1.. _BuildingLibcxx:
2
3===============
4Building libc++
5===============
6
7.. contents::
8  :local:
9
10.. _build instructions:
11
12The instructions on this page are aimed at vendors who ship libc++ as part of an
13operating system distribution, a toolchain or similar shipping vehicules. If you
14are a user merely trying to use libc++ in your program, you most likely want to
15refer to your vendor's documentation, or to the general documentation for using
16libc++ :ref:`here <using-libcxx>`.
17
18.. warning::
19  If your operating system already provides libc++, it is important to be careful
20  not to replace it. Replacing your system's libc++ installation could render it
21  non-functional. Use the CMake option ``CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX`` to select a safe
22  place to install libc++.
23
24
25The default build
26=================
27
28By default, libc++ and libc++abi are built as sub-projects of the LLVM project.
29This can be achieved with the usual CMake invocation:
30
31.. code-block:: bash
32
33  $ git clone https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project.git
34  $ cd llvm-project
35  $ mkdir build
36  $ cmake -G Ninja -S llvm -B build -DLLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS="libcxx;libcxxabi" # Configure
37  $ ninja -C build cxx cxxabi                                                 # Build
38  $ ninja -C build check-cxx check-cxxabi                                     # Test
39  $ ninja -C build install-cxx install-cxxabi                                 # Install
40
41.. note::
42  See :ref:`CMake Options` below for more configuration options.
43
44After building the ``install-cxx`` and ``install-cxxabi`` targets, shared libraries
45for libc++ and libc++abi should now be present in ``<CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX>/lib``, and
46headers in ``<CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX>/include/c++/v1``. See :ref:`using an alternate
47libc++ installation <alternate libcxx>` for information on how to use this libc++ over
48the default one.
49
50In the default configuration, libc++ and libc++abi will be built using the compiler available
51by default on your system. It is also possible to bootstrap Clang and build libc++ with it.
52
53
54Bootstrapping build
55===================
56
57It is also possible to build Clang and then build libc++ and libc++abi using that
58just-built compiler. This is the correct way to build libc++ when putting together
59a toolchain, or when the system compiler is not adequate to build libc++ (too old,
60unsupported, etc.). This type of build is also commonly called a "Runtimes build":
61
62.. code-block:: bash
63
64  $ mkdir build
65  $ cmake -G Ninja -S llvm -B build -DLLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS="clang"            \  # Configure
66                                    -DLLVM_ENABLE_RUNTIMES="libcxx;libcxxabi" \
67                                    -DLLVM_RUNTIME_TARGETS="<target-triple>"
68  $ ninja -C build runtimes                                                      # Build
69  $ ninja -C build check-runtimes                                                # Test
70  $ ninja -C build install-runtimes                                              # Install
71
72
73Support for Windows
74===================
75
76libcxx supports being built with clang-cl, but not with MSVC's cl.exe, as
77cl doesn't support the ``#include_next`` extension. Furthermore, VS 2017 or
78newer (19.14) is required.
79
80libcxx also supports being built with clang targeting MinGW environments.
81
82CMake + Visual Studio
83---------------------
84
85Building with Visual Studio currently does not permit running tests. However,
86it is the simplest way to build.
87
88.. code-block:: batch
89
90  > cmake -G "Visual Studio 16 2019" -S libcxx -B build ^
91          -T "ClangCL"                                  ^
92          -DLIBCXX_ENABLE_SHARED=YES                    ^
93          -DLIBCXX_ENABLE_STATIC=NO                     ^
94          -DLIBCXX_ENABLE_EXPERIMENTAL_LIBRARY=NO
95  > cmake --build build
96
97CMake + ninja (MSVC)
98--------------------
99
100Building with ninja is required for development to enable tests.
101A couple of tests require Bash to be available, and a couple dozens
102of tests require other posix tools (cp, grep and similar - LLVM's tests
103require the same). Without those tools the vast majority of tests
104can still be ran successfully.
105
106If Git for Windows is available, that can be used to provide the bash
107shell by adding the right bin directory to the path, e.g.
108``set PATH=%PATH%;C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin``.
109
110Alternatively, one can also choose to run the whole build in a MSYS2
111shell. That can be set up e.g. by starting a Visual Studio Tools Command
112Prompt (for getting the environment variables pointing to the headers and
113import libraries), and making sure that clang-cl is available in the
114path. From there, launch an MSYS2 shell via e.g.
