llvm-for-llvmta/utils/gn/README.rst

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=====================
Building LLVM with GN
=====================
.. contents::
:local:
.. _Introduction:
Introduction
============
*Warning* The GN build is experimental and best-effort. It might not work,
and if you use it you're expected to feel comfortable to unbreak it if
necessary. LLVM's official build system is CMake, if in doubt use that.
If you add files, you're expected to update the CMake build but you don't need
to update GN build files. Reviewers should not ask authors to update GN build
files. Keeping the GN build files up-to-date is on the people who use the GN
build.
`GN <https://gn.googlesource.com/gn/>`_ is a metabuild system. It always
creates ninja files, but it can create some IDE projects (MSVC, Xcode, ...)
which then shell out to ninja for the actual build.
The main motivation behind the GN build is that some people find it more
convenient for day-to-day hacking on LLVM than CMake. Distribution, building
just parts of LLVM, and embedding the LLVM GN build from other builds are
non-goals for the GN build.
This is a `good overview of GN <https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/15Zwb53JcncHfEwHpnG_PoIbbzQ3GQi_cpujYwbpcbZo/edit#slide=id.g119d702868_0_12>`_.
.. _Quick start:
Quick start
===========
#. ``git clone https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project.git; cd llvm-project`` if
you don't have a checkout yet.
#. ``llvm/utils/gn/get.py`` to download a prebuilt gn binary if you're on a
64-bit X86 system running Linux, macOS, or Windows. `Build gn yourself
<https://gn.googlesource.com/gn/#getting-started>`_ if you're on a different
platform or don't want to trust prebuilt binaries.
#. ``llvm/utils/gn/gn.py gen out/gn`` to run GN and create build files.
``out/gn`` is the build directory, it can have any name, and you can have as
many as you want, each with different build settings. (The ``gn.py`` script
adds ``--dotfile=llvm/utils/gn/.gn --root=.`` and just runs regular ``gn``;
you can manually pass these parameters and not use the wrapper if you
prefer.)
#. ``echo out >> .git/info/exclude`` to tell git to ignore files below ``out``.
#. ``ninja -C out/gn check-lld`` to build all prerequisites for and run the LLD
tests.
By default, you get a release build with assertions enabled that targets
the host arch. You can set build options by editing ``out/gn/args.gn``, for
example putting ``is_debug = true`` in there gives you a debug build. Run
``llvm/utils/gn/gn.py args --list out/gn`` to see a list of all possible
options. After touching ``out/gn/args.gn`` just run ninja: it will re-invoke gn
before starting the build.
GN has extensive built-in help; try e.g. ``llvm/utils/gn/gn.py help gen`` to see
the help for the ``gen`` command. The full GN reference is also `available
online <https://gn.googlesource.com/gn/+/master/docs/reference.md>`_.
GN has an autoformatter:
``git ls-files '*.gn' '*.gni' | xargs llvm/utils/gn/gn.py format``
after making GN build changes is your friend.
To not put ``BUILD.gn`` files into the main tree, they are all below
``utils/gn/secondary``. For example, the build file for ``llvm/lib/Support``
is in ``utils/gn/secondary/llvm/lib/Support``.
.. _Syncing GN files from CMake files:
Syncing GN files from CMake files
=================================
Sometimes after pulling in the latest changes, the GN build doesn't work.
Most of the time this is due to someone adding a file to CMakeLists.txt file.
Run ``llvm/utils/gn/build/sync_source_lists_from_cmake.py`` to print a report
of which files need to be added to or removed from ``BUILD.gn`` files to
match the corresponding ``CMakeLists.txt``. You have to manually read the output
of the script and implement its suggestions.
If new ``CMakeLists.txt`` files have been added, you have to manually create
a new corresponding ``BUILD.gn`` file below ``llvm/utils/gn/secondary/``.
If the dependencies in a ``CMakeLists.txt`` file have been changed, you have to
manually analyze and fix.
.. _Philosophy:
Philosophy
==========
GN believes in using GN arguments to configure the build explicitly, instead
of implicitly figuring out what to do based on what's available on the current
system.
configure is used for three classes of feature checks:
- compiler checks. In GN, these could use exec_script to identify the host
compiler at GN time. For now the build has explicit toggles for compiler
features. (Maybe there could be a script that writes args.gn based on the
host compiler). It's possible we'll use exec_script() for this going forward,
but we'd have one exec_script call to identify compiler id and version,
and then base GN arg default values of compiler id and version instead of
doing one exec_script per feature check.
(In theory, the config approach means a new os / compiler just needs to tweak
the checks and not the code, but in practice a) new os's / compilers are rare
b) they will require code changes anyhow, so the configure tradeoff seems
not worth it.)
- library checks. For e.g. like zlib, GN thinks it's better to say "we require
zlib, else we error at build time" than silently omitting features. People
who really don't want to install zlib can explicitly set the GN arg to turn
off zlib.
- header checks (does system header X exist). These are generally not needed
(just keying this off the host OS works fine), but if they should become
necessary in the future, they should be done at build time and the few
targets that need to know if header X exists then depend on that build-time
check while everything else can build parallel with it.
- LLVM-specific build toggles (assertions on/off, debug on/off, targets to
build, ...). These map cleanly to GN args (which then get copied into
config.h in a build step).
For the last two points, it would be nice if LLVM didn't have a single
``config.h`` header, but one header per toggle. That way, when e.g.
``llvm_enable_terminfo`` is toggled, only the 3 files caring about that setting
would need to be rebuilt, instead of everything including ``config.h``.
GN doesn't believe in users setting arbitrary cflags from an environment
variable, it wants the build to be controlled by .gn files.