End verbatim text +.ft R +.fi +.. +.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will +.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left +.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a +.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to +.\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' +.\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. +.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr +.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' +.ie n \{\ +. ds -- \(*W- +. ds PI pi +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch +. ds L" "" +. ds R" "" +. ds C` "" +. ds C' "" +'br\} +.el\{\ +. ds -- \|\(em\| +. ds PI \(*p +. ds L" `` +. ds R" '' +'br\} +.\" +.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for +.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index +.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the +.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. +.if \nF \{\ +. de IX +. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" +.. +. nr % 0 +. rr F +.\} +.\" +.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes +.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. +.hy 0 +.if n .na +.\" +.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). +.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. +. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds #H 0 +. ds #V .8m +. ds #F .3m +. ds #[ \f1 +. ds #] \fP +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) +. ds #V .6m +. ds #F 0 +. ds #[ \& +. ds #] \& +.\} +. \" simple accents for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds ' \& +. ds ` \& +. ds ^ \& +. ds , \& +. ds ~ ~ +. ds / +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" +. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' +. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' +. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' +.\} +. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents +.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' +.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' +.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] +.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' +.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' +.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] +.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] +.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e +.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E +. \" corrections for vroff +.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' +.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' +. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) +.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ +\{\ +. ds : e +. ds 8 ss +. ds o a +. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga +. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy +. ds th \o'bp' +. ds Th \o'LP' +. ds ae ae +. ds Ae AE +.\} +.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C +.\" ======================================================================== +.\" +.IX Title "LLVM-RANLIB 1" +.TH LLVM-RANLIB 1 "2006-03-13" "CVS" "LLVM Command Guide" +.SH "NAME" +llvm\-ranlib \- Generate index for LLVM archive +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.IX Header "SYNOPSIS" +\&\fBllvm-ranlib\fR [\-\-version] [\-\-help] <archive\-file> +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +.IX Header "DESCRIPTION" +The \fBllvm-ranlib\fR command is similar to the common Unix utility, \f(CW\*(C`ranlib\*(C'\fR. It +adds or updates the symbol table in an \s-1LLVM\s0 archive file. Note that using the +\&\fBllvm-ar\fR modifier \fIs\fR is usually more efficient than running \fBllvm-ranlib\fR +which is only provided only for completness and compatibility. Unlike other +implementations of \f(CW\*(C`ranlib\*(C'\fR, \fBllvm-ranlib\fR indexes \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode files, not +native object modules. You can list the contents of the symbol table with the +\&\f(CW\*(C`llvm\-nm \-s\*(C'\fR command. +.SH "OPTIONS" +.IX Header "OPTIONS" +.IP "\fIarchive-file\fR" 4 +.IX Item "archive-file" +Specifies the archive-file to which the symbol table is added or updated. +.IP "\fI\-\-version\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--version" +Print the version of \fBllvm-ranlib\fR and exit without building a symbol table. +.IP "\fI\-\-help\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--help" +Print usage help for \fBllvm-ranlib\fR and exit without building a symbol table. +.SH "EXIT STATUS" +.IX Header "EXIT STATUS" +If \fBllvm-ranlib\fR succeeds, it will exit with 0. If an error occurs, a non-zero +exit code will be returned. +.SH "SEE ALSO" +.IX Header "SEE ALSO" +llvm-ar, \fIranlib\fR\|(1) +.SH "AUTHORS" +.IX Header "AUTHORS" +Maintained by the \s-1LLVM\s0 Team (<http://llvm.org>). diff --git a/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-upgrade.1 b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-upgrade.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..26860c14fb --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm-upgrade.1 @@ -0,0 +1,179 @@ +.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14 +.\" +.\" Standard preamble: +.\" ======================================================================== +.de Sh \" Subsection heading +.br +.if t .Sp +.ne 5 +.PP +\fB\\$1\fR +.PP +.. +.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) +.if t .sp .5v +.if n .sp +.. +.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text +.ft CW +.nf +.ne \\$1 +.. +.de Ve \" End verbatim text +.ft R +.fi +.. +.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will +.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left +.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a +.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to +.\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' +.\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. +.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr +.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' +.ie n \{\ +. ds -- \(*W- +. ds PI pi +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch +. ds L" "" +. ds R" "" +. ds C` "" +. ds C' "" +'br\} +.el\{\ +. ds -- \|\(em\| +. ds PI \(*p +. ds L" `` +. ds R" '' +'br\} +.\" +.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for +.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index +.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the +.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. +.if \nF \{\ +. de IX +. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" +.. +. nr % 0 +. rr F +.\} +.\" +.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes +.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. +.hy 0 +.if n .na +.\" +.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). +.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. +. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds #H 0 +. ds #V .8m +. ds #F .3m +. ds #[ \f1 +. ds #] \fP +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) +. ds #V .6m +. ds #F 0 +. ds #[ \& +. ds #] \& +.\} +. \" simple accents for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds ' \& +. ds ` \& +. ds ^ \& +. ds , \& +. ds ~ ~ +. ds / +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" +. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' +. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' +. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' +.\} +. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents +.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' +.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' +.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] +.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' +.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' +.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] +.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] +.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e +.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E +. \" corrections for vroff +.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' +.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' +. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) +.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ +\{\ +. ds : e +. ds 8 ss +. ds o a +. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga +. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy +. ds th \o'bp' +. ds Th \o'LP' +. ds ae ae +. ds Ae AE +.\} +.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C +.\" ======================================================================== +.\" +.IX Title "LLVM-UPGRADE 1" +.TH LLVM-UPGRADE 1 "2006-12-02" "CVS" "LLVM Command Guide" +.SH "NAME" +llvm\-upgrade \- LLVM assembly upgrader +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.IX Header "SYNOPSIS" +\&\fBllvm-upgrade\fR [\fIoptions\fR] [\fIfilename\fR] +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +.IX Header "DESCRIPTION" +\&\fBllvm-upgrade\fR is the \s-1LLVM\s0 assembly upgrader. It reads a file containing +human-readable \s-1LLVM\s0 assembly language, and upgrades that assembly to the current +version of \s-1LLVM\s0. If the input is in the form currently accepted by \s-1LLVM\s0, then +no upgrades are performed. +.PP +The expected usage of this tool is as a filter, like this: +.Sp +.RS 4 +\&\fBllvm\-1.9/bin/llvm\-dis < 1.9.bc | llvm-upgrade | llvm\-2.0/bin/llvm\-as \-o 2.0.bc\fR +.RE +.PP +If \fIfilename\fR is omitted or is \f(CW\*(C`\-\*(C'\fR, then \fBllvm-upgrade\fR reads its input from +standard input. +.PP +If an output file is not specified with the \fB\-o\fR option, then +\&\fBllvm-upgrade\fR sends its output to standard output. +.SH "OPTIONS" +.IX Header "OPTIONS" +.IP "\fB\-f\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-f" +Force overwrite. Normally, \fBllvm-upgrade\fR will refuse to overwrite an +output file that already exists. With this option, \fBllvm-upgrade\fR +will overwrite the output file. +.IP "\fB\-\-help\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--help" +Print a summary of command line options. +.IP "\fB\-o\fR \fIfilename\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-o filename" +Specify the output file name. If \fIfilename\fR is \f(CW\*(C`\-\*(C'\fR, then \fBllvm-upgrade\fR +sends its output to standard output. +.SH "EXIT STATUS" +.IX Header "EXIT STATUS" +If \fBllvm-upgrade\fR succeeds, it will exit with 0. Otherwise, if an error +occurs, it will exit with a non-zero value. +.SH "SEE ALSO" +.IX Header "SEE ALSO" +llvm-as, llvm-dis +.SH "AUTHORS" +.IX Header "AUTHORS" +Maintained by the \s-1LLVM\s0 Team (<http://llvm.org>). diff --git a/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm2cpp.1 b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm2cpp.