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Fixes for Visual Studio users. Patch by OvermindDL1 on llvm-dev!

llvm-svn: 60679
This commit is contained in:
Nick Lewycky 2008-12-08 00:45:02 +00:00
parent 8b7aa3053d
commit 69eb224a5e
3 changed files with 47 additions and 16 deletions

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@ -268,7 +268,7 @@ software you will need.</p>
<tr>
<td>Windows</td>
<td>x86<sup><a href="#pf_1">1</a></sup></td>
<td>Visual Studio .NET<sup><a href="#pf_4">4</a>,<a href="#pf_5">5</a></sup></td>
<td>Visual Studio 2005 SP1 or higher<sup><a href="#pf_4">4</a>,<a href="#pf_5">5</a></sup></td>
<tr>
<td>AIX<sup><a href="#pf_3">3</a>,<a href="#pf_4">4</a></sup></td>
<td>PowerPC</td>
@ -305,7 +305,7 @@ software you will need.</p>
up</a></li>
<li><a name="pf_2">Code generation supported for 32-bit ABI only</a></li>
<li><a name="pf_3">No native code generation</a></li>
<li><a name="pf_4">Build is not complete: one or more tools don't link</a></li>
<li><a name="pf_4">Build is not complete: one or more tools do not link or function</a></li>
<li><a name="pf_5">The GCC-based C/C++ frontend does not build</a></li>
<li><a name="pf_6">The port is done using the MSYS shell.</a>
<a href="http://www.mingw.org/MinGWiki/">Download</a> and install

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@ -65,12 +65,12 @@
<p>The LLVM test suite cannot be run on the Visual Studio port at this
time.</p>
<p>Most of the tools build and work. <tt>llvm-db</tt> does not build at this
time. <tt>bugpoint</tt> does build, but does not work.
<p>Most of the tools build and work. <tt>bugpoint</tt> does build, but does
not work. The other tools 'should' work, but have not been fully tested.</p>
<p>Additional information about the LLVM directory structure and tool chain
can be found on the main <a href="GettingStarted.html">Getting Started</a>
page.</P>
page.</p>
</div>
@ -108,11 +108,38 @@
<li><tt>cd llvm</tt></li>
</ol></li>
</ul></li>
<li> Use <a href="http://www.cmake.org/">CMake</a> to generate up-to-date
project files:
<ul><li>This step is currently optional as LLVM does still come with a
normal Visual Studio solution file, but it is not always kept up-to-date
and will soon be deprecated in favor of the multi-platform generator
CMake.</li>
<li>If CMake is installed then the most simple way is to just start the
CMake GUI, select the directory where you have LLVM extracted to, and
the default options should all be fine. The one option you may really
want to change, regardless of anything else, might be the
CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX setting to select a directory to INSTALL to once
compiling is complete.</li>
<li>If you use CMake to generate the Visual Studio solution and project
files, then the Solution will have a few extra options compared to the
current included one. The projects may still be built individually, but
to build them all do not just select all of them in batch build (as some
are meant as configuration projects), but rather select and build just
the ALL_BUILD project to build everything, or the INSTALL project, which
first builds the ALL_BUILD project, then installs the LLVM headers, libs,
and other useful things to the directory set by the CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX
setting when you first configured CMake.</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Start Visual Studio
<ol>
<li>Simply double click on the solution file <tt>llvm/win32/llvm.sln</tt>.
</li>
<ul>
<li>If you did not use CMake, then simply double click on the solution
file <tt>llvm/win32/llvm.sln</tt>.</li>
<li>If you used CMake, then the directory you created the project files,
the root directory will have an <tt>llvm.sln</tt> file, just
double-click on that to open Visual Studio.</li>
</ol></li>
<li>Build the LLVM Suite:
@ -151,8 +178,8 @@ changes are continually making the VS support better.</p>
<div class="doc_text">
<p>Any system that can adequately run Visual Studio .NET 2003 is fine. The
LLVM source tree and object files, libraries and executables will consume
<p>Any system that can adequately run Visual Studio .NET 2005 SP1 is fine.
The LLVM source tree and object files, libraries and executables will consume
approximately 3GB.</p>
</div>
@ -161,11 +188,15 @@ changes are continually making the VS support better.</p>
<div class="doc_subsection"><a name="software"><b>Software</b></a></div>
<div class="doc_text">
<p>You will need Visual Studio .NET 2003. Earlier versions cannot open the
solution/project files. The VS 2005 beta can, but will migrate these files
to its own format in the process. While it should work with the VS 2005
beta, there are no guarantees and there is no support for it at this time.
It has been reported that VC++ Express also works.</p>
<p>You will need Visual Studio .NET 2005 SP1 or higher. The VS2005 SP1
beta and the normal VS2005 still have bugs that are not completely
compatible. VS2003 would work except (at last check) it has a bug with
friend classes that you can work-around with some minor code rewriting
(and please submit a patch if you do). Earlier versions of Visual Studio
do not support the C++ standard well enough and will not work.</p>
<p>You will also need the <a href="http://www.cmake.org/">CMake</a> build
system since it generates the project files you will use to build with.</p>
<p>If you plan to modify any .y or .l files, you will need to have bison
and/or flex installed where Visual Studio can find them. Otherwise, you do

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@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ Annotable::~Annotable() { // Virtual because it's designed to be subclassed...
namespace {
class StrCmp {
public:
bool operator()(const char *a, const char *b) {
bool operator()(const char *a, const char *b) const {
return strcmp(a, b) < 0;
}
};