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Daniel Dunbar 4ce4598af3 docs: Sketch docs for llvm-build tool.
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<h1>LLVMBuild Guide</h1>
<ol>
<li><a href="#introduction">Introduction</a></li>
<li><a href="#projectorg">Project Organization</a></li>
<li><a href="#buildintegration">Build Integration</a></li>
<li><a href="#componentoverview">Component Overview</a></li>
<li><a href="#formatreference">Format Reference</a></li>
</ol>
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<h2><a name="introduction">Introduction</a></h2>
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<div>
<p>This document describes the <tt>LLVMBuild</tt> organization and files which
we use to describe parts of the LLVM ecosystem. For description of specific
LLVMBuild related tools, please see the command guide.</p>
<p>LLVM is designed to be a modular set of libraries which can be flexibly
mixed together in order to build a variety of tools, like compilers, JITs,
custom code generators, optimization passes, interpreters, and so on. Related
projects in the LLVM system like Clang and LLDB also tend to follow this
philosophy.</p>
<p>In order to support this usage style, LLVM has a fairly strict structure as
to how the source code and various components are organized. The
<tt>LLVMBuild.txt</tt> files are the explicit specification of that structure,
and are used by the build systems and other tools in order to develop the LLVM
project.</p>
</div>
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<h2><a name="projectorg">Project Organization</a></h2>
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<!-- FIXME: We should probably have an explicit top level project object. Good
place to hang project level data, name, etc. Also useful for serving as the
$ROOT of project trees for things which can be checked out separately. -->
<div>
<p>The source code for LLVM projects using the LLVMBuild system (LLVM, Clang,
and LLDB) is organized into <em>components</em>, which define the separate
pieces of functionality that make up the project. These projects may consist
of many libraries, associated tools, build tools, or other utility tools (for
example, testing tools).</p>
<p>For the most part, the project contents are organized around defining one
main component per each subdirectory. Each such directory contains
an <tt>LLVMBuild.txt</tt> which contains the component definitions.</p>
<p>The component descriptions for the project as a whole are automatically
gathered by the LLVMBuild tools. The tools automatically traverse the source
directory structure to find all of the component description files. NOTE: For
performance/sanity reasons, we only traverse into subdirectories when the
parent itself contains an <tt>LLVMBuild.txt</tt> description file.</p>
</div>
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<h2><a name="buildintegration">Build Integration</a></h2>
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<div>
<p>The LLVMBuild files themselves are just a declarative way to describe the
project structure. The actual building of the LLVM project is handled by
another build system (currently we support
both <a href="MakefileGuide.html">Makefiles</a>
and <a href="CMake.html">CMake</a>.</p>
<p>The build system implementation will load the relevant contents of the
LLVMBuild files and use that to drive the actual project build. Typically, the
build system will only need to load this information at "configure" time, and
use it to generative native information. Build systems will also handle
automatically reconfiguring their information when the contents of
the <i>LLVMBuild.txt</i> files change.</p>
<p>Developers generally are not expected to need to be aware of the details of
how the LLVMBuild system is integrated into their build. Ideally, LLVM
developers who are not working on the build system would only ever need to
modify the contents of the <i>LLVMBuild.txt</i> description files (although we
have not reached this goal yet).</p>
<p>For more information on the utility tool we provide to help interfacing
with the build system, please see
the <a href="CommandGuide/html/llvm-build.html">llvm-build</a>
documentation.</p>
</div>
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<h2><a name="componentoverview">Component Overview</a></h2>
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<div>
<p>As mentioned earlier, LLVM projects are organized into
logical <em>components</em>. Every component is typically grouped into it's
own subdirectory. Generally, a component is organized around a coherent group
of sources which have some kind of clear API separation from other parts of
the code.</p>
<p>LLVM primarily uses the following types of components:</p>
<ul>
<li><em>Libraries</em> - Library components define a distinct API which can
be independently linked into LLVM client applications. Libraries typically
have private and public header files, and may specify a link of required
libraries that they build on top of.</li>
<li><em>Build Tools</em> - Build tools are applications which are designed
to be run as part of the build process (typically to generate other source
files). Currently, LLVM uses one main build tool
called <a href="TableGenFundamentals.html">TableGen</a> to generate a
variety of source files.</li>
<li><em>Tools</em> - Command line applications which are built using the
LLVM component libraries. Most LLVM tools are small and are primarily
frontends to the library interfaces.</li>
<!-- FIXME: We also need shared libraries as a first class component, but this
is not yet implemented. -->
</ul>
<p>Components are described using <em>LLVMBuild.txt</em> files in the
directories that define the component. See
the <a href="#formatreference">Format Reference</a> section for information on
the exact format of these files.</p>
</div>
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<h2><a name="formatref">LLVMBuild Format Reference</a></h2>
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<div>
<p>LLVMBuild files are written in a simple variant of the INI or configuration
file format (<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/INI_file">Wikipedia
entry</a>). The format defines a list of sections each of which may contain
some number of properties. A simple example of the file format is below:</p>
<div class="doc_code">
<pre>
<i>; Comments start with a semi-colon.</i>
<i>; Sections are declared using square brackets.</i>
[component 0]
<i>; Properties are declared using '=' and are contained in the previous section.
