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 | <!--*************************************************************************--> | 
 | <h1>Clang - Features and Goals</h1> | 
 | <!--*************************************************************************--> | 
 |  | 
 | <p> | 
 | This page describes the <a href="index.html#goals">features and goals</a> of | 
 | Clang in more detail and gives a more broad explanation about what we mean. | 
 | These features are: | 
 | </p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>End-User Features:</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <ul> | 
 | <li><a href="#performance">Fast compiles and low memory use</a></li> | 
 | <li><a href="#expressivediags">Expressive diagnostics</a></li> | 
 | <li><a href="#gcccompat">GCC compatibility</a></li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Utility and Applications:</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <ul> | 
 | <li><a href="#libraryarch">Library based architecture</a></li> | 
 | <li><a href="#diverseclients">Support diverse clients</a></li> | 
 | <li><a href="#ideintegration">Integration with IDEs</a></li> | 
 | <li><a href="#license">Use the LLVM 'BSD' License</a></li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Internal Design and Implementation:</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <ul> | 
 | <li><a href="#real">A real-world, production quality compiler</a></li> | 
 | <li><a href="#simplecode">A simple and hackable code base</a></li> | 
 | <li><a href="#unifiedparser">A single unified parser for C, Objective C, C++, | 
 |     and Objective C++</a></li> | 
 | <li><a href="#conformance">Conformance with C/C++/ObjC and their | 
 |     variants</a></li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <!--*************************************************************************--> | 
 | <h2><a name="enduser">End-User Features</a></h2> | 
 | <!--*************************************************************************--> | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | <!--=======================================================================--> | 
 | <h3><a name="performance">Fast compiles and Low Memory Use</a></h3> | 
 | <!--=======================================================================--> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>A major focus of our work on clang is to make it fast, light and scalable. | 
 | The library-based architecture of clang makes it straight-forward to time and | 
 | profile the cost of each layer of the stack, and the driver has a number of | 
 | options for performance analysis. Many detailed benchmarks can be found online.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Compile time performance is important, but when using clang as an API, often | 
 | memory use is even more so: the less memory the code takes the more code you can | 
 | fit into memory at a time (useful for whole program analysis tools, for | 
 | example).</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>In addition to being efficient when pitted head-to-head against GCC in batch | 
 | mode, clang is built with a <a href="#libraryarch">library based | 
 | architecture</a> that makes it relatively easy to adapt it and build new tools | 
 | with it.  This means that it is often possible to apply out-of-the-box thinking | 
 | and novel techniques to improve compilation in various ways.</p> | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | <!--=======================================================================--> | 
 | <h3><a name="expressivediags">Expressive Diagnostics</a></h3> | 
 | <!--=======================================================================--> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>In addition to being fast and functional, we aim to make Clang extremely user | 
 | friendly.  As far as a command-line compiler goes, this basically boils down to | 
 | making the diagnostics (error and warning messages) generated by the compiler | 
 | be as useful as possible.  There are several ways that we do this, but the | 
 | most important are pinpointing exactly what is wrong in the program, | 
 | highlighting related information so that it is easy to understand at a glance, | 
 | and making the wording as clear as possible.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Here is one simple example that illustrates the difference between a typical | 
 | GCC and Clang diagnostic:</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <pre> | 
 |   $ <b>gcc-4.2 -fsyntax-only t.c</b> | 
 |   t.c:7: error: invalid operands to binary + (have 'int' and 'struct A') | 
 |   $ <b>clang -fsyntax-only t.c</b> | 
 |   t.c:7:39: error: invalid operands to binary expression ('int' and 'struct A') | 
 |   <span style="color:darkgreen">  return y + func(y ? ((SomeA.X + 40) + SomeA) / 42 + SomeA.X : SomeA.X);</span> | 
 |   <span style="color:blue">                       ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ^ ~~~~~</span> | 
 | </pre> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Here you can see that you don't even need to see the original source code to | 
 | understand what is wrong based on the Clang error: Because Clang prints a | 
 | caret, you know exactly <em>which</em> plus it is complaining about.  The range | 
 | information highlights the left and right side of the plus which makes it | 
 | immediately obvious what the compiler is talking about, which is very useful for | 
 | cases involving precedence issues and many other situations.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Clang diagnostics are very polished and have many features.  For more  | 
