@hackage llvm-ffi13.0

FFI bindings to the LLVM compiler toolkit.

  • Installation

  • Tested Compilers

  • Dependencies (2)

  • Dependents (2)

    @hackage/llvm-tf, @hackage/acme-everything
  • Package Flags

      developer
       (off by default)

      developer mode - warnings let compilation fail

      buildexamples
       (off by default)

      Build example executables

      pkgconfig
       (off by default)

      use pkgconfig (llvm.pc) instead of extra-libraries

      specificpkgconfig
       (on by default)

      use llvm-x.pc instead of llvm.pc

      llvm309
       (off by default)

      use LLVM-3.9 instead of latest supported LLVM

      llvm400
       (off by default)

      use LLVM-4.0 instead of latest supported LLVM

      llvm500
       (off by default)

      use LLVM-5.0 instead of latest supported LLVM

      llvm600
       (off by default)

      use LLVM-6.0 instead of latest supported LLVM

      llvm700
       (off by default)

      use LLVM-7 instead of latest supported LLVM

      llvm800
       (off by default)

      use LLVM-8 instead of latest supported LLVM

      llvm900
       (off by default)

      use LLVM-9 instead of latest supported LLVM

      llvm1000
       (off by default)

      use LLVM-10 instead of latest supported LLVM

      llvm1100
       (off by default)

      use LLVM-11 instead of latest supported LLVM

      llvm1200
       (off by default)

      use LLVM-12 instead of latest supported LLVM

FFI bindings to the LLVM compiler toolkit.

Installation cannot be done fully automatically. It would require Cabal code that is bound to certain Cabal versions and is prone to fail. We give several non-automatic ways that also allow you to choose a particular LLVM version.

First possibility is to point Cabal to the LLVM installation directories manually. It is recommended to add options to your global .cabal/config:

extra-include-dirs: /usr/lib/llvm-13/include
extra-lib-dirs: /usr/lib/llvm-13/lib

This works for both v1-build and v2-build. The shown paths work for Debian and Ubuntu using the LLVM repositories at https://apt.llvm.org/. You can obtain them with

llvm-config-13 --includedir --libdir

You can choose specific LLVM versions per project. For v1-builds it works like so:

cabal install -fllvm900 --extra-include-dirs=$(llvm-config-9 --includedir) --extra-lib-dirs=$(llvm-config-9 --libdir) yourpackage

For Nix-style build you must add some options to the cabal.project.local file of your LLVM-related project:

package llvm-ffi
  flags: +llvm900
  extra-include-dirs: /usr/lib/llvm-9/include
  extra-lib-dirs: /usr/lib/llvm-9/lib

The second way uses pkg-config. You can store above paths permanently in a pkg-config file like llvm.pc. The optimal way would be if LLVM installations or GNU/Linux distributions would contain such a file, but they don't. Instead, you may generate it using the llvm-pkg-config package or write one manually. Then you run

cabal install -fpkgConfig

We try to stay up to date with LLVM releases. The current version of this package is compatible with LLVM 3.9-13. Please understand that the package may or may not work against older LLVM releases.

Warning for inplace builds: Re-configuring the package using, say -fllvm600, and re-buildung it might result in corrupt code. You must make sure that the stuff in cbits is re-compiled. Cabal or GHC may forget about that. You are safe if you run cabal clean.

Caution: Ugly crashes can occur if you have configured paths for LLVM version X in .cabal/config and try to build llvm-ffi for a different LLVM version Y. Counterintuitively, global search paths have higher precedence than local ones: https://github.com/haskell/cabal/issues/7782. But that does not simply mean that the local configuration is ignored completely. Instead the local library file is found, because its name libLLVM-Y.so is unique, whereas the include file names clash, thus the ones from the global include directory are used.