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built atop the C language bindings, and user programs can link with them as such: # Bytecode ocamlc -cc g++ llvm.cma llvmbitwriter.cma -o example example.ml # Native ocamlopt -cc g++ llvm.cmxa llvmbitwriter.cmxa -o example.opt example.ml The vmcore.ml test exercises most/all of the APIs thus far bound. Unfortunately, they're not yet numerous enough to write hello world. But: $ cat example.ml (* example.ml *) open Llvm open Llvm_bitwriter let _ = let filename = Sys.argv.(1) in let m = create_module filename in let v = make_int_constant i32_type 42 false in let g = define_global "hello_world" v m in if not (write_bitcode_file m filename) then exit 1; dispose_module m; $ ocamlc -cc g++ llvm.cma llvm_bitwriter.cma -o example example.ml File "example.ml", line 11, characters 6-7: Warning Y: unused variable g. $ ./example example.bc $ llvm-dis < example.bc ; ModuleID = '<stdin>' @hello_world = global i32 42 ; <i32*> [#uses=0] The ocaml test cases provide effective tests for the C interfaces. llvm-svn: 42093
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4 lines
223 B
Plaintext
This directory contains bindings for the LLVM compiler infrastructure to allow
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programs written in languages other than C or C++ to take advantage of the LLVM
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infrastructure--for instance, a self-hosted compiler front-end.
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