 | information and examples, please see the <a href="diagnostics.html">Expressive | 
 | Diagnostics</a> page.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <!--=======================================================================--> | 
 | <h3><a name="gcccompat">GCC Compatibility</a></h3> | 
 | <!--=======================================================================--> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>GCC is currently the defacto-standard open source compiler today, and it | 
 | routinely compiles a huge volume of code.  GCC supports a huge number of | 
 | extensions and features (many of which are undocumented) and a lot of  | 
 | code and header files depend on these features in order to build.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>While it would be nice to be able to ignore these extensions and focus on | 
 | implementing the language standards to the letter, pragmatics force us to | 
 | support the GCC extensions that see the most use.  Many users just want their | 
 | code to compile, they don't care to argue about whether it is pedantically C99 | 
 | or not.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>As mentioned above, all | 
 | extensions are explicitly recognized as such and marked with extension | 
 | diagnostics, which can be mapped to warnings, errors, or just ignored. | 
 | </p> | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | <!--*************************************************************************--> | 
 | <h2><a name="applications">Utility and Applications</a></h2> | 
 | <!--*************************************************************************--> | 
 |  | 
 | <!--=======================================================================--> | 
 | <h3><a name="libraryarch">Library Based Architecture</a></h3> | 
 | <!--=======================================================================--> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>A major design concept for clang is its use of a library-based | 
 | architecture.  In this design, various parts of the front-end can be cleanly | 
 | divided into separate libraries which can then be mixed up for different needs | 
 | and uses.  In addition, the library-based approach encourages good interfaces | 
 | and makes it easier for new developers to get involved (because they only need | 
 | to understand small pieces of the big picture).</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <blockquote><p> | 
 | "The world needs better compiler tools, tools which are built as libraries. | 
 | This design point allows reuse of the tools in new and novel ways. However, | 
 | building the tools as libraries isn't enough: they must have clean APIs, be as | 
 | decoupled from each other as possible, and be easy to modify/extend. This | 
 | requires clean layering, decent design, and keeping the libraries independent of | 
 | any specific client."</p></blockquote> | 
 |  | 
 | <p> | 
 | Currently, clang is divided into the following libraries and tool: | 
 | </p> | 
 |  | 
 | <ul> | 
 | <li><b>libsupport</b> - Basic support library, from LLVM.</li> | 
 | <li><b>libsystem</b> - System abstraction library, from LLVM.</li> | 
 | <li><b>libbasic</b> - Diagnostics, SourceLocations, SourceBuffer abstraction, | 
 |     file system caching for input source files.</li> | 
 | <li><b>libast</b> - Provides classes to represent the C AST, the C type system, | 
 |     builtin functions, and various helpers for analyzing and manipulating the | 
 |     AST (visitors, pretty printers, etc).</li> | 
 | <li><b>liblex</b> - Lexing and preprocessing, identifier hash table, pragma | 
 |     handling, tokens, and macro expansion.</li> | 
 | <li><b>libparse</b> - Parsing. This library invokes coarse-grained 'Actions' | 
 |     provided by the client (e.g. libsema builds ASTs) but knows nothing about | 
 |     ASTs or other client-specific data structures.</li> | 
 | <li><b>libsema</b> - Semantic Analysis.  This provides a set of parser actions | 
 |     to build a standardized AST for programs.</li> | 
 | <li><b>libcodegen</b> - Lower the AST to LLVM IR for optimization & code | 
 |     generation.</li> | 
 | <li><b>librewrite</b> - Editing of text buffers (important for code rewriting | 
 |     transformation, like refactoring).</li> | 
 | <li><b>libanalysis</b> - Static analysis support.</li> | 
 | <li><b>clang</b> - A driver program, client of the libraries at various | 
 |     levels.</li> | 
 | </ul> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>As an example of the power of this library based design....  If you wanted to | 
 | build a preprocessor, you would take the Basic and Lexer libraries. If you want | 
 | an indexer, you would take the previous two and add the Parser library and | 
 | some actions for indexing. If you want a refactoring, static analysis, or | 
 | source-to-source compiler tool, you would then add the AST building and | 
 | semantic analyzer libraries.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>For more information about the low-level implementation details of the | 
 | various clang libraries, please see the <a href="docs/InternalsManual.html"> | 
 | clang Internals Manual</a>.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <!--=======================================================================--> | 
 | <h3><a name="diverseclients">Support Diverse Clients</a></h3> | 
 | <!--=======================================================================--> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Clang is designed and built with many grand plans for how we can use it.  The | 
 | driving force is the fact that we use C and C++ daily, and have to suffer due to | 