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..1c8a6381bb --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvm2cpp.1 @@ -0,0 +1,301 @@ +.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14 +.\" +.\" Standard preamble: +.\" ======================================================================== +.de Sh \" Subsection heading +.br +.if t .Sp +.ne 5 +.PP +\fB\\$1\fR +.PP +.. +.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) +.if t .sp .5v +.if n .sp +.. +.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text +.ft CW +.nf +.ne \\$1 +.. +.de Ve \" End verbatim text +.ft R +.fi +.. +.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will +.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left +.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a +.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to +.\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' +.\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. +.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr +.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' +.ie n \{\ +. ds -- \(*W- +. ds PI pi +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch +. ds L" "" +. ds R" "" +. ds C` "" +. ds C' "" +'br\} +.el\{\ +. ds -- \|\(em\| +. ds PI \(*p +. ds L" `` +. ds R" '' +'br\} +.\" +.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for +.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index +.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the +.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. +.if \nF \{\ +. de IX +. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" +.. +. nr % 0 +. rr F +.\} +.\" +.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes +.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. +.hy 0 +.if n .na +.\" +.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). +.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. +. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds #H 0 +. ds #V .8m +. ds #F .3m +. ds #[ \f1 +. ds #] \fP +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) +. ds #V .6m +. ds #F 0 +. ds #[ \& +. ds #] \& +.\} +. \" simple accents for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds ' \& +. ds ` \& +. ds ^ \& +. ds , \& +. ds ~ ~ +. ds / +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" +. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' +. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' +. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' +.\} +. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents +.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' +.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' +.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] +.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' +.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' +.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] +.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] +.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e +.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E +. \" corrections for vroff +.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' +.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' +. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) +.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ +\{\ +. ds : e +. ds 8 ss +. ds o a +. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga +. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy +. ds th \o'bp' +. ds Th \o'LP' +. ds ae ae +. ds Ae AE +.\} +.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C +.\" ======================================================================== +.\" +.IX Title "LLVM2CPP 1" +.TH LLVM2CPP 1 "2006-08-10" "CVS" "LLVM Command Guide" +.SH "NAME" +llvm2xpp \- LLVM bytecode to LLVM C++ IR translator +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.IX Header "SYNOPSIS" +\&\fBllvm2cpp\fR [\fIoptions\fR] [\fIfilename\fR] +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +.IX Header "DESCRIPTION" +\&\fBllvm2cpp\fR translates from \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode (.bc files) to a +corresponding \*(C+ source file that will make calls against the \s-1LLVM\s0 \*(C+ \s-1API\s0 to +build the same module as the input. By default, the \*(C+ output is a complete +program that builds the module, verifies it and then emits the module as +\&\s-1LLVM\s0 assembly. This technique assists with testing because the input to +\&\fBllvm2cpp\fR and the output of the generated \*(C+ program should be identical. +.PP +If \fIfilename\fR is omitted or is \f(CW\*(C`\-\*(C'\fR, then \fBllvm2cpp\fR reads its input from +standard input. +.PP +If an output file is not specified with the \fB\-o\fR option, then +\&\fBllvm2cpp\fR sends its output to a file or standard output by following +these rules: +.IP "\(bu" 4 +If the input is standard input, then the output is standard output. +.IP "\(bu" 4 +If the input is a file that ends with \f(CW\*(C`.bc\*(C'\fR, then the output file is of +the same name, except that the suffix is changed to \f(CW\*(C`.cpp\*(C'\fR. +.IP "\(bu" 4 +If the input is a file that does not end with the \f(CW\*(C`.bc\*(C'\fR suffix, then the +output file has the same name as the input file, except that the \f(CW\*(C`.cpp\*(C'\fR +suffix is appended. +.SH "OPTIONS" +.IX Header "OPTIONS" +.IP "\fB\-f\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-f" +Force overwrite. Normally, \fBllvm2cpp\fR will refuse to overwrite an +output file that already exists. With this option, \fBllvm2cpp\fR +will overwrite the output file and replace it with new \*(C+ source code. +.IP "\fB\-\-help\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--help" +Print a summary of command line options. +.IP "\fB\-f\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-f" +Normally, \fBllvm2cpp\fR will not overwrite an existing output file. With this +option, that default behavior is changed and the program will overwrite existing +output files. +.IP "\fB\-o\fR \fIfilename\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-o filename" +Specify the output file name. If \fIfilename\fR is \f(CW\*(C`\-\*(C'\fR, then \fBllvm2cpp\fR +sends its output to standard output. +.IP "\fB\-funcname\fR \fIfunctionName\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-funcname functionName" +Specify the name of the function to be generated. The generated code contains a +single function that produces the input module. By default its name is +\&\fImakeLLVMModule\fR. The \fB\-funcname\fR option overrides this default and allows +you to control the name of the generated function. This is handy in conjunction +with the \fB\-fragment\fR option when you only want \fBllvm2cpp\fR to generate a +single function that produces the module. With both options, such generated code +could be \fI#included\fR into another program. +.IP "\fB\-for\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-for" +Specify the name of the thing for which \*(C+ code should be generated. By default +the entire input module is re\-generated. However, use of the various \fB\-gen\-*\fR +options can restrict what is produced. This option indicates what that +restriction is. +.IP "\fB\-gen\-program\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-gen-program" +Specify that the output should be a complete program. Such program will recreate +\&\fBllvm2cpp\fR's input as an \s-1LLVM\s0 module, verify that module, and then write out +the module in \s-1LLVM\s0 assembly format. This is useful for doing identity tests +where the output of the generated program is identical to the input to +\&\fBllvm2cpp\fR. The \s-1LLVM\s0 DejaGnu test suite can make use of this fact. This is the +default form of generated output. +.Sp +If the \fB\-for\fR option is given with this option, it specifies the module +identifier to use for the module created. +.IP "\fB\-gen\-module\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-gen-module" +Specify that the output should be a function that regenerates the module. It is +assumed that this output will be #included into another program that has already +arranged for the correct header files to be #included. The function generated +takes no arguments and returns a \fIModule*\fR. +.Sp +If the \fB\-for\fR option is given with this option, it specifies the module +identifier to use in creating the module returned by the generated function. +.IP "\fB\-gen\-contents\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-gen-contents" +Specify that the output should be a function that adds the contents of the input +module to another module. It is assumed that the output will be #included into +another program that has already arranged for the correct header files to be +#included. The function generated takes a single argument of type \fIModule*\fR and +returns that argument. Note that Module level attributes such as endianess, +pointer size, target triple and inline asm are not passed on from the input +module to the destination module. Only the sub-elements of the module (types, +constants, functions, global variables) will be added to the input module. +.Sp +If the \fB\-for\fR option is given with this option, it specifies the module +identifier to set in the input module by the generated function. +.IP "\fB\-gen\-function\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-gen-function" +Specify that the output should be a function that produces the definitions +necessary for a specific function to be added to a module. It is assumed that +the output will be #included into another program that has already arranged +for the correct header files to be #included. The function generated takes a +single argument of type \fIModule*\fR and returns the \fIFunction*\fR that it added to +the module. Note that only those things (types, constants, etc.) directly +needed in the definition of the function will be placed in the generated +function. +.Sp +The \fB\-for\fR option must be given with this option or an error will be produced. +The value of the option must be the name of a function in the input module for +which code should be generated. If the named function does not exist an error +will be produced. +.IP "\fB\-gen\-inline\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-gen-inline" +This option is very