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Selecting LLVM features

Installing a library

We will look at llvm as an example. You could install it using:

> kmpkg install llvm

or via a manifest with:

{
"dependencies": ["llvm"]
}

With llvm now installed, we can execute:

> installed\x86-windows\bin\llc.exe --version

We see:

  Registered Targets:
x86 - 32-bit X86: Pentium-Pro and above
x86-64 - 64-bit X86: EM64T and AMD64

Installing additional features

But llvm supports many more targets, from ARM to SPARC to SystemZ. However, clearly our current installation doesn't include ARM as a target; thus, we need to learn how kmpkg allows us to install other LLVM targets. The llvm port allows this via the "target-*" features.

If we do:

> kmpkg search llvm

We can see:

llvm                 10.0.0#6         The LLVM Compiler Infrastructure
llvm[clang] Build C Language Family Front-end.
llvm[clang-tools-extra] Build Clang tools.
...
llvm[target-all] Build with all backends.
llvm[target-amdgpu] Build with AMDGPU backend.
llvm[target-arm] Build with ARM backend.
...

We can install any of these targets by using the install-feature syntax:

> kmpkg install llvm[target-arm] # Installs LLVM with the ARM target
{
"dependencies": [{ "name": "llvm", "features": ["target-arm"] }]
}

Opting out of default features

The llvm port includes a few default features that you as a user may not want: for example, the clang feature is default, which means that kmpkg install llvm will also build and install clang. If you are writing a compiler that uses LLVM as a backend, you're likely not interested in installing clang as well, and we can do that by disabling default features with the special core "feature":

> kmpkg install llvm[core,target-arm] # removing the default-feature with "core" also removes all of the default targets you get

or in manifest files:

{
"dependencies": [{
"name": "llvm",
"default-features": false,
"features": ["target-arm"]
}]
}