;
; We support simple scalar values and list values, where items are separated by
; spaces. There is no support for quoting, and so property values may not contain
; spaces.</i>
property_name = property_value
list_property_name = value_1 value_2 <em>...</em> value_n
</pre>
</div>
<p>LLVMBuild files are expected to define a strict set of section and
properties. An typical component description file for a library
component would look typically look like the following example:</p>
<div class="doc_code">
<pre>
[component_0]
type = Library
name = Linker
parent = Libraries
required_libraries = Archive BitReader Core Support TransformUtils
</pre>
</div class="doc_code">
<p>A full description of the exact sections and properties which are allowed
follows.</p>
<p>Each file may define multiple components. Each component is described by a
section who name starts with "component". The remainder of the section name is
ignored, but each section name must be unique. Typically components are just
number in order for files with multiple components ("component_0",
"component_1", and so on).<p>
<p><b>Section names not matches this format are currently
unused and are disallowed.</b></p>
<p>Every component is defined by the properties in the section. The exact list
of properties that are allowed depends on the component
type. Components <b>may not</b> define any properties other than those
expected by the component type.</p>
<p>Every component must define the following properties:</p>
<ul>
<li><i>type</i> <b>[required]</b>
<p>The type of the component. Supported component types are
detailed below. Most components will define additional properties which
may be required or optional.</p></li>
<li><i>name</i> <b>[required]</b>
<p>The name of the component. Names are required to be unique
across the entire project.</p></li>
<li><i>parent</i> <b>[required]</b>
<p>The name of the logical parent of the component. Components are
organized into a logical tree to make it easier to navigate and organize
groups of components. The parent's have no semantics as far as the project
build is concerned, however. Typically, the parent will be the main
component of the parent directory.</p>
<!-- FIXME: Should we make the parent optional, and default to parent
directories component? -->
<p>Components may reference the root pseudo component using '$ROOT' to
indicate they should logically be grouped at the top-level.</p>
</li>
</ul>
<p>Components may define the following properties:</p>
<ul>
<li><i>dependencies</i> <b>[optional]</b>
<p>If specified, a list of names of components which <i>must</i> be built
prior to this one. This should only be exactly those components which
produce some tool or source code required for building the
component.</p>
<p><em>NOTE:</em> Group and LibraryGroup components have no semantics for
the actual build, and are not allowed to specify dependencies.</p></li>
</ul>
<p>The following section lists the available component types, as well as the
properties which are associated with that component.</p>
<ul>
<li><i>type = Group</i>
<p>Group components exist purely to allow additional arbitrary structuring
of the logical components tree. For example, one might define a
"Libraries" group to hold all of the root library components.</p>
<p>Group components have no additionally properties.</p>
</li>
<li><i>type = Library</i>
<p>Library components define an individual library which should be built
from the source code in the component directory.</p>
<p>Components with this type use the following properties:</p>
<ul>
<li><i>library_name</i> <b>[optional]</b>
<p>If given, the name to use for the actual library file on disk. If
not given, the name is derived from the component name
itself.</p></li>
<li><i>required_libraries</i> <b>[optional]</b>
<p>If given, a list of the names of Library or LibraryGroup components
which must also be linked in whenever this library is used. That is,
the link time dependencies for this component. When tools are built,
the build system will include the transitive closer of
all <i>required_libraries</i> for the components the tool needs.</p></li>
<li><i>add_to_library_groups</i> <b>[optional]</b>
<p>If given, a list of the names of LibraryGroup components which this
component is also part of. This allows nesting groups of
components. For example, the <i>X86</i> target might define a library
group for all of the <i>X86</i> components. That library group might
then be included in the <i>all-targets</i> library group.</p></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li><i>type = LibraryGroup</i>
<p>LibraryGroup components are a mechanism to allow easy definition of
useful sets of related components. In particular, we use them to easily
specify things like "all targets", or "all assembly printers".</p>
<p>Components with this type use the following properties:</p>
<ul>
<li><i>required_libraries</i> <b>[optional]</b>
<p>See the Library type for a description of this property.</p></li>
<li><i>add_to_library_groups</i> <b>[optional]</b>
<p>See the Library type for a description of this property.</p></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li><i>type = Tool</i>
<p>Tool components define standalone command line tools which should be
built from the source code in the component directory and linked.</p>
<p>Components with this type use the following properties:</p>
<ul>
<li><i>required_libraries</i> <b>[optional]</b>
<p>If given, a list of the names of Library or LibraryGroup components
which this tool is required to be linked with. <b>NOTE:</b> The values
should be the component names, which may not always match up with the
actual library names on disk.</p>
<p>Build systems are expected to properly include all of the libraries
required by the linked components (i.e., the transitive closer
of <em>required_libraries</em>).</p>
<p>Build systems are also expected to understand that those library
components must be built prior to linking -- they do not also need to
be listed under <i>dependencies</i>.</p></li>
</ul>
</li>
<li><i>type = BuildTool</i>
<p>BuildTool components are like Tool components, except that the tool is
supposed to be built for the platform where the build is running (instead
of that platform being targetted). Build systems are expected to handle
the fact that required libraries may need to be built for multiple
platforms in order to be able to link this tool.</p>
<p>BuildTool components currently use the exact same properties as Tool
components, the type distinction is only used to differentiate what the
tool is built for.</p>
</li>
</ul>
</div>
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