115``C:\msys64\msys2_shell.cmd -full-path -mingw64`` (preserving the earlier
116environment, allowing the MSVC headers/libraries and clang-cl to be found).
117
118In either case, then run:
119
120.. code-block:: batch
121
122  > cmake -G Ninja -S libcxx -B build                                                 ^
123          -DCMAKE_C_COMPILER=clang-cl                                                 ^
124          -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=clang-cl                                               ^
125          -DLIBCXX_ENABLE_EXPERIMENTAL_LIBRARY=NO
126  > ninja -C build cxx
127  > ninja -C build check-cxx
128
129If you are running in an MSYS2 shell and you have installed the
130MSYS2-provided clang package (which defaults to a non-MSVC target), you
131should add e.g. ``-DLIBCXX_TARGET_TRIPLE=x86_64-windows-msvc`` (replacing
132``x86_64`` with the architecture you're targeting) to the ``cmake`` command
133line above. This will instruct ``check-cxx`` to use the right target triple
134when invoking ``clang++``.
135
136Also note that if not building in Release mode, a failed assert in the tests
137pops up a blocking dialog box, making it hard to run a larger number of tests.
138
139CMake + ninja (MinGW)
140---------------------
141
142libcxx can also be built in MinGW environments, e.g. with the MinGW
143compilers in MSYS2. This requires clang to be available (installed with
144e.g. the ``mingw-w64-x86_64-clang`` package), together with CMake and ninja.
145
146.. code-block:: bash
147
148  > cmake -G Ninja -S libcxx -B build                                                 \
149          -DCMAKE_C_COMPILER=clang                                                    \
150          -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=clang++                                                \
151          -DLIBCXX_HAS_WIN32_THREAD_API=ON                                            \
152          -DLIBCXX_CXX_ABI=libstdc++                                                  \
153          -DLIBCXX_TARGET_INFO="libcxx.test.target_info.MingwLocalTI"
154  > ninja -C build cxx
155  > cp /mingw64/bin/{libstdc++-6,libgcc_s_seh-1,libwinpthread-1}.dll lib
156  > ninja -C build check-cxx
157
158As this build configuration ends up depending on a couple other DLLs that
159aren't available in path while running tests, copy them into the same
160directory as the tested libc++ DLL.
161
162(Building a libc++ that depends on libstdc++ isn't necessarily a config one
163would want to deploy, but it simplifies the config for testing purposes.)
164
165.. _`libc++abi`: http://libcxxabi.llvm.org/
166
167
168.. _CMake Options:
169
170CMake Options
171=============
172
173Here are some of the CMake variables that are used often, along with a
174brief explanation and LLVM-specific notes. For full documentation, check the
175CMake docs or execute ``cmake --help-variable VARIABLE_NAME``.
176
177**CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE**:STRING
178  Sets the build type for ``make`` based generators. Possible values are
179  Release, Debug, RelWithDebInfo and MinSizeRel. On systems like Visual Studio
180  the user sets the build type with the IDE settings.
181
182**CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX**:PATH
183  Path where LLVM will be installed if "make install" is invoked or the
184  "INSTALL" target is built.
185
186**CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER**:STRING
187  The C++ compiler to use when building and testing libc++.
188
189
190.. _libcxx-specific options:
191
192libc++ specific options
193-----------------------
194
195.. option:: LIBCXX_INSTALL_LIBRARY:BOOL
196
197  **Default**: ``ON``
198
199  Toggle the installation of the library portion of libc++.
200
201.. option:: LIBCXX_INSTALL_HEADERS:BOOL
202
203  **Default**: ``ON``
204
205  Toggle the installation of the libc++ headers.
206
207.. option:: LIBCXX_ENABLE_ASSERTIONS:BOOL
208
209  **Default**: ``OFF``
210
211  Build libc++ with assertions enabled.
212
213.. option:: LIBCXX_BUILD_32_BITS:BOOL
214
215  **Default**: ``OFF``
216
217  Build libc++ as a 32 bit library. Also see `LLVM_BUILD_32_BITS`.
218
219.. option:: LIBCXX_ENABLE_SHARED:BOOL
220
221  **Default**: ``ON``
222
223  Build libc++ as a shared library. Either `LIBCXX_ENABLE_SHARED` or
224  `LIBCXX_ENABLE_STATIC` has to be enabled.