analagous to \fB\-gen\-function\fR except that the generated +function will not re-produce the target function's definition. Instead, the body +of the target function is inserted into some other function passed as an +argument to the generated function. Similarly any arguments to the function must +be passed to the generated function. The result of the generated function is the +first basic block of the target function. +.Sp +The \fB\-for\fR option works the same way as it does for \fB\-gen\-function\fR. +.IP "\fB\-gen\-variable\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-gen-variable" +Specify that the output should be a function that produces the definitions +necessary for a specific global variable to be added to a module. It is assumed +that the output will be #included into another program that has already arranged +for the correct header files to be #included. The function generated takes a +single argument of type \fIModule*\fR and returns the \fIGlobalVariable*\fR that it +added to the module. Note that only those things (types, constants, etc.) +directly needed in the definition of the global variable will be placed in the +generated function. +.Sp +The \fB\-for\fR option must be given with this option or an error will be produced. +THe value of the option must be the name of a global variable in the input +module for which code should be generated. If the named global variable does not +exist an error will be produced. +.IP "\fB\-gen\-type\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-gen-type" +Specify that the output should be a function that produces the definitions +necessary for specific type to be added to a module. It is assumed that the +otuput will be #included into another program that has already arranged for the +correct header files to be #included. The function generated take a single +argument of type \fIModule*\fR and returns the \fIType*\fR that it added to the +module. Note that the generated function will only add the necessary type +definitions to (possibly recursively) define the requested type. +.Sp +The \fB\-for\fR option must be given with this option or an error will be produced. +The value of the option must be the name of a global type in the input module +for which code should be generated. If the named type does not exist an error +will be produced. +.IP "\fB\-stats\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-stats" +Show pass statistics (not interesting in this program). +.IP "\fB\-time\-passes\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-time-passes" +Show pass timing statistics (not interesting in this program). +.IP "\fB\-version\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-version" +Show the version number of this program. +.SH "EXIT STATUS" +.IX Header "EXIT STATUS" +If \fBllvm2cpp\fR succeeds, it will exit with 0. Otherwise, if an error +occurs, it will exit with a non-zero value. +.SH "SEE ALSO" +.IX Header "SEE ALSO" +llvm-as tblgen +.SH "AUTHORS" +.IX Header "AUTHORS" +Written by Reid Spencer (<http://hlvm.org>). diff --git a/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvmc.1 b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvmc.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..9506c5e495 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvmc.1 @@ -0,0 +1,455 @@ +.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14 +.\" +.\" Standard preamble: +.\" ======================================================================== +.de Sh \" Subsection heading +.br +.if t .Sp +.ne 5 +.PP +\fB\\$1\fR +.PP +.. +.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) +.if t .sp .5v +.if n .sp +.. +.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text +.ft CW +.nf +.ne \\$1 +.. +.de Ve \" End verbatim text +.ft R +.fi +.. +.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will +.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left +.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a +.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to +.\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' +.\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. +.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr +.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' +.ie n \{\ +. ds -- \(*W- +. ds PI pi +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch +. ds L" "" +. ds R" "" +. ds C` "" +. ds C' "" +'br\} +.el\{\ +. ds -- \|\(em\| +. ds PI \(*p +. ds L" `` +. ds R" '' +'br\} +.\" +.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for +.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index +.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the +.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. +.if \nF \{\ +. de IX +. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" +.. +. nr % 0 +. rr F +.\} +.\" +.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes +.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. +.hy 0 +.if n .na +.\" +.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). +.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. +. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds #H 0 +. ds #V .8m +. ds #F .3m +. ds #[ \f1 +. ds #] \fP +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) +. ds #V .6m +. ds #F 0 +. ds #[ \& +. ds #] \& +.\} +. \" simple accents for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds ' \& +. ds ` \& +. ds ^ \& +. ds , \& +. ds ~ ~ +. ds / +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" +. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' +. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' +. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' +.\} +. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents +.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' +.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' +.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] +.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' +.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' +.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] +.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] +.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e +.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E +. \" corrections for vroff +.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' +.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' +. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) +.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ +\{\ +. ds : e +. ds 8 ss +. ds o a +. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga +. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy +. ds th \o'bp' +. ds Th \o'LP' +. ds ae ae +. ds Ae AE +.\} +.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C +.\" ======================================================================== +.\" +.IX Title "LLVMC 1" +.TH LLVMC 1 "2007-02-11" "CVS" "LLVM Command Guide" +.SH "NAME" +llvmc \- The LLVM Compiler Driver (experimental) +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.IX Header "SYNOPSIS" +\&\fBllvmc\fR [\fIoptions\fR] [\fIfilenames\fR...] +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +.IX Header "DESCRIPTION" +\&\fBllvmc\fR is a configurable driver for invoking other \s-1LLVM\s0 (and non\-LLVM) tools +in order to compile, optimize and link software for multiple languages. For +those familiar with \s-1FSF\s0's \fBgcc\fR tool, it is very similar. Please note that +\&\fBllvmc\fR is considered an experimental tool. \fBllvmc\fR has the following goals: +.IP "* provide a single point of access to the \s-1LLVM\s0 tool set," 4 +.IX Item "provide a single point of access to the LLVM tool set," +.PD 0 +.IP "* hide the complexities of the \s-1LLVM\s0 tools through a single interface," 4 +.IX Item "hide the complexities of the LLVM tools through a single interface," +.IP "* make integration of existing non-LLVM tools simple," 4 +.IX Item "make integration of existing non-LLVM tools simple," +.IP "* extend the capabilities of minimal front ends, and" 4 +.IX Item "extend the capabilities of minimal front ends, and" +.IP "* make the interface for compiling consistent for all languages." 4 +.IX Item "make the interface for compiling consistent for all languages." +.PD +.PP +The tool itself does nothing with a user's program. It merely invokes other +tools to get the compilation tasks done. +.PP +The options supported by \fBllvmc\fR generalize the compilation process and +provide a consistent and simple interface for multiple programming languages. +This makes it easier for developers to get their software compiled with \s-1LLVM\s0. +Without \fBllvmc\fR, developers would need to understand how to invoke the +front-end compiler, optimizer, assembler, and linker in order to compile their +programs. \fBllvmc\fR's sole mission is to trivialize that process. +.Sh "Basic Operation" +.IX Subsection "Basic Operation" +\&\fBllvmc\fR always takes the following basic actions: +.IP "* Command line options and filenames are collected." 4 +.IX Item "Command line options and filenames are collected." +The command line options provide the marching orders to \fBllvmc\fR on what actions +it should perform. This is the \fIrequest\fR the user is making of \fBllvmc\fR and it +is interpreted first. +.IP "* Configuration files are read." 4 +.IX Item "Configuration files are read." +Based on the options and the suffixes of the filenames presented, a set of +configuration files are read to configure the actions \fBllvmc\fR will take. +Configuration files are provided by either \s-1LLVM\s0 or the front end compiler tools +that \fBllvmc\fR invokes. Users generally don't need to be concerned with the +contents of the configuration files. +.IP "* Determine actions to take." 4 +.IX Item "Determine actions to take." +The tool chain needed to complete the task is determined. This is the primary +work of \fBllvmc\fR. It breaks the request specified by the command line options +into a set of basic actions to be done: +.RS 4 +.IP "* Pre\-processing: gathering/filtering compiler input (optional)." 4 +.IX Item "Pre-processing: gathering/filtering compiler input (optional)." +.PD 0 +.IP "* Translation: source language to bytecode conversion." 4 +.IX Item "Translation: source language to bytecode conversion." +.IP "* Assembly: bytecode to native code conversion." 4 +.IX Item "Assembly: bytecode to native code conversion." +.IP "* Optimization: conversion of bytecode to something that runs faster." 4 +.IX Item "Optimization: conversion of bytecode to something that runs faster." +.IP "* Linking: combining multiple bytecodes to produce executable program." 