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LLVM Techniques, Tips, and Best Practices Clang and Middle-End Libraries

You're reading from   LLVM Techniques, Tips, and Best Practices Clang and Middle-End Libraries Design powerful and reliable compilers using the latest libraries and tools from LLVM

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838824952
Length 370 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Min-Yih Hsu Min-Yih Hsu
Author Profile Icon Min-Yih Hsu
Min-Yih Hsu
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Build System and LLVM-Specific Tooling
2. Chapter 1: Saving Resources When Building LLVM FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Exploring LLVM's Build System Features 4. Chapter 3: Testing with LLVM LIT 5. Chapter 4: TableGen Development 6. Section 2: Frontend Development
7. Chapter 5: Exploring Clang's Architecture 8. Chapter 6: Extending the Preprocessor 9. Chapter 7: Handling AST 10. Chapter 8: Working with Compiler Flags and Toolchains 11. Section 3: "Middle-End" Development
12. Chapter 9: Working with PassManager and AnalysisManager 13. Chapter 10: Processing LLVM IR 14. Chapter 11: Gearing Up with Support Utilities 15. Chapter 12: Learning LLVM IR Instrumentation 16. Assessments 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Understanding drivers and toolchains in Clang

Before we talk about the compiler driver in Clang, it is necessary to highlight the fact that compiling a piece of code is never a single task (and not a simple one, either). In school, we were taught that a compiler consists of a lexer, a parser, sometimes came with an optimizer, and ended with an assembly code printer. While you still can see these stages in real-world compilers, they give you nothing but textual assembly code rather than an executable or library, as we would normally expect. Furthermore, this naïve compiler only provides limited flexibility – it can't be ported to any other operating systems or platforms.

To make this toy compiler more realistic and usable, many other plumber tools need to be put together, along with the core compiler: an assembler to transform assembly code into (binary format) object file, a linker to put multiple object files into an executable or library, and many other routines...

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