225
226.. option:: LIBCXX_ENABLE_STATIC:BOOL
227
228  **Default**: ``ON``
229
230  Build libc++ as a static library. Either `LIBCXX_ENABLE_SHARED` or
231  `LIBCXX_ENABLE_STATIC` has to be enabled.
232
233.. option:: LIBCXX_LIBDIR_SUFFIX:STRING
234
235  Extra suffix to append to the directory where libraries are to be installed.
236  This option overrides `LLVM_LIBDIR_SUFFIX`.
237
238.. option:: LIBCXX_HERMETIC_STATIC_LIBRARY:BOOL
239
240  **Default**: ``OFF``
241
242  Do not export any symbols from the static libc++ library.
243  This is useful when the static libc++ library is being linked into shared
244  libraries that may be used in with other shared libraries that use different
245  C++ library. We want to avoid exporting any libc++ symbols in that case.
246
247.. option:: LIBCXX_ENABLE_FILESYSTEM:BOOL
248
249   **Default**: ``ON`` except on Windows when using MSVC.
250
251   This option can be used to enable or disable the filesystem components on
252   platforms that may not support them. For example on Windows when using MSVC.
253
254.. option:: LIBCXX_ENABLE_INCOMPLETE_FEATURES:BOOL
255
256  **Default**: ``ON``
257
258  Whether to enable support for incomplete library features. Incomplete features
259  are new library features under development. These features don't guarantee
260  ABI stability nor the quality of completed library features. Vendors
261  shipping the library may want to disable this option.
262
263.. option:: LIBCXX_INSTALL_LIBRARY_DIR:PATH
264
265  **Default**: ``lib${LIBCXX_LIBDIR_SUFFIX}``
266
267  Path where built libc++ libraries should be installed. If a relative path,
268  relative to ``CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX``.
269
270.. option:: LIBCXX_INSTALL_INCLUDE_DIR:PATH
271
272  **Default**: ``include/c++/v1``
273
274  Path where target-agnostic libc++ headers should be installed. If a relative
275  path, relative to ``CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX``.
276
277.. option:: LIBCXX_INSTALL_INCLUDE_TARGET_DIR:PATH
278
279  **Default**: ``include/c++/v1`` or
280  ``include/${LLVM_DEFAULT_TARGET_TRIPLE}/c++/v1``
281
282  Path where target-specific libc++ headers should be installed. If a relative
283  path, relative to ``CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX``.
284
285.. _libc++experimental options:
286
287libc++experimental Specific Options
288------------------------------------
289
290.. option:: LIBCXX_ENABLE_EXPERIMENTAL_LIBRARY:BOOL
291
292  **Default**: ``ON``
293
294  Build and test libc++experimental.a.
295
296.. option:: LIBCXX_INSTALL_EXPERIMENTAL_LIBRARY:BOOL
297
298  **Default**: ``LIBCXX_ENABLE_EXPERIMENTAL_LIBRARY AND LIBCXX_INSTALL_LIBRARY``
299
300  Install libc++experimental.a alongside libc++.
301
302
303.. _ABI Library Specific Options:
304
305ABI Library Specific Options
306----------------------------
307
308.. option:: LIBCXX_CXX_ABI:STRING
309
310  **Values**: ``none``, ``libcxxabi``, ``libcxxrt``, ``libstdc++``, ``libsupc++``.
311
312  Select the ABI library to build libc++ against.
313
314.. option:: LIBCXX_CXX_ABI_INCLUDE_PATHS:PATHS
315
316  Provide additional search paths for the ABI library headers.
317
318.. option:: LIBCXX_CXX_ABI_LIBRARY_PATH:PATH
319
320  Provide the path to the ABI library that libc++ should link against.
321
322.. option:: LIBCXX_ENABLE_STATIC_ABI_LIBRARY:BOOL
323
324  **Default**: ``OFF``
325
326  If this option is enabled, libc++ will try and link the selected ABI library
327  statically.
328
329.. option:: LIBCXX_ENABLE_ABI_LINKER_SCRIPT:BOOL
330
331  **Default**: ``ON`` by default on UNIX platforms other than Apple unless
332  'LIBCXX_ENABLE_STATIC_ABI_LIBRARY' is ON. Otherwise the default value is ``OFF``.
333
334  This option generate and installs a linker script as ``libc++.so`` which
335  links the correct ABI library.