4 +.IX Item "Linking: combining multiple bytecodes to produce executable program." +.RE +.RS 4 +.RE +.IP "* Execute actions." 4 +.IX Item "Execute actions." +.PD +The actions determined previously are executed sequentially and then +\&\fBllvmc\fR terminates. +.SH "OPTIONS" +.IX Header "OPTIONS" +.Sh "Control Options" +.IX Subsection "Control Options" +Control options tell \fBllvmc\fR what to do at a high level. The +following control options are defined: +.IP "\fB\-c\fR or \fB\-\-compile\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-c or --compile" +This option specifies that the linking phase is not to be run. All +previous phases, if applicable will run. This is generally how a given +bytecode file is compiled and optimized for a source language module. +.IP "\fB\-k\fR or \fB\-\-link\fR or default" 4 +.IX Item "-k or --link or default" +This option (or the lack of any control option) specifies that all stages +of compilation, optimization, and linking should be attempted. Source files +specified on the command line will be compiled and linked with objects and +libraries also specified. +.IP "\fB\-S\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-S" +This option specifies that compilation should end in the creation of +an \s-1LLVM\s0 assembly file that can be later converted to an \s-1LLVM\s0 object +file. +.IP "\fB\-E\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-E" +This option specifies that no compilation or linking should be +performed. Only pre\-processing, if applicable to the language being +compiled, is performed. For languages that support it, this will +result in the output containing the raw input to the compiler. +.Sh "Optimization Options" +.IX Subsection "Optimization Options" +Optimization with \fBllvmc\fR is based on goals and specified with +the following \-O options. The specific details of which +optimizations run is controlled by the configuration files because +each source language will have different needs. +.IP "\fB\-O1\fR or \fB\-O0\fR (default, fast compilation)" 4 +.IX Item "-O1 or -O0 (default, fast compilation)" +Only those optimizations that will hasten the compilation (mostly by reducing +the output) are applied. In general these are extremely fast and simple +optimizations that reduce emitted code size. The goal here is not to make the +resulting program fast but to make the compilation fast. If not specified, +this is the default level of optimization. +.IP "\fB\-O2\fR (basic optimization)" 4 +.IX Item "-O2 (basic optimization)" +This level of optimization specifies a balance between generating good code +that will execute reasonably quickly and not spending too much time optimizing +the code to get there. For example, this level of optimization may include +things like global common subexpression elimination, aggressive dead code +elimination, and scalar replication. +.IP "\fB\-O3\fR (aggressive optimization)" 4 +.IX Item "-O3 (aggressive optimization)" +This level of optimization aggressively optimizes each set of files compiled +together. However, no link-time inter-procedural optimization is performed. +This level implies all the optimizations of the \fB\-O1\fR and \fB\-O2\fR optimization +levels, and should also provide loop optimizations and compile time +inter-procedural optimizations. Essentially, this level tries to do as much +as it can with the input it is given but doesn't do any link time \s-1IPO\s0. +.IP "\fB\-O4\fR (link time optimization)" 4 +.IX Item "-O4 (link time optimization)" +In addition to the previous three levels of optimization, this level of +optimization aggressively optimizes each program at link time. It employs +basic analysis and basic link-time inter-procedural optimizations, +considering the program as a whole. +.IP "\fB\-O5\fR (aggressive link time optimization)" 4 +.IX Item "-O5 (aggressive link time optimization)" +This is the same as \fB\-O4\fR except it employs aggressive analyses and +aggressive inter-procedural optimization. +.IP "\fB\-O6\fR (profile guided optimization: not implemented)" 4 +.IX Item "-O6 (profile guided optimization: not implemented)" +This is the same as \fB\-O5\fR except that it employs profile-guided +re-optimization of the program after it has executed. Note that this implies +a single level of re-optimization based on runtime profile analysis. Once +the re-optimization has completed, the profiling instrumentation is +removed and final optimizations are employed. +.IP "\fB\-O7\fR (lifelong optimization: not implemented)" 4 +.IX Item "-O7 (lifelong optimization: not implemented)" +This is the same as \fB\-O5\fR and similar to \fB\-O6\fR except that re-optimization +is performed through the life of the program. That is, each run will update +the profile by which future re-optimizations are directed. +.Sh "Input Options" +.IX Subsection "Input Options" +.IP "\fB\-l\fR \fI\s-1LIBRARY\s0\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-l LIBRARY" +This option instructs \fBllvmc\fR to locate a library named \fI\s-1LIBRARY\s0\fR and search +it for unresolved symbols when linking the program. +.IP "\fB\-L\fR \fIpath\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-L path" +This option instructs \fBllvmc\fR to add \fIpath\fR to the list of places in which +the linker will +.IP "\fB\-x\fR \fI\s-1LANGUAGE\s0\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-x LANGUAGE" +This option instructs \fBllvmc\fR to regard the following input files as +containing programs in the language \fI\s-1LANGUAGE\s0\fR. Normally, input file languages +are identified by their suffix but this option will override that default +behavior. The \fB\-x\fR option stays in effect until the end of the options or +a new \fB\-x\fR option is encountered. +.Sh "Output Options" +.IX Subsection "Output Options" +.IP "\fB\-m\fR\fIarch\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-march" +This option selects the back end code generator to use. The \fIarch\fR portion +of the option names the back end to use. +.IP "\fB\-\-native\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--native" +Normally, \fBllvmc\fR produces bytecode files at most stages of compilation. +With this option, \fBllvmc\fR will arrange for native object files to be +generated with the \fB\-c\fR option, native assembly files to be generated +with the \fB\-S\fR option, and native executables to be generated with the +\&\fB\-\-link\fR option. In the case of the \fB\-E\fR option, the output will not +differ as there is no \fInative\fR version of pre-processed output. +.IP "\fB\-o\fR \fIfilename\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-o filename" +Specify the output file name. The contents of the file depend on other +options. +.Sh "Information Options" +.IX Subsection "Information Options" +.IP "\fB\-n\fR or \fB\-\-no\-op\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-n or --no-op" +This option tells \fBllvmc\fR to do everything but actually execute the +resulting tools. In combination with the \fB\-v\fR option, this causes \fBllvmc\fR +to merely print out what it would have done. +.IP "\fB\-v\fR or \fB\-\-verbose\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-v or --verbose" +This option will cause \fBllvmc\fR to print out (on standard output) each of the +actions it takes to accomplish the objective. The output will immediately +precede the invocation of other tools. +.IP "\fB\-\-stats\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--stats" +Print all statistics gathered during the compilation to the standard error. +Note that this option is merely passed through to the sub-tools to do with +as they please. +.IP "\fB\-\-time\-passes\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--time-passes" +Record the amount of time needed for each optimization pass and print it +to standard error. Like \fB\-\-stats\fR this option is just passed through to +the sub-tools to do with as they please. +.IP "\fB\-\-time\-programs\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--time-programs" +Record the amount of time each program (compilation tool) takes and print +it to the standard error. +.Sh "Language Specific Options" +.IX Subsection "Language Specific Options" +.IP "\fB\-T,pre\fR=\fIoptions\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-T,pre=options" +Pass an arbitrary option to the pre\-processor. +.IP "\fB\-T,opt\fR=\fIoptions\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-T,opt=options" +Pass an arbitrary option to the optimizer. +.IP "\fB\-T,lnk\fR=\fIoptions\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-T,lnk=options" +Pass an arbitrary option to the linker. +.IP "\fB\-T,asm\fR=\fIoptions\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-T,asm=options" +Pass an arbitrary option to the code generator. +.Sh "C/\*(C+ Specific Options" +.IX Subsection "C/ Specific Options" +.IP "\fB\-I\fR\fIpath\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-Ipath" +This option is just passed through to a C or \*(C+ front end compiler to tell it +where include files can be found. +.IP "\fB\-D\fR\fIsymbol\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-Dsymbol" +This option is just passed through to a C or \*(C+ front end compiler to tell it +to define a symbol. +.Sh "Miscellaneous Options" +.IX Subsection "Miscellaneous Options" +.IP "\fB\-\-help\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--help" +Print a summary of command line options. +.IP "\fB\-\-version\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--version" +This option will cause \fBllvmc\fR to print out its version number and terminate. +.Sh "Advanced Options" +.IX Subsection "Advanced Options" +You better know what you're doing if you use these options. Improper use +of these options can produce drastically wrong results. +.IP "\fB\-\-config\-dir\fR \fIdirname\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--config-dir dirname" +This option tells \fBllvmc\fR to read configuration data from the \fIdirectory\fR +named \fIdirname\fR. Data from such directories will be read in the order +specified on the command line after all other standard configuration files have +been read. This allows users or groups of users to conveniently create +their own configuration directories in addition to the standard ones to which +they may not have write access. +.Sh "Unimplemented Options" +.IX Subsection "Unimplemented Options" +The options below are not currently implemented in \fBllvmc\fR but will be +eventually. They are documented here as \*(L"future design\*(R". +.IP "\fB\-\-show\-config\fR \fI[suffixes...]