 | a lack of good tools available for it.  We believe that the C and C++ tools | 
 | ecosystem has been significantly limited by how difficult it is to parse and | 
 | represent the source code for these languages, and we aim to rectify this | 
 | problem in clang.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The problem with this goal is that different clients have very different | 
 | requirements.  Consider code generation, for example: a simple front-end that | 
 | parses for code generation must analyze the code for validity and emit code | 
 | in some intermediate form to pass off to a optimizer or backend.  Because | 
 | validity analysis and code generation can largely be done on the fly, there is | 
 | not hard requirement that the front-end actually build up a full AST for all | 
 | the expressions and statements in the code.  TCC and GCC are examples of | 
 | compilers that either build no real AST (in the former case) or build a stripped | 
 | down and simplified AST (in the later case) because they focus primarily on | 
 | codegen.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>On the opposite side of the spectrum, some clients (like refactoring) want | 
 | highly detailed information about the original source code and want a complete | 
 | AST to describe it with.  Refactoring wants to have information about macro | 
 | expansions, the location of every paren expression '(((x)))' vs 'x', full | 
 | position information, and much more.  Further, refactoring wants to look | 
 | <em>across the whole program</em> to ensure that it is making transformations | 
 | that are safe.  Making this efficient and getting this right requires a | 
 | significant amount of engineering and algorithmic work that simply are | 
 | unnecessary for a simple static compiler.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>The beauty of the clang approach is that it does not restrict how you use it. | 
 | In particular, it is possible to use the clang preprocessor and parser to build | 
 | an extremely quick and light-weight on-the-fly code generator (similar to TCC) | 
 | that does not build an AST at all.   As an intermediate step, clang supports | 
 | using the current AST generation and semantic analysis code and having a code  | 
 | generation client free the AST for each function after code generation. Finally, | 
 | clang provides support for building and retaining fully-fledged ASTs, and even | 
 | supports writing them out to disk.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Designing the libraries with clean and simple APIs allows these high-level | 
 | policy decisions to be determined in the client, instead of forcing "one true | 
 | way" in the implementation of any of these libraries.  Getting this right is | 
 | hard, and we don't always get it right the first time, but we fix any problems | 
 | when we realize we made a mistake.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <!--=======================================================================--> | 
 | <h3 id="ideintegration">Integration with IDEs</h3> | 
 | <!--=======================================================================--> | 
 |  | 
 | <p> | 
 | We believe that Integrated Development Environments (IDE's) are a great way | 
 | to pull together various pieces of the development puzzle, and aim to make clang | 
 | work well in such an environment.  The chief advantage of an IDE is that they | 
 | typically have visibility across your entire project and are long-lived | 
 | processes, whereas stand-alone compiler tools are typically invoked on each | 
 | individual file in the project, and thus have limited scope.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>There are many implications of this difference, but a significant one has to | 
 | do with efficiency and caching: sharing an address space across different files | 
 | in a project, means that you can use intelligent caching and other techniques to | 
 | dramatically reduce analysis/compilation time.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>A further difference between IDEs and batch compiler is that they often | 
 | impose very different requirements on the front-end: they depend on high | 
 | performance in order to provide a "snappy" experience, and thus really want | 
 | techniques like "incremental compilation", "fuzzy parsing", etc.  Finally, IDEs | 
 | often have very different requirements than code generation, often requiring | 
 | information that a codegen-only frontend can throw away.  Clang is | 
 | specifically designed and built to capture this information. | 
 | </p> | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | <!--=======================================================================--> | 
 | <h3><a name="license">Use the LLVM 'BSD' License</a></h3> | 
 | <!--=======================================================================--> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>We actively intend for clang (and LLVM as a whole) to be used for | 
 | commercial projects, not only as a stand-alone compiler but also as a library | 
 | embedded inside a proprietary application.  The BSD license is the simplest way | 
 | to allow this.  We feel that the license encourages contributors to pick up the | 
 | source and work with it, and believe that those individuals and organizations | 
 | will contribute back their work if they do not want to have to maintain a fork | 
 | forever (which is time consuming and expensive when merges are involved). | 
 | Further, nobody makes money on compilers these days, but many people need them | 
