Crates.io | llvm-sys-featured |
lib.rs | llvm-sys-featured |
version | 0.1.1 |
source | src |
created_at | 2020-08-25 04:05:16.807123 |
updated_at | 2020-08-31 22:29:24.649418 |
description | Bindings to LLVM's C API |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/cdisselkoen/llvm-sys-featured |
max_upload_size | |
id | 280372 |
size | 240,823 |
Originally, this crate was created as one solution to the problem of
using Cargo features to select an LLVM version for use with llvm-sys
,
which wasn't possible at the time.
Since then, thanks to changes in llvm-sys
(see
this llvm-sys
GitLab issue),
it is now possible to achieve the same goal much more simply, using
Cargo's dependency renaming feature.
For instance, as of this writing, llvm-ir
uses the following in its
Cargo.toml:
[dependencies]
llvm-sys-80 = { package = "llvm-sys", version = "80.3.0", optional = true }
llvm-sys-90 = { package = "llvm-sys", version = "90.2.0", optional = true }
llvm-sys-100 = { package = "llvm-sys", version = "100.2.0", optional = true }
[features]
# Select the LLVM version to be compatible with.
# You _must_ enable exactly one of the following features.
llvm-8 = ["llvm-sys-80"]
llvm-9 = ["llvm-sys-90"]
llvm-10 = ["llvm-sys-100"]
and checks in its build.rs
script that exactly one of those features was
enabled.
Then, in its actual library code, llvm-ir
uses the following:
#[cfg(feature = "llvm-8")]
pub use llvm_sys_80 as llvm_sys;
#[cfg(feature = "llvm-9")]
pub use llvm_sys_90 as llvm_sys;
#[cfg(feature = "llvm-10")]
pub use llvm_sys_100 as llvm_sys;
which declares llvm-sys
to represent the appropriate version of the
dependency.
Since this is now possible with llvm-sys
, there is no more need for the
alternative solution represented by llvm-sys-featured
.
This crate is now deprecated in favor of using llvm-sys
directly, and will
not be maintained or updated for future LLVM releases.
The original README for llvm-sys-featured
follows.
Rust bindings to LLVM's C API.
This is essentially a mirror of llvm-sys, except that instead of using
separate crates.io releases for each LLVM version, this crate uses Cargo
features. Currently, the goal is that with the llvm-8
feature you get
exactly llvm-sys
version 80.2.0, with the llvm-9
feature you get exactly
llvm-sys
version 90.1.0, and with the llvm-10
feature you get exactly
llvm-sys
version 100.1.1.
Add this crate as a dependency in your Cargo.toml
, selecting the feature
corresponding to the LLVM version you want:
[dependencies]
llvm-sys-featured = { version = "0.1.1", features = ["llvm-10"] }
Currently, the supported LLVM versions are llvm-8
, llvm-9
, and llvm-10
.
There must be the corresponding LLVM version available on your system.
By default, llvm-sys-featured
will look for llvm-config
on PATH
to find
a system-wide copy of LLVM and use that if it is compatible.
Alternately, you can set the environment variable LLVM_SYS_FEATURED_PREFIX
with the path (install prefix) to a compiled and installed copy of the
libraries, which will be used instead.
If you want to use llvm-sys-featured
as a drop-in replacement for
llvm-sys
(keeping the llvm-sys
name in your code), you can use Cargo's
dependency renaming feature:
[dependencies]
llvm-sys = { package = "llvm-sys-featured", version = "0.1.1", features = ["llvm-10"] }
Documentation for this crate's API can be found at docs.rs. However, most of the interfaces do not have detailed descriptions there, as they are simply bindings to the corresponding LLVM C API interfaces; refer to the LLVM documentation for more information, particularly the generated API documentation.
See the examples
directory in this repository for API examples; these
are exactly the same as the examples provided by llvm-sys.
We recommend that most users not use this crate directly, but instead use one of the following safe, "Rusty" APIs for LLVM:
Currently, this crate supports LLVM 8, LLVM 9, and LLVM 10. (See Usage.)
Like llvm-sys, this crate checks that the LLVM version being used matches the
one selected via Cargo features (or crate version in llvm-sys
's case).
This is because the LLVM C API stability guarantees are
relatively weak.
As an exception, like llvm-sys, this crate allows to use a newer LLVM
version with older bindings, which should be safe in almost all cases; for
more information, see comments in the llvm-sys README.
This behavior can be disabled by either selecting the strict-versioning
feature on this crate, or by setting the environment variable
LLVM_SYS_FEATURED_STRICT_VERSIONING
; in either case, this crate will then
enforce that the LLVM version being used exactly matches the one selected via
Cargo features.
LLVM can be acquired from your system package manager on most systems; but if
you want a newer version of LLVM, you can download it from the LLVM Download
page. On Debian and Ubuntu systems,
you can also get the latest versions from apt
by following these
instructions.
For more information on building LLVM from source, see the LLVM docs or the llvm-sys README.
At least 99% of the code in this crate is taken directly from llvm-sys, so a big thanks to its author Peter Marheine, who deserves all the credit for the excellent LLVM bindings.
This crate, like llvm-sys, is licensed under the MIT License. That means you're free to adapt and redistribute this crate with very few restrictions, just like how this crate adapts and redistributes llvm-sys.