336
337.. option:: LIBCXXABI_USE_LLVM_UNWINDER:BOOL
338
339  **Default**: ``OFF``
340
341  Build and use the LLVM unwinder. Note: This option can only be used when
342  libc++abi is the C++ ABI library used.
343
344
345libc++ Feature Options
346----------------------
347
348.. option:: LIBCXX_ENABLE_EXCEPTIONS:BOOL
349
350  **Default**: ``ON``
351
352  Build libc++ with exception support.
353
354.. option:: LIBCXX_ENABLE_RTTI:BOOL
355
356  **Default**: ``ON``
357
358  Build libc++ with run time type information.
359
360.. option:: LIBCXX_INCLUDE_TESTS:BOOL
361
362  **Default**: ``ON`` (or value of ``LLVM_INCLUDE_TESTS``)
363
364  Build the libc++ tests.
365
366.. option:: LIBCXX_INCLUDE_BENCHMARKS:BOOL
367
368  **Default**: ``ON``
369
370  Build the libc++ benchmark tests and the Google Benchmark library needed
371  to support them.
372
373.. option:: LIBCXX_BENCHMARK_TEST_ARGS:STRING
374
375  **Default**: ``--benchmark_min_time=0.01``
376
377  A semicolon list of arguments to pass when running the libc++ benchmarks using the
378  ``check-cxx-benchmarks`` rule. By default we run the benchmarks for a very short amount of time,
379  since the primary use of ``check-cxx-benchmarks`` is to get test and sanitizer coverage, not to
380  get accurate measurements.
381
382.. option:: LIBCXX_BENCHMARK_NATIVE_STDLIB:STRING
383
384  **Default**:: ``""``
385
386  **Values**:: ``libc++``, ``libstdc++``
387
388  Build the libc++ benchmark tests and Google Benchmark library against the
389  specified standard library on the platform. On Linux this can be used to
390  compare libc++ to libstdc++ by building the benchmark tests against both
391  standard libraries.
392
393.. option:: LIBCXX_BENCHMARK_NATIVE_GCC_TOOLCHAIN:STRING
394
395  Use the specified GCC toolchain and standard library when building the native
396  stdlib benchmark tests.
397
398.. option:: LIBCXX_HIDE_FROM_ABI_PER_TU_BY_DEFAULT:BOOL
399
400  **Default**: ``OFF``
401
402  Pick the default for whether to constrain ABI-unstable symbols to
403  each individual translation unit. This setting controls whether
404  `_LIBCPP_HIDE_FROM_ABI_PER_TU_BY_DEFAULT` is defined by default --
405  see the documentation of that macro for details.
406
407
408libc++ ABI Feature Options
409--------------------------
410
411The following options allow building libc++ for a different ABI version.
412
413.. option:: LIBCXX_ABI_VERSION:STRING
414
415  **Default**: ``1``
416
417  Defines the target ABI version of libc++.
418
419.. option:: LIBCXX_ABI_UNSTABLE:BOOL
420
421  **Default**: ``OFF``
422
423  Build the "unstable" ABI version of libc++. Includes all ABI changing features
424  on top of the current stable version.
425
426.. option:: LIBCXX_ABI_NAMESPACE:STRING
427
428  **Default**: ``__n`` where ``n`` is the current ABI version.
429
430  This option defines the name of the inline ABI versioning namespace. It can be used for building
431  custom versions of libc++ with unique symbol names in order to prevent conflicts or ODR issues
432  with other libc++ versions.
433
434  .. warning::
435    When providing a custom namespace, it's the users responsibility to ensure the name won't cause
436    conflicts with other names defined by libc++, both now and in the future. In particular, inline
437    namespaces of the form ``__[0-9]+`` are strictly reserved by libc++ and may not be used by users.
438    Doing otherwise could cause conflicts and hinder libc++ ABI evolution.
439
440.. option:: LIBCXX_ABI_DEFINES:STRING
441
442  **Default**: ``""``
443
444  A semicolon-separated list of ABI macros to persist in the site config header.
445  See ``include/__config`` for the list of ABI macros.
446
447
448.. _LLVM-specific variables:
449
450LLVM-specific options
451---------------------
452
453.. option:: LLVM_LIBDIR_SUFFIX:STRING
454
455  Extra suffix to append to the directory where libraries are to be
456  installed. On a 64-bit architecture, one could use ``-DLLVM_LIBDIR_SUFFIX=64``
457  to install libraries to ``/usr/lib64``.
458
459.. option:: LLVM_BUILD_32_BITS:BOOL
460
461  Build 32-bits executables and libraries on 64-bits systems. This option is
462  available only on some 64-bits Unix systems. Defaults to OFF.
463
464.. option:: LLVM_LIT_ARGS:STRING
465
466  Arguments given to lit.  ``make check`` and ``make clang-test`` are affected.
467  By default, ``'-sv --no-progress-bar'`` on Visual C++ and Xcode, ``'-sv'`` on
468  others.
469
470
471Using Alternate ABI libraries
472=============================
473
474In order to implement various features like exceptions, RTTI, ``dynamic_cast`` and
475more, libc++ requires what we refer to as an ABI library. Typically, that library
476implements the `Itanium C++ ABI <https://itanium-cxx-abi.github.io/cxx-abi/abi.html>`_.
477
478By default, libc++ uses libc++abi as an ABI library. However, it is possible to use
479other ABI libraries too.
480
481Using libsupc++ on Linux
482------------------------
483
484You will need libstdc++ in order to provide libsupc++.
485
486Figure out where the libsupc++ headers are on your system. On Ubuntu this
487is ``/usr/include/c++/<version>`` and ``/usr/include/c++/<version>/<target-triple>``
488
489You can also figure this out by running
490
491.. code-block:: bash
492
493  $ echo | g++ -Wp,-v -x c++ - -fsyntax-only
494  ignoring nonexistent directory "/usr/local/include/x86_64-linux-gnu"
495  ignoring nonexistent directory "/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-linux-gnu/4.7/../../../../x86_64-linux-gnu/include"
496  #include "..." search starts here:
497  #include &lt;...&gt; search starts here:
498  /usr/include/c++/4.7
499  /usr/include/c++/4.7/x86_64-linux-gnu
500  /usr/include/c++/4.7/backward
501  /usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-linux-gnu/4.7/include
502  /usr/local/include
503  /usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-linux-gnu/4.7/include-fixed
504  /usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu
505  /usr/include
506  End of search list.
507
508Note that the first two entries happen to be what we are looking for. This
509may not be correct on all platforms.
510
511We can now run CMake:
512
513.. code-block:: bash
514
515  $ cmake -G Ninja -S llvm -B build           \
516    -DLLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS="libcxx"           \
517    -DLIBCXX_CXX_ABI=libstdc++                \
518    -DLIBCXX_CXX_ABI_INCLUDE_PATHS="/usr/include/c++/4.7/;/usr/include/c++/4.7/x86_64-linux-gnu/"
519  $ ninja -C build install-cxx
520
521
522You can also substitute ``-DLIBCXX_CXX_ABI=libsupc++``
523above, which will cause the library to be linked to libsupc++ instead
524of libstdc++, but this is only recommended if you know that you will
525never need to link against libstdc++ in the same executable as libc++.
526GCC ships libsupc++ separately but only as a static library.  If a
527program also needs to link against libstdc++, it will provide its
528own copy of libsupc++ and this can lead to subtle problems.
529
530Using libcxxrt on Linux
531------------------------
532
533You will need to keep the source tree of `libcxxrt`_ available
534on your build machine and your copy of the libcxxrt shared library must
535be placed where your linker will find it.
536
537We can now run CMake like:
538
539.. code-block:: bash
540
541  $ cmake -G Ninja -S llvm -B build                                   \
542          -DLLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS="libcxx"                             \
543          -DLIBCXX_CXX_ABI=libcxxrt                                   \
544          -DLIBCXX_CXX_ABI_INCLUDE_PATHS=path/to/libcxxrt-sources/src
545  $ ninja -C build install-cxx
546
547Unfortunately you can't simply run clang with "-stdlib=libc++" at this point, as
548clang is set up to link for libc++ linked to libsupc++.  To get around this
549you'll have to set up your linker yourself (or patch clang).  For example,
550
551.. code-block:: bash
552
553  $ clang++ -stdlib=libc++ helloworld.cpp \
554            -nodefaultlibs -lc++ -lcxxrt -lm -lc -lgcc_s -lgcc
555
556Alternately, you could just add libcxxrt to your libraries list, which in most
557situations will give the same result:
558
559.. code-block:: bash
560
561  $ clang++ -stdlib=libc++ helloworld.cpp -lcxxrt
562
563.. _`libcxxrt`: https://github.com/libcxxrt/libcxxrt
564