 | to get bigger goals accomplished: it makes sense for everyone to work | 
 | together.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>For more information about the LLVM/clang license, please see the <a  | 
 | href="http://llvm.org/docs/DeveloperPolicy.html#license">LLVM License  | 
 | Description</a> for more information.</p> | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | <!--*************************************************************************--> | 
 | <h2><a name="design">Internal Design and Implementation</a></h2> | 
 | <!--*************************************************************************--> | 
 |  | 
 | <!--=======================================================================--> | 
 | <h3><a name="real">A real-world, production quality compiler</a></h3> | 
 | <!--=======================================================================--> | 
 |  | 
 | <p> | 
 | Clang is designed and built by experienced compiler developers who | 
 | are increasingly frustrated with the problems that <a  | 
 | href="comparison.html">existing open source compilers</a> have.  Clang is | 
 | carefully and thoughtfully designed and built to provide the foundation of a | 
 | whole new generation of C/C++/Objective C development tools, and we intend for | 
 | it to be production quality.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Being a production quality compiler means many things: it means being high | 
 | performance, being solid and (relatively) bug free, and it means eventually | 
 | being used and depended on by a broad range of people.  While we are still in | 
 | the early development stages, we strongly believe that this will become a | 
 | reality.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <!--=======================================================================--> | 
 | <h3><a name="simplecode">A simple and hackable code base</a></h3> | 
 | <!--=======================================================================--> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Our goal is to make it possible for anyone with a basic understanding | 
 | of compilers and working knowledge of the C/C++/ObjC languages to understand and | 
 | extend the clang source base.  A large part of this falls out of our decision to | 
 | make the AST mirror the languages as closely as possible: you have your friendly | 
 | if statement, for statement, parenthesis expression, structs, unions, etc, all | 
 | represented in a simple and explicit way.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>In addition to a simple design, we work to make the source base approachable | 
 | by commenting it well, including citations of the language standards where | 
 | appropriate, and designing the code for simplicity.  Beyond that, clang offers | 
 | a set of AST dumpers, printers, and visualizers that make it easy to put code in | 
 | and see how it is represented.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <!--=======================================================================--> | 
 | <h3><a name="unifiedparser">A single unified parser for C, Objective C, C++, | 
 | and Objective C++</a></h3> | 
 | <!--=======================================================================--> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>Clang is the "C Language Family Front-end", which means we intend to support | 
 | the most popular members of the C family.  We are convinced that the right | 
 | parsing technology for this class of languages is a hand-built recursive-descent | 
 | parser.  Because it is plain C++ code, recursive descent makes it very easy for | 
 | new developers to understand the code, it easily supports ad-hoc rules and other | 
 | strange hacks required by C/C++, and makes it straight-forward to implement | 
 | excellent diagnostics and error recovery.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>We believe that implementing C/C++/ObjC in a single unified parser makes the | 
 | end result easier to maintain and evolve than maintaining a separate C and C++ | 
 | parser which must be bugfixed and maintained independently of each other.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <!--=======================================================================--> | 
 | <h3><a name="conformance">Conformance with C/C++/ObjC and their | 
 |  variants</a></h3> | 
 | <!--=======================================================================--> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>When you start work on implementing a language, you find out that there is a | 
 | huge gap between how the language works and how most people understand it to | 
 | work.  This gap is the difference between a normal programmer and a (scary? | 
 | super-natural?) "language lawyer", who knows the ins and outs of the language | 
 | and can grok standardese with ease.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>In practice, being conformant with the languages means that we aim to support | 
 | the full language, including the dark and dusty corners (like trigraphs, | 
 | preprocessor arcana, C99 VLAs, etc).  Where we support extensions above and | 
 | beyond what the standard officially allows, we make an effort to explicitly call | 
 | this out in the code and emit warnings about it (which are disabled by default, | 
 | but can optionally be mapped to either warnings or errors), allowing you to use | 
 | clang in "strict" mode if you desire.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | <p>We also intend to support "dialects" of these languages, such as C89, K&R | 
 | C, C++'03, Objective-C 2, etc.</p> | 
 |  | 
 | </div> | 
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