Building LLVM with CMake

Written by Oscar Fuentes

Introduction

CMake is a cross-platform build-generator tool. CMake does not build the project, it generates the files needed by your build tool (GNU make, Visual Studio, etc) for building LLVM.

If you are really anxious about getting a functional LLVM build, go to the Quick start section. If you are a CMake novice, start on Basic CMake usage and then go back to the Quick start once you know what you are doing. The Options and variables section is a reference for customizing your build. If you already have experience with CMake, this is the recommended starting point.

Quick start

We use here the command-line, non-interactive CMake interface

  1. Download and install CMake. Version 2.6.2 is the minimum required.

  2. Open a shell. Your development tools must be reachable from this shell through the PATH environment variable.

  3. Create a directory for containing the build. It is not supported to build LLVM on the source directory. cd to this directory:

    mkdir mybuilddir

    cd mybuilddir

  4. Execute this command on the shell replacing path/to/llvm/source/root with the path to the root of your LLVM source tree:

    cmake path/to/llvm/source/root

    CMake will detect your development environment, perform a series of test and generate the files required for building LLVM. CMake will use default values for all build parameters. See the Options and variables section for fine-tuning your build

    This can fail if CMake can't detect your toolset, or if it thinks that the environment is not sane enough. On this case make sure that the toolset that you intend to use is the only one reachable from the shell and that the shell itself is the correct one for you development environment. CMake will refuse to build MinGW makefiles if you have a POSIX shell reachable through the PATH environment variable, for instance. You can force CMake to use a given build tool, see the Usage section.

Basic CMake usage

This section explains basic aspects of CMake, mostly for explaining those options which you may need on your day-to-day usage.

CMake comes with extensive documentation in the form of html files and on the cmake executable itself. Execute cmake --help for further help options.

CMake requires to know for which build tool it shall generate files (GNU make, Visual Studio, Xcode, etc). If not specified on the command line, it tries to guess it based on you environment. Once identified the build tool, CMake uses the corresponding Generator for creating files for your build tool. You can explicitly specify the generator with the command line option -G "Name of the generator". For knowing the available generators on your platform, execute

cmake --help

This will list the generator's names at the end of the help text. Generator's names are case-sensitive. Example:

cmake -G "Visual Studio 8 2005" path/to/llvm/source/root

For a given development platform there can be more than one adequate generator. If you use Visual Studio "NMake Makefiles" is a generator you can use for building with NMake. By default, CMake chooses the more specific generator supported by your development environment. If you want an alternative generator, you must tell this to CMake with the -G option.

TODO: explain variables and cache. Move explanation here from #options section.

Options and variables

Variables customize how the build will be generated. Options are boolean variables, with possible values ON/OFF. Options and variables are defined on the CMake command line like this:

cmake -DVARIABLE=value path/to/llvm/source

You can set a variable after the initial CMake invocation for changing its value. You can also undefine a variable:

cmake -UVARIABLE path/to/llvm/source

Variables are stored on the CMake cache. This is a file named CMakeCache.txt on the root of the build directory. Do not hand-edit it.

Variables are listed here appending its type after a colon. It is correct to write the variable and the type on the CMake command line:

cmake -DVARIABLE:TYPE=value path/to/llvm/source

Frequently-used CMake variables

Here are listed some of the CMake variables that are used often, along with a brief explanation and LLVM-specific notes. For full documentation, check the CMake docs or execute cmake --help-variable VARIABLE_NAME.

CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE:STRING
Sets the build type for make based generators. Possible values are Release, Debug, RelWithDebInfo and MinSizeRel. On systems like Visual Studio the user sets the build type with the IDE settings.
CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX:PATH
Path where LLVM will be installed if "make install" is invoked or the "INSTALL" target is built.
LLVM_LIBDIR_SUFFIX:STRING
Extra suffix to append to the directory where libraries are to be installed. On a 64-bit architecture, one could use -DLLVM_LIBDIR_SUFFIX=64 to install libraries to /usr/lib64.
CMAKE_C_FLAGS:STRING
Extra flags to use when compiling C source files.
CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS:STRING
Extra flags to use when compiling C++ source files.
BUILD_SHARED_LIBS:BOOL
Flag indicating is shared libraries will be built. Its default value is OFF. Shared libraries are not supported on Windows and not recommended in the other OSes.
LLVM-specific variables
LLVM_TARGETS_TO_BUILD:STRING
Semicolon-separated list of targets to build, or all for building all targets. Case-sensitive. For Visual C++ defaults to X86. On the other cases defaults to all. Example: -DLLVM_TARGETS_TO_BUILD="X86;PowerPC;Alpha".
LLVM_BUILD_TOOLS:BOOL
Build LLVM tools. Defaults to ON. Targets for building each tool are generated in any case. You can build an tool separately by invoking its target. For example, you can build llvm-as with a makefile-based system executing make llvm-as on the root of your build directory.
LLVM_BUILD_EXAMPLES:BOOL
Build LLVM examples. Defaults to OFF. Targets for building each example are generated in any case. See documentation for LLVM_BUILD_TOOLS above for more details.
LLVM_ENABLE_THREADS:BOOL
Build with threads support, if available. Defaults to ON.
LLVM_ENABLE_ASSERTIONS:BOOL
Enables code assertions. Defaults to OFF if and only if CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE is Release.
LLVM_ENABLE_PIC:BOOL
Add the -fPIC flag for the compiler command-line, if the compiler supports this flag. Some systems, like Windows, do not need this flag. Defaults to ON.
LLVM_ENABLE_WARNINGS:BOOL
Enable all compiler warnings. Defaults to ON.
LLVM_ENABLE_PEDANTIC:BOOL
Enable pedantic mode. This disable compiler specific extensions, is possible. Defaults to ON.
LLVM_ENABLE_WERROR:BOOL
Stop and fail build, if a compiler warning is triggered. Defaults to OFF.
LLVM_BUILD_32_BITS:BOOL
Build 32-bits executables and libraries on 64-bits systems. This option is available only on some 64-bits unix systems. Defaults to OFF.
LLVM_TARGET_ARCH:STRING
LLVM target to use for native code generation. This is required for JIT generation. It defaults to "host", meaning that it shall pick the architecture of the machine where LLVM is being built. If you are cross-compiling, set it to the target architecture name.
LLVM_TABLEGEN:STRING
Full path to a native TableGen executable (usually named tblgen). This is intented for cross-compiling: if the user sets this variable, no native TableGen will be created.
Executing the test suite

LLVM testing is not supported on Visual Studio.

TODO

Cross compiling

See this wiki page for generic instructions on how to cross-compile with CMake. It goes into detailed explanations and may seem daunting, but it is not. On the wiki page there are several examples including toolchain files. Go directly to this section for a quick solution.

Also see the LLVM-specific variables section for variables used when cross-compiling.

Embedding LLVM in your project

TODO

Compiler/Platform specific topics

Notes for specific compilers and/or platforms.


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LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
Last modified: $Date: 2008-12-31 03:59:36 +0100 (Wed, 31 Dec 2008) $