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Philip Reames 1b86ad27a7 Use 15 byte long nops on modern Intel processors
Back in D42616, we switched our default nop length from 15 to 10 bytes because some platforms have painful decode stalls when encountering multiple instruction prefixes. (10 byte long nops come from the fact that prefixes are used to pad after 8 bytes, and some platforms have issues w/more than two prefixes.)

Based on Agner's guides, it appears to be the case that modern Intel (SandyBridge and later) can decode an arbitrary number of prefixes without issue. Intel's guide only provides up to 9 bytes; I read that as providing a safe default for all their chips. Older chips and Atom series have serious decode stalls. I can't find a conclusive reference beyond those two.

Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D75945
2020-03-13 10:51:09 -07:00
clang [CMake] Explicitly specify paths to libc++abi in CrossWinToARMLinux.cmake 2020-03-13 17:58:02 +03:00
clang-tools-extra [clang-tidy] Update Abseil Duration Conversion check to find more cases. 2020-03-13 12:52:37 -04:00
compiler-rt [msan] Fix srcaddr handling in recvfrom interceptor. 2020-03-12 17:29:10 -07:00
debuginfo-tests Change to individual pretty printer classes, remove generic `make_printer`. 2020-03-11 15:04:03 +01:00
libc [libc] [UnitTest] Add timeout to death tests 2020-03-11 23:57:20 -04:00
libclc libclc: cmake configure should depend on file list 2020-02-25 04:43:14 -05:00
libcxx Revert "Update system_error tests for more platforms." 2020-03-12 18:09:44 -07:00
libcxxabi [libc++abi] NFC: Move AtomicInt to cxa_guard_impl.h 2020-03-12 18:27:03 -04:00
libunwind [libunwind] Silence warnings when __mips_hard_float is not defined 2020-03-13 09:19:56 +01:00
lld [CodeView] Align type records on 4-bytes when emitting PDBs 2020-03-13 12:22:19 -04:00
lldb [lldb/Host] s/FindProcesses/FindProcessesImpl/ in windows/Host.cpp 2020-03-13 10:07:15 -07:00
llvm Use 15 byte long nops on modern Intel processors 2020-03-13 10:51:09 -07:00
mlir incorporate feedback from River. 2020-03-12 22:36:42 -07:00
openmp openmp: fix memcpy memory leak 2020-03-12 23:24:16 -05:00
parallel-libs [arcconfig] Delete subproject arcconfigs 2020-02-24 16:20:36 -08:00
polly [Polly] Replace use of std::stringstream. NFC. 2020-03-09 11:35:34 -05:00
pstl [pstl] Clean up parameter uglifications 2020-03-09 09:16:14 -04:00
.arcconfig [arcconfig] Default base to previous revision 2020-02-24 16:20:25 -08:00
.clang-format
.clang-tidy - Update .clang-tidy to ignore parameters of main like functions for naming violations in clang and llvm directory 2020-01-31 16:49:45 +00:00
.git-blame-ignore-revs Add LLDB reformatting to .git-blame-ignore-revs 2019-09-04 09:31:55 +00:00
.gitignore Add a newline at the end of the file 2019-09-04 06:33:46 +00:00
CONTRIBUTING.md Add contributing info to CONTRIBUTING.md and README.md 2019-12-02 15:47:15 +00:00
README.md [README] Add note on using cmake to perform the build 2020-02-12 14:51:24 -06:00

README.md

The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure

This directory and its sub-directories contain source code for LLVM, a toolkit for the construction of highly optimized compilers, optimizers, and run-time environments.

The README briefly describes how to get started with building LLVM. For more information on how to contribute to the LLVM project, please take a look at the Contributing to LLVM guide.

Getting Started with the LLVM System

Taken from https://llvm.org/docs/GettingStarted.html.

Overview

Welcome to the LLVM project!

The LLVM project has multiple components. The core of the project is itself called "LLVM". This contains all of the tools, libraries, and header files needed to process intermediate representations and converts it into object files. Tools include an assembler, disassembler, bitcode analyzer, and bitcode optimizer. It also contains basic regression tests.

C-like languages use the Clang front end. This component compiles C, C++, Objective C, and Objective C++ code into LLVM bitcode -- and from there into object files, using LLVM.

Other components include: the libc++ C++ standard library, the LLD linker, and more.

Getting the Source Code and Building LLVM

The LLVM Getting Started documentation may be out of date. The Clang Getting Started page might have more accurate information.

This is an example work-flow and configuration to get and build the LLVM source:

  1. Checkout LLVM (including related sub-projects like Clang):

    • git clone https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project.git

    • Or, on windows, git clone --config core.autocrlf=false https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project.git

  2. Configure and build LLVM and Clang:

    • cd llvm-project

    • mkdir build

    • cd build

    • cmake -G <generator> [options] ../llvm

      Some common build system generators are:

      • Ninja --- for generating Ninja build files. Most llvm developers use Ninja.
      • Unix Makefiles --- for generating make-compatible parallel makefiles.
      • Visual Studio --- for generating Visual Studio projects and solutions.
      • Xcode --- for generating Xcode projects.

      Some Common options:

      • -DLLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS='...' --- semicolon-separated list of the LLVM sub-projects you'd like to additionally build. Can include any of: clang, clang-tools-extra, libcxx, libcxxabi, libunwind, lldb, compiler-rt, lld, polly, or debuginfo-tests.

        For example, to build LLVM, Clang, libcxx, and libcxxabi, use -DLLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS="clang;libcxx;libcxxabi".

      • -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=directory --- Specify for directory the full path name of where you want the LLVM tools and libraries to be installed (default /usr/local).

      • -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=type --- Valid options for type are Debug, Release, RelWithDebInfo, and MinSizeRel. Default is Debug.

      • -DLLVM_ENABLE_ASSERTIONS=On --- Compile with assertion checks enabled (default is Yes for Debug builds, No for all other build types).

    • cmake --build . [-- [options] <target>] or your build system specified above directly.

      • The default target (i.e. ninja or make) will build all of LLVM.

      • The check-all target (i.e. ninja check-all) will run the regression tests to ensure everything is in working order.

      • CMake will generate targets for each tool and library, and most LLVM sub-projects generate their own check-<project> target.

      • Running a serial build will be slow. To improve speed, try running a parallel build. That's done by default in Ninja; for make, use the option -j NNN, where NNN is the number of parallel jobs, e.g. the number of CPUs you have.

    • For more information see CMake

Consult the Getting Started with LLVM page for detailed information on configuring and compiling LLVM. You can visit Directory Layout to learn about the layout of the source code tree.