\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--show-config [suffixes...]" +When this option is given, the only action taken by \fBllvmc\fR is to show its +final configuration state in the form of a configuration file. No compilation +tasks will be conducted when this option is given; processing will stop once +the configuration has been printed. The optional (comma separated) list of +suffixes controls what is printed. Without any suffixes, the configuration +for all languages is printed. With suffixes, only the languages pertaining +to those file suffixes will be printed. The configuration information is +printed after all command line options and configuration files have been +read and processed. This allows the user to verify that the correct +configuration data has been read by \fBllvmc\fR. +.IP "\fB\-\-config\fR :\fIsection\fR:\fIname\fR=\fIvalue\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--config :section:name=value" +This option instructs \fBllvmc\fR to accept \fIvalue\fR as the value for configuration +item \fIname\fR in the section named \fIsection\fR. This is a quick way to override +a configuration item on the command line without resorting to changing the +configuration files. +.IP "\fB\-\-config\-only\-from\fR \fIdirname\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--config-only-from dirname" +This option tells \fBllvmc\fR to skip the normal processing of configuration +files and only configure from the contents of the \fIdirname\fR directory. Multiple +\&\fB\-\-config\-only\-from\fR options may be given in which case the directories are +read in the order given on the command line. +.IP "\fB\-\-emit\-raw\-code\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--emit-raw-code" +No optimization is done whatsoever. The compilers invoked by \fBllvmc\fR with +this option given will be instructed to produce raw, unoptimized code. This +option is useful only to front end language developers and therefore does not +participate in the list of \fB\-O\fR options. This is distinctly different from +the \fB\-O0\fR option (a synonym for \fB\-O1\fR) because those optimizations will +reduce code size to make compilation faster. With \fB\-\-emit\-raw\-code\fR, only +the full raw code produced by the compiler will be generated. +.SH "EXIT STATUS" +.IX Header "EXIT STATUS" +If \fBllvmc\fR succeeds, it will exit with 0. Otherwise, if an error +occurs, it will exit with a non-zero value and no compilation actions +will be taken. If one of the compilation tools returns a non-zero +status, pending actions will be discarded and \fBllvmc\fR will return the +same result code as the failing compilation tool. +.SH "DEFICIENCIES" +.IX Header "DEFICIENCIES" +\&\fBllvmc\fR is considered an experimental \s-1LLVM\s0 tool because it has these +deficiencies: +.IP "Insufficient support for native linking" 4 +.IX Item "Insufficient support for native linking" +Because \fBllvm-ld\fR doesn't handle native linking, neither can \fBllvmc\fR +.IP "Poor configuration support" 4 +.IX Item "Poor configuration support" +The support for configuring new languages, etc. is weak. There are many +command line configurations that cannot be achieved with the current +support. Furthermore the grammar is cumbersome for configuration files. +Please see <http://llvm.org/PR686> for further details. +.IP "Does not handle target specific configurations" 4 +.IX Item "Does not handle target specific configurations" +This is one of the major deficiencies, also addressed in +<http://llvm.org/PR686> +.SH "SEE ALSO" +.IX Header "SEE ALSO" +llvm-as, llvm-dis, llc, llvm-link +.SH "AUTHORS" +.IX Header "AUTHORS" +Maintained by the \s-1LLVM\s0 Team (<http://llvm.org>). diff --git a/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvmgcc.1 b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvmgcc.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..45b23cb00a --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvmgcc.1 @@ -0,0 +1,194 @@ +.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14 +.\" +.\" Standard preamble: +.\" ======================================================================== +.de Sh \" Subsection heading +.br +.if t .Sp +.ne 5 +.PP +\fB\\$1\fR +.PP +.. +.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) +.if t .sp .5v +.if n .sp +.. +.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text +.ft CW +.nf +.ne \\$1 +.. +.de Ve \" End verbatim text +.ft R +.fi +.. +.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will +.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left +.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a +.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to +.\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' +.\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. +.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr +.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' +.ie n \{\ +. ds -- \(*W- +. ds PI pi +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch +. ds L" "" +. ds R" "" +. ds C` "" +. ds C' "" +'br\} +.el\{\ +. ds -- \|\(em\| +. ds PI \(*p +. ds L" `` +. ds R" '' +'br\} +.\" +.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for +.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index +.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the +.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. +.if \nF \{\ +. de IX +. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" +.. +. nr % 0 +. rr F +.\} +.\" +.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes +.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. +.hy 0 +.if n .na +.\" +.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). +.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. +. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds #H 0 +. ds #V .8m +. ds #F .3m +. ds #[ \f1 +. ds #] \fP +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) +. ds #V .6m +. ds #F 0 +. ds #[ \& +. ds #] \& +.\} +. \" simple accents for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds ' \& +. ds ` \& +. ds ^ \& +. ds , \& +. ds ~ ~ +. ds / +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" +. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' +. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' +. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' +.\} +. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents +.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' +.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' +.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] +.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' +.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' +.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] +.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] +.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e +.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E +. \" corrections for vroff +.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' +.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' +. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) +.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ +\{\ +. ds : e +. ds 8 ss +. ds o a +. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga +. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy +. ds th \o'bp' +. ds Th \o'LP' +. ds ae ae +. ds Ae AE +.\} +.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C +.\" ======================================================================== +.\" +.IX Title "LLVMGCC 1" +.TH LLVMGCC 1 "2007-02-11" "CVS" "LLVM Command Guide" +.SH "NAME" +llvm\-gcc \- LLVM C front\-end +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.IX Header "SYNOPSIS" +\&\fBllvm-gcc\fR [\fIoptions\fR] \fIfilename\fR +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +.IX Header "DESCRIPTION" +The \fBllvm-gcc\fR command is the \s-1LLVM\s0 C front end. It is a modified +version of gcc that compiles C/ObjC programs into native objects, \s-1LLVM\s0 +bytecode or \s-1LLVM\s0 assembly language, depending upon the options. +.PP +By default, \fBllvm-gcc\fR compiles to native objects just like \s-1GCC\s0 does. If the +\&\fB\-emit\-llvm\fR option is given then it will generate \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode files instead. +If \fB\-S\fR (assembly) is also given, then it will generate \s-1LLVM\s0 assembly. +.PP +Being derived from the \s-1GNU\s0 Compiler Collection, \fBllvm-gcc\fR has many +of gcc's features and accepts most of gcc's options. It handles a +number of gcc's extensions to the C programming language. +.SH "OPTIONS" +.IX Header "OPTIONS" +.IP "\fB\-\-help\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--help" +Print a summary of command line options. +.IP "\fB\-S\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-S" +Do not generate an \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode file. Rather, compile the source +file into an \s-1LLVM\s0 assembly language file. +.IP "\fB\-c\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-c" +Do not generate a linked executable. Rather, compile the source +file into an \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode file. This bytecode file can then be +linked with other bytecode files later on to generate a full \s-1LLVM\s0 +executable. +.IP "\fB\-o\fR \fIfilename\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-o filename" +Specify the output file to be \fIfilename\fR. +.IP "\fB\-I\fR \fIdirectory\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-I directory" +Add a directory to the header file search path. This option can be +repeated. +.IP "\fB\-L\fR \fIdirectory\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-L directory" +Add \fIdirectory\fR to the library search path. This option can be +repeated. +.IP "\fB\-l\fR\fIname\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-lname" +Link in the library lib\fIname\fR.[bc | a | so]. This library should +be a bytecode library. +.IP "\fB\-emit\-llvm\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-emit-llvm" +Make the output be \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode (or assembly) instead of native object (or +assembly). +.SH "EXIT STATUS" +.IX Header "EXIT STATUS" +If \fBllvm-gcc\fR succeeds, it will exit with 0. Otherwise, if an error +occurs, it will exit with a non-zero value. +.SH "SEE ALSO" +.IX Header "SEE ALSO" +llvm\-g++ +.SH "AUTHORS" +.IX Header "AUTHORS" +Maintained by the \s-1LLVM\s0 Team (<http://llvm.org>). diff --git a/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvmgxx.1 b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvmgxx.