Port variant | standard |
Summary | LLVM 4.0 and Clang |
Only for platform | sunos |
Package version | 4.0.1_2 |
Homepage | http://llvm.org/ |
Keywords | devel, lang |
Maintainer | nobody |
License | LLVM Release License |
Other variants | There are no other variants. |
Ravenports | Buildsheet | History |
Ravensource | Port Directory | History |
Last modified | 09 APR 2020, 05:56:45 UTC |
Port created | 07 JUN 2017, 22:40:10 UTC |
complete | This is the llvm40-standard metapackage. It pulls in all subpackages of llvm40-standard. |
clang | The LLVM Project is a collection of modular and reusable compiler and toolchain technologies. Despite its name, LLVM has little to do with traditional virtual machines, though it does provide helpful libraries that can be used to build them. The name "LLVM" itself is not an acronym; it is the full name of the project. This package contains Clang is an "LLVM native" C/C++/Objective-C compiler, which aims to deliver amazingly fast compiles (e.g. about 3x faster than GCC when compiling Objective-C code in a debug configuration), extremely useful error and warning messages and to provide a platform for building great source level tools. The Clang Static Analyzer is a tool that automatically finds bugs in your code, and is a great example of the sort of tool that can be built using the Clang frontend as a library to parse C/C++ code. |
llvm | The LLVM Project is a collection of modular and reusable compiler and toolchain technologies. Despite its name, LLVM has little to do with traditional virtual machines, though it does provide helpful libraries that can be used to build them. The name "LLVM" itself is not an acronym; it is the full name of the project. This package contains the LLVM Core libraries which provide a modern source- and target-independent optimizer, along with code generation support for many popular CPUs (as well as some less common ones!) These libraries are built around a well specified code representation known as the LLVM intermediate representation ("LLVM IR"). The LLVM Core libraries are well documented, and it is particularly easy to invent your own language (or port an existing compiler) to use LLVM as an optimizer and code generator. |
main | http://llvm.org/releases/4.0.1/ |
No other ports depend on this one. |