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Clang Compiler Frontend

You're reading from   Clang Compiler Frontend Get to grips with the internals of a C/C++ compiler frontend and create your own tools

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837630981
Length 326 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Ivan Murashko Ivan Murashko
Author Profile Icon Ivan Murashko
Ivan Murashko
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part I: Clang Setup and Architecture FREE CHAPTER
2. Chapter 1: Environment Setup 3. Chapter 2: Clang Architecture 4. Chapter 3: Clang AST 5. Chapter 4: Basic Libraries and Tools 6. Part II: Clang Tools
7. Chapter 5: Clang-Tidy Linter Framework 8. Chapter 6: Advanced Code Analysis 9. Chapter 7: Refactoring Tools 10. Chapter 8: IDE Support and Clangd 11. Part III: Appendix
12. Bibliography
13. Index 14. Other Books You Might Enjoy Appendix 1: Compilation Database 1. Appendix 2: Build Speed Optimization

6.3 CFG

A CFG is a fundamental data structure in compiler design and static program analysis, representing all paths that might be traversed through a program during execution.

A CFG consists of the following key components:

  • Nodes: Correspond to basic blocks, a straight-line sequence of operations with one entry and one exit point

  • Edges: Represent the flow of control from one block to another, including both conditional and unconditional branches

  • Start and end nodes: Every CFG has a unique entry node and one or more exit nodes

As an example of a CFG, consider the function to calculate the maximum of two integer numbers that we used as an example before; see Figure 2.5:

int max(int a, int b) { 
 
  if (a > b) 
 

    return a; 
 
  return b; 
 
}

Figure 6.1: CFG example C++ code: max.cpp

The corresponding CFG can be represented as follows:

Figure 6.2: CFG example for max.cpp

Figure 6.2: CFG example for...

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