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..362ee49a73 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/llvmgxx.1 @@ -0,0 +1,194 @@ +.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14 +.\" +.\" Standard preamble: +.\" ======================================================================== +.de Sh \" Subsection heading +.br +.if t .Sp +.ne 5 +.PP +\fB\\$1\fR +.PP +.. +.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) +.if t .sp .5v +.if n .sp +.. +.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text +.ft CW +.nf +.ne \\$1 +.. +.de Ve \" End verbatim text +.ft R +.fi +.. +.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will +.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left +.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a +.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to +.\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' +.\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. +.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr +.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' +.ie n \{\ +. ds -- \(*W- +. ds PI pi +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch +. ds L" "" +. ds R" "" +. ds C` "" +. ds C' "" +'br\} +.el\{\ +. ds -- \|\(em\| +. ds PI \(*p +. ds L" `` +. ds R" '' +'br\} +.\" +.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for +.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index +.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the +.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. +.if \nF \{\ +. de IX +. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" +.. +. nr % 0 +. rr F +.\} +.\" +.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes +.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. +.hy 0 +.if n .na +.\" +.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). +.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. +. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds #H 0 +. ds #V .8m +. ds #F .3m +. ds #[ \f1 +. ds #] \fP +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) +. ds #V .6m +. ds #F 0 +. ds #[ \& +. ds #] \& +.\} +. \" simple accents for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds ' \& +. ds ` \& +. ds ^ \& +. ds , \& +. ds ~ ~ +. ds / +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" +. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' +. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' +. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' +.\} +. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents +.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' +.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' +.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] +.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' +.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' +.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] +.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] +.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e +.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E +. \" corrections for vroff +.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' +.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' +. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) +.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ +\{\ +. ds : e +. ds 8 ss +. ds o a +. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga +. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy +. ds th \o'bp' +. ds Th \o'LP' +. ds ae ae +. ds Ae AE +.\} +.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C +.\" ======================================================================== +.\" +.IX Title "LLVMGXX 1" +.TH LLVMGXX 1 "2007-02-11" "CVS" "LLVM Command Guide" +.SH "NAME" +llvm\-g++ \- LLVM C++ front\-end +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.IX Header "SYNOPSIS" +\&\fBllvm\-g++\fR [\fIoptions\fR] \fIfilename\fR +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +.IX Header "DESCRIPTION" +The \fBllvm\-g++\fR command is the \s-1LLVM\s0 \*(C+ front end. It is a modified +version of g++ that compiles \*(C+/ObjC++ programs into native code, +\&\s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode or assembly language, depending upon the options. +.PP +By default, \fBllvm\-g++\fR compiles to native objects just like \s-1GCC\s0 does. If the +\&\fB\-emit\-llvm\fR option is given then it will generate \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode files instead. +If \fB\-S\fR (assembly) is also given, then it will generate \s-1LLVM\s0 assembly. +.PP +Being derived from the \s-1GNU\s0 Compiler Collection, \fBllvm\-g++\fR has many +of g++'s features and accepts most of g++'s options. It handles a +number of g++'s extensions to the \*(C+ programming language. +.SH "OPTIONS" +.IX Header "OPTIONS" +.IP "\fB\-\-help\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--help" +Print a summary of command line options. +.IP "\fB\-S\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-S" +Do not generate an \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode file. Rather, compile the source +file into an \s-1LLVM\s0 assembly language file. +.IP "\fB\-c\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-c" +Do not generate a linked executable. Rather, compile the source +file into an \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode file. This bytecode file can then be +linked with other bytecode files later on to generate a full \s-1LLVM\s0 +executable. +.IP "\fB\-o\fR \fIfilename\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-o filename" +Specify the output file to be \fIfilename\fR. +.IP "\fB\-I\fR \fIdirectory\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-I directory" +Add a directory to the header file search path. This option can be +repeated. +.IP "\fB\-L\fR \fIdirectory\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-L directory" +Add \fIdirectory\fR to the library search path. This option can be +repeated. +.IP "\fB\-l\fR\fIname\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-lname" +Link in the library lib\fIname\fR.[bc | a | so]. This library should +be a bytecode library. +.IP "\fB\-emit\-llvm\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-emit-llvm" +Make the output be \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode (or assembly) instead of native object (or +assembly). +.SH "EXIT STATUS" +.IX Header "EXIT STATUS" +If \fBllvm\-g++\fR succeeds, it will exit with 0. Otherwise, if an error +occurs, it will exit with a non-zero value. +.SH "SEE ALSO" +.IX Header "SEE ALSO" +llvm-gcc +.SH "AUTHORS" +.IX Header "AUTHORS" +Maintained by the \s-1LLVM\s0 Team (<http://llvm.org>). diff --git a/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/opt.1 b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/opt.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..f080e9f8b6 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/opt.1 @@ -0,0 +1,246 @@ +.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14 +.\" +.\" Standard preamble: +.\" ======================================================================== +.de Sh \" Subsection heading +.br +.if t .Sp +.ne 5 +.PP +\fB\\$1\fR +.PP +.. +.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) +.if t .sp .5v +.if n .sp +.. +.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text +.ft CW +.nf +.ne \\$1 +.. +.de Ve \" End verbatim text +.ft R +.fi +.. +.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will +.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left +.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a +.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to +.\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' +.\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. +.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr +.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' +.ie n \{\ +. ds -- \(*W- +. ds PI pi +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch +. ds L" "" +. ds R" "" +. ds C` "" +. ds C' "" +'br\} +.el\{\ +. ds -- \|\(em\| +. ds PI \(*p +. ds L" `` +. ds R" '' +'br\} +.\" +.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for +.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index +.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the +.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. +.if \nF \{\ +. de IX +. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" +.. +. nr % 0 +. rr F +.\} +.\" +.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes +.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. +.hy 0 +.if n .na +.\" +.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). +.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. +. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds #H 0 +. ds #V .8m +. ds #F .3m +. ds #[ \f1 +. ds #] \fP +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) +. ds #V .6m +. ds #F 0 +. ds #[ \& +. ds #] \& +.\} +. \" simple accents for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds ' \& +. ds ` \& +. ds ^ \& +. ds , \& +. ds ~ ~ +. ds / +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" +. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' +. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' +. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' +.\} +. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents +.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' +.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' +.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] +.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' +.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' +.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] +.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] +.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e +.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E +. \" corrections for vroff +.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' +.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' +. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) +.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ +\{\ +. ds : e +. ds 8 ss +. ds o a +. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga +. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy +. ds th \o'bp' +. ds Th \o'LP' +. ds ae ae +. ds Ae AE +.\} +.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C +.\" ======================================================================== +.\" +.IX Title "OPT 1" +.TH OPT 1 "2007-02-02" "CVS" "LLVM Command Guide" +.SH "NAME" +opt \- LLVM optimizer +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.IX Header "SYNOPSIS" +\&\fBopt\fR [\fIoptions\fR] [\fIfilename\fR] +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +.IX Header "DESCRIPTION" +The \fBopt\fR command is the modular \s-1LLVM\s0 optimizer and analyzer. It takes \s-1LLVM\s0 +bytecode as input, runs the specified optimizations or analyses on it, and then +outputs the optimized \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode or the analysis results. The function of +\&\fBopt\fR depends on whether the \fB\-analyze\fR option is given. +.PP +When \fB\-analyze\fR is specified, \fBopt\fR performs various analyses of \s-1LLVM\s0 +bytecode. It will usually print the results on standard output, but in a few +cases, it will print output to standard error or generate a file with the +analysis output, which is usually done when the output is meant for another +program. +.PP +While \fB\-analyze\fR is \fInot\fR given, \fBopt\fR attempts to produce an optimized +bytecode file. The optimizations available via \fBopt\fR depend upon what +libraries were linked into it as well as any additional libraries that have +been loaded with the \fB\-load\fR option. Use the \fB\-help\fR option to determine +what optimizations you can use. +.PP +If \fIfilename\fR is omitted from the command line or is \fI\-\fR, \fBopt\fR reads its +input from standard input. The input must be an \s-1LLVM\s0 bytecode file. +.PP +If an output filename is not specified with the \fB\-o\fR option, \fBopt\fR +writes its output to the standard output. +.SH "OPTIONS" +.IX Header "OPTIONS" +.IP "\fB\-f\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-f" +Force overwrite. Normally, \fBopt\fR will refuse to overwrite an +output file that already exists. With this option, \fBopt\fR will +overwrite the output file and replace it with new bytecode. +.IP "\fB\-help\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-help" +Print a summary of command line options. +.IP "\fB\-o\fR \fIfilename\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-o filename" +Specify the output filename. +.IP "\fB\-{passname}\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-{passname}" +\&\fBopt\fR provides the ability to run any of \s-1LLVM\s0's optimization or analysis passes +in any order. The \fB\-help\fR option lists all the passes available. The order in +which the options occur on the command line are the order in which they are +executed (within pass constraints). +.IP "\fB\-std\-compile\-opts\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-std-compile-opts" +This is short hand for a standard list of \fIcompile time optimization\fR passes. +This is typically used to optimize the output from the llvm-gcc front end. It +might be useful for other front end compilers as well. To discover the full set +of options available, use the following command: +.Sp +.Vb 1 +\& llvm-as < /dev/null | opt -std-compile-opts -disable-output -debug-pass=Arguments +.Ve +.IP "\fB\-disable\-inlining\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-disable-inlining" +This option is only meaningful when \fB\-std\-compile\-opts\fR is given. It simply +removes the inlining pass from the standard list. +.IP "\fB\-disable\-opt\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-disable-opt" +This option is only meaningful when \fB\-std\-compile\-opts\fR is given. It disables +most, but not all, of the \fB\-std\-compile\-opts\fR. The ones that remain are +\&\fB\-verify\fR, \fB\-lower\-setjmp\fR, and \fB\-funcresolve\fR. +.IP "\fB\-strip\-debug\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-strip-debug" +This option causes opt to strip debug information from the module before +applying other optimizations. It is essentially the same as \fB\-strip\fR but it +ensures that stripping of debug information is done first. +.IP "\fB\-verify\-each\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-verify-each" +This option causes opt to add a verify pass after every pass otherwise specified +on the command line (including \fB\-verify\fR). This is useful for cases where it +is suspected that a pass is creating an invalid module but it is not clear which +pass is doing it. The combination of \fB\-std\-compile\-opts\fR and \fB\-verify\-each\fR +can quickly track down this kind of problem. +.IP "\fB\-profile\-info\-file\fR \fIfilename\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-profile-info-file filename" +Specify the name of the file loaded by the \-profile\-loader option. +.IP "\fB\-stats\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-stats" +Print statistics. +.IP "\fB\-time\-passes\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-time-passes" +Record the amount of time needed for each pass and print it to standard +error. +.IP "\fB\-debug\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-debug" +If this is a debug build, this option will enable debug printouts +from passes which use the \fI\s-1\fIDEBUG\s0()\fI\fR macro. See the \fB\s-1LLVM\s0 Programmer's +Manual\fR, section \fI#DEBUG\fR for more information. +.IP "\fB\-load\fR=\fIplugin\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-load=plugin" +Load the dynamic object \fIplugin\fR. This object should register new optimization +or analysis passes. Once loaded, the object will add new command line options to +enable various optimizations or analyses. To see the new complete list of +optimizations, use the \fB\-help\fR and \fB\-load\fR options together. For example: +.Sp +.Vb 1 +\& opt -load=plugin.so -help +.Ve +.IP "\fB\-p\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-p" +Print module after each transformation. +.SH "EXIT STATUS" +.IX Header "EXIT STATUS" +If \fBopt\fR succeeds, it will exit with 0. Otherwise, if an error +occurs, it will exit with a non-zero value. +.SH "AUTHORS" +.IX Header "AUTHORS" +Maintained by the \s-1LLVM\s0 Team (<http://llvm.org>). diff --git a/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/stkrc.1 b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/stkrc.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..46c1584d68 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/stkrc.1 @@ -0,0 +1,198 @@ +.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14 +.\" +.\" Standard preamble: +.\" ======================================================================== +.de Sh \" Subsection heading +.br +.if t .Sp +.ne 5 +.PP +\fB\\$1\fR +.PP +.. +.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) +.if t .sp .5v +.if n .sp +.. +.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text +.ft CW +.nf +.ne \\$1 +.. +.de Ve \" End verbatim text +.ft R +.fi +.. +.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will +.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left +.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a +.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to +.\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' +.\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. +.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr +.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' +.ie n \{\ +. ds -- \(*W- +. ds PI pi +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch +. ds L" "" +. ds R" "" +. ds C` "" +. ds C' "" +'br\} +.el\{\ +. ds -- \|\(em\| +. ds PI \(*p +. ds L" `` +. ds R" '' +'br\} +.\" +.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for +.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index +.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the +.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. +.if \nF \{\ +. de IX +. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" +.. +. nr % 0 +. rr F +.\} +.\" +.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes +.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. +.hy 0 +.if n .na +.\" +.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). +.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. +. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds #H 0 +. ds #V .8m +. ds #F .3m +. ds #[ \f1 +. ds #] \fP +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) +. ds #V .6m +. ds #F 0 +. ds #[ \& +. ds #] \& +.\} +. \" simple accents for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds ' \& +. ds ` \& +. ds ^ \& +. ds , \& +. ds ~ ~ +. ds / +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" +. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' +. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' +. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' +.\} +. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents +.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' +.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' +.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] +.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' +.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' +.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] +.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] +.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e +.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E +. \" corrections for vroff +.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' +.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' +. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) +.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ +\{\ +. ds : e +. ds 8 ss +. ds o a +. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga +. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy +. ds th \o'bp' +. ds Th \o'LP' +. ds ae ae +. ds Ae AE +.\} +.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C +.\" ======================================================================== +.