llvm-cfi-verify
Low-Level Virtual Machine (LLVM)
Install
- All systems
-
curl cmd.cat/llvm-cfi-verify.sh
- Debian
-
apt-get install llvm
- Ubuntu
-
apt-get install llvm
- Alpine
-
apk add llvm
- Arch Linux
-
pacman -S llvm
- Kali Linux
-
apt-get install llvm
- CentOS
-
yum install llvm
- Fedora
-
dnf install llvm
- Windows (WSL2)
-
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install llvm
- OS X
-
brew install llvm
- Raspbian
-
apt-get install llvm
- Dockerfile
- dockerfile.run/llvm-cfi-verify
- Docker
-
docker run cmd.cat/llvm-cfi-verify llvm-cfi-verify
powered by Commando
llvm
Low-Level Virtual Machine (LