=pod =head1 NAME lli - directly execute programs from LLVM bitcode =head1 SYNOPSIS B [I] [I] [I] =head1 DESCRIPTION B directly executes programs in LLVM bitcode format. It takes a program in LLVM bitcode format and executes it using a just-in-time compiler, if one is available for the current architecture, or an interpreter. B takes all of the same code generator options as L, but they are only effective when B is using the just-in-time compiler. If I is not specified, then B reads the LLVM bitcode for the program from standard input. The optional I specified on the command line are passed to the program as arguments. =head1 GENERAL OPTIONS =over =item B<-fake-argv0>=I Override the C value passed into the executing program. =item B<-force-interpreter>=I<{false,true}> If set to true, use the interpreter even if a just-in-time compiler is available for this architecture. Defaults to false. =item B<-help> Print a summary of command line options. =item B<-load>=I Causes B to load the plugin (shared object) named I and use it for optimization. =item B<-stats> Print statistics from the code-generation passes. This is only meaningful for the just-in-time compiler, at present. =item B<-time-passes> Record the amount of time needed for each code-generation pass and print it to standard error. =item B<-version> Print out the version of B and exit without doing anything else. =back =head1 TARGET OPTIONS =over =item B<-mtriple>=I Override the target triple specified in the input bitcode file with the specified string. This may result in a crash if you pick an architecture which is not compatible with the current system. =item B<-march>=I Specify the architecture for which to generate assembly, overriding the target encoded in the bitcode file. See the output of B for a list of valid architectures. By default this is inferred from the target triple or autodetected to the current architecture. =item B<-mcpu>=I Specify a specific chip in the current architecture to generate code for. By default this is inferred from the target triple and autodetected to the current architecture. For a list of available CPUs, use: B /dev/null | llc -march=xyz -mcpu=help> =item B<-mattr>=I Override or control specific attributes of the target, such as whether SIMD operations are enabled or not. The default set of attributes is set by the current CPU. For a list of available attributes, use: B /dev/null | llc -march=xyz -mattr=help> =back =head1 FLOATING POINT OPTIONS =over =item B<-disable-excess-fp-precision> Disable optimizations that may increase floating point precision. =item B<-enable-finite-only-fp-math> Enable optimizations that assumes only finite floating point math. That is, there is no NAN or Inf values. =item B<-enable-unsafe-fp-math> Causes B to enable optimizations that may decrease floating point precision. =item B<-soft-float> Causes B to generate software floating point library calls instead of equivalent hardware instructions. =back =head1 CODE GENERATION OPTIONS =over =item B<-code-model>=I Choose the code model from: default: Target default code model small: Small code model kernel: Kernel code model medium: Medium code model large: Large code model =item B<-disable-post-RA-scheduler> Disable scheduling after register allocation. =item B<-disable-spill-fusing> Disable fusing of spill code into instructions. =item B<-enable-correct-eh-support> Make the -lowerinvoke pass insert expensive, but correct, EH code. =item B<-enable-eh> Exception handling should be emitted. =item B<-join-liveintervals> Coalesce copies (default=true). =item B<-nozero-initialized-in-bss> Don't place zero-initialized symbols into the BSS section. =item B<-pre-RA-sched>=I Instruction schedulers available (before register allocation): =default: Best scheduler for the target =none: No scheduling: breadth first sequencing =simple: Simple two pass scheduling: minimize critical path and maximize processor utilization =simple-noitin: Simple two pass scheduling: Same as simple except using generic latency =list-burr: Bottom-up register reduction list scheduling =list-tdrr: Top-down register reduction list scheduling =list-td: Top-down list scheduler -print-machineinstrs - Print generated machine code =item B<-regalloc>=I Register allocator to use: (default = linearscan) =bigblock: Big-block register allocator =linearscan: linear scan register allocator =local - local register allocator =simple: simple register allocator =item B<-relocation-model>=I Choose relocation model from: =default: Target default relocation model =static: Non-relocatable code =pic - Fully relocatable, position independent code =dynamic-no-pic: Relocatable external references, non-relocatable code =item B<-spiller> Spiller to use: (default: local) =simple: simple spiller =local: local spiller =item B<-x86-asm-syntax>=I Choose style of code to emit from X86 backend: =att: Emit AT&T-style assembly =intel: Emit Intel-style assembly =back =head1 EXIT STATUS If B fails to load the program, it will exit with an exit code of 1. Otherwise, it will return the exit code of the program it executes. =head1 SEE ALSO L =head1 AUTHOR Maintained by the LLVM Team (L). =cut