\" +.IX Title "STKRC 1" +.TH STKRC 1 "2006-03-13" "CVS" "LLVM Command Guide" +.SH "NAME" +stkrc \- Stacker Compiler +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.IX Header "SYNOPSIS" +\&\fBstkrc\fR [\fIoptions\fR] [\fIfilename\fR] +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +.IX Header "DESCRIPTION" +The \fBstkrc\fR command is the compiler for the Stacker language. Stacker is a +simple stack based, Forth-like language that was written as a demonstration +language for \s-1LLVM\s0. For details on the language, please see +<http://llvm.org/docs/Stacker.html> . The \fBstkrc\fR compiler is fairly +minimal. It compiles to bytecode only and doesn't perform any optimizations. +The output of stkrc (a bytecode file) can be piped through other \s-1LLVM\s0 tools +for optimization and linking. +.PP +If \fIfilename\fR is omitted or is \f(CW\*(C`\-\*(C'\fR, then \fBstkrc\fR reads its input +from standard input. This is useful for combining the tool into a pipeline. +.PP +If an output file is not specified with the \fB\-o\fR option, then +\&\fBllvm-as\fR sends its output to a file or standard output by following +these rules: +.IP "\(bu" 4 +If the input is standard input, then the output is standard output. +.IP "\(bu" 4 +If the input is a file that ends with \f(CW\*(C`.st\*(C'\fR, then the output file is of +the same name, except that the suffix is changed to \f(CW\*(C`.bc\*(C'\fR. +.IP "\(bu" 4 +If the input is a file that does not end with the \f(CW\*(C`.st\*(C'\fR suffix, then the +output file has the same name as the input file, except that the \f(CW\*(C`.bc\*(C'\fR +suffix is appended. +.SH "OPTIONS" +.IX Header "OPTIONS" +.IP "\fB\-o\fR \fIfilename\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-o filename" +Specify the output file name. If \fIfilename\fR is \f(CW\*(C`\-\*(C'\fR, then \fBllvm-as\fR +sends its output to standard output. +.IP "\fB\-stats\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-stats" +Print statistics acquired during compilation. +.IP "\fB\-time\-passes\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-time-passes" +Record the amount of time needed for each pass and print it to standard +error. +.IP "\fB\-f\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-f" +Force the output to be written. Normally, \fBstkrc\fR won't overwrite an existing +bytecode file. This option overrides that behavior. +.IP "\fB\-s\fR \fIstacksize\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-s stacksize" +Specify the stack size for the program. The default stack size, 1024, should be +sufficient for most programs. For very large programs, especially those that +recurse a lot, you might want to provide a larger value. Each unit of this +value consumes 8 bytes of memory. +.IP "\fB\-help\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-help" +Print a summary of command line options. +.SH "EXIT STATUS" +.IX Header "EXIT STATUS" +If \fBstkrc\fR succeeds, it will exit with 0. Otherwise, if an error +occurs, it will exit with a non-zero value, usually 1. +.SH "SEE ALSO" +.IX Header "SEE ALSO" +llvm-as, <http://llvm.org/docs/Stacker.html> +.SH "AUTHORS" +.IX Header "AUTHORS" +Maintained by the \s-1LLVM\s0 Team (<http://llvm.org>). diff --git a/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/tblgen.1 b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/tblgen.1 new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..021f79919a --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/CommandGuide/man/man1/tblgen.1 @@ -0,0 +1,215 @@ +.\" Automatically generated by Pod::Man v1.37, Pod::Parser v1.14 +.\" +.\" Standard preamble: +.\" ======================================================================== +.de Sh \" Subsection heading +.br +.if t .Sp +.ne 5 +.PP +\fB\\$1\fR +.PP +.. +.de Sp \" Vertical space (when we can't use .PP) +.if t .sp .5v +.if n .sp +.. +.de Vb \" Begin verbatim text +.ft CW +.nf +.ne \\$1 +.. +.de Ve \" End verbatim text +.ft R +.fi +.. +.\" Set up some character translations and predefined strings. \*(-- will +.\" give an unbreakable dash, \*(PI will give pi, \*(L" will give a left +.\" double quote, and \*(R" will give a right double quote. | will give a +.\" real vertical bar. \*(C+ will give a nicer C++. Capital omega is used to +.\" do unbreakable dashes and therefore won't be available. \*(C` and \*(C' +.\" expand to `' in nroff, nothing in troff, for use with C<>. +.tr \(*W-|\(bv\*(Tr +.ds C+ C\v'-.1v'\h'-1p'\s-2+\h'-1p'+\s0\v'.1v'\h'-1p' +.ie n \{\ +. ds -- \(*W- +. ds PI pi +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=24u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-12u'-\" diablo 10 pitch +. if (\n(.H=4u)&(1m=20u) .ds -- \(*W\h'-12u'\(*W\h'-8u'-\" diablo 12 pitch +. ds L" "" +. ds R" "" +. ds C` "" +. ds C' "" +'br\} +.el\{\ +. ds -- \|\(em\| +. ds PI \(*p +. ds L" `` +. ds R" '' +'br\} +.\" +.\" If the F register is turned on, we'll generate index entries on stderr for +.\" titles (.TH), headers (.SH), subsections (.Sh), items (.Ip), and index +.\" entries marked with X<> in POD. Of course, you'll have to process the +.\" output yourself in some meaningful fashion. +.if \nF \{\ +. de IX +. tm Index:\\$1\t\\n%\t"\\$2" +.. +. nr % 0 +. rr F +.\} +.\" +.\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes +.\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. +.hy 0 +.if n .na +.\" +.\" Accent mark definitions (@(#)ms.acc 1.5 88/02/08 SMI; from UCB 4.2). +.\" Fear. Run. Save yourself. No user-serviceable parts. +. \" fudge factors for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds #H 0 +. ds #V .8m +. ds #F .3m +. ds #[ \f1 +. ds #] \fP +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds #H ((1u-(\\\\n(.fu%2u))*.13m) +. ds #V .6m +. ds #F 0 +. ds #[ \& +. ds #] \& +.\} +. \" simple accents for nroff and troff +.if n \{\ +. ds ' \& +. ds ` \& +. ds ^ \& +. ds , \& +. ds ~ ~ +. ds / +.\} +.if t \{\ +. ds ' \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\'\h"|\\n:u" +. ds ` \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\`\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'^\h'|\\n:u' +. ds , \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10)',\h'|\\n:u' +. ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu-\*(#H-.1m)'~\h'|\\n:u' +. ds / \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H)'\z\(sl\h'|\\n:u' +.\} +. \" troff and (daisy-wheel) nroff accents +.ds : \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*8/10-\*(#H+.1m+\*(#F)'\v'-\*(#V'\z.\h'.2m+\*(#F'.\h'|\\n:u'\v'\*(#V' +.ds 8 \h'\*(#H'\(*b\h'-\*(#H' +.ds o \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu+\w'\(de'u-\*(#H)/2u'\v'-.3n'\*(#[\z\(de\v'.3n'\h'|\\n:u'\*(#] +.ds d- \h'\*(#H'\(pd\h'-\w'~'u'\v'-.25m'\f2\(hy\fP\v'.25m'\h'-\*(#H' +.ds D- D\\k:\h'-\w'D'u'\v'-.11m'\z\(hy\v'.11m'\h'|\\n:u' +.ds th \*(#[\v'.3m'\s+1I\s-1\v'-.3m'\h'-(\w'I'u*2/3)'\s-1o\s+1\*(#] +.ds Th \*(#[\s+2I\s-2\h'-\w'I'u*3/5'\v'-.3m'o\v'.3m'\*(#] +.ds ae a\h'-(\w'a'u*4/10)'e +.ds Ae A\h'-(\w'A'u*4/10)'E +. \" corrections for vroff +.if v .ds ~ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*9/10-\*(#H)'\s-2\u~\d\s+2\h'|\\n:u' +.if v .ds ^ \\k:\h'-(\\n(.wu*10/11-\*(#H)'\v'-.4m'^\v'.4m'\h'|\\n:u' +. \" for low resolution devices (crt and lpr) +.if \n(.H>23 .if \n(.V>19 \ +\{\ +. ds : e +. ds 8 ss +. ds o a +. ds d- d\h'-1'\(ga +. ds D- D\h'-1'\(hy +. ds th \o'bp' +. ds Th \o'LP' +. ds ae ae +. ds Ae AE +.\} +.rm #[ #] #H #V #F C +.\" ======================================================================== +.\" +.IX Title "TBLGEN 1" +.TH TBLGEN 1 "2006-06-02" "CVS" "LLVM Command Guide" +.SH "NAME" +tblgen \- Target Description To C++ Code Generator +.SH "SYNOPSIS" +.IX Header "SYNOPSIS" +\&\fBtblgen\fR [\fIoptions\fR] [\fIfilename\fR] +.SH "DESCRIPTION" +.IX Header "DESCRIPTION" +\&\fBtblgen\fR translates from target description (.td) files into \*(C+ code that can +be included in the definition of an \s-1LLVM\s0 target library. Most users of \s-1LLVM\s0 will +not need to use this program. It is only for assisting with writing an \s-1LLVM\s0 +target backend. +.PP +The input and output of \fBtblgen\fR is beyond the scope of this short +introduction. Please see the \fICodeGeneration\fR page in the \s-1LLVM\s0 documentation. +.PP +The \fIfilename\fR argument specifies the name of a Target Description (.td) file +to read as input. +.SH "OPTIONS" +.IX Header "OPTIONS" +.IP "\fB\-\-help\fR" 4 +.IX Item "--help" +Print a summary of command line options. +.IP "\fB\-o\fR \fIfilename\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-o filename" +Specify the output file name. If \fIfilename\fR is \f(CW\*(C`\-\*(C'\fR, then \fBtblgen\fR +sends its output to standard output. +.IP "\fB\-I\fR \fIdirectory\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-I directory" +Specify where to find other target description files for inclusion. The +\&\fIdirectory\fR value should be a full or partial path to a directory that contains +target description files. +.IP "\fB\-asmwriternum\fR \fIN\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-asmwriternum N" +Make \-gen\-asm\-writer emit assembly writer number \fIN\fR. +.IP "\fB\-class\fR \fIclass Name\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-class class Name" +Print the enumeration list for this class. +.IP "\fB\-print\-records\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-print-records" +Print all records to standard output (default). +.IP "\fB\-print\-enums\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-print-enums" +Print enumeration values for a class +.IP "\fB\-gen\-emitter\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-gen-emitter" +Generate machine code emitter. +.IP "\fB\-gen\-register\-enums\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-gen-register-enums" +Generate the enumeration values for all registers. +.IP "\fB\-gen\-register\-desc\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-gen-register-desc" +Generate a register info description for each register. +.IP "\fB\-gen\-register\-desc\-header\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-gen-register-desc-header" +Generate a register info description header for each register. +.IP "\fB\-gen\-instr\-enums\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-gen-instr-enums" +Generate enumeration values for instructions. +.IP "\fB\-gen\-instr\-desc\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-gen-instr-desc" +Generate instruction descriptions. +.IP "\fB\-gen\-asm\-writer\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-gen-asm-writer" +Generate the assembly writer. +.IP "\fB\-gen\-dag\-isel\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-gen-dag-isel" +Generate a \s-1DAG\s0 (Directed Acycle Graph) instruction selector. +.IP "\fB\-gen\-subtarget\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-gen-subtarget" +Generate subtarget enumerations. +.IP "\fB\-gen\-intrinsic\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-gen-intrinsic" +Generate intrinsic information. +.IP "\fB\-version\fR" 4 +.IX Item "-version" +Show the version number of this program. +.SH "EXIT STATUS" +.IX Header "EXIT STATUS" +If \fBtblgen\fR succeeds, it will exit with 0. Otherwise, if an error +occurs, it will exit with a non-zero value. +.SH "AUTHORS" +.IX Header "AUTHORS" +Maintained by The \s-1LLVM\s0 Team (<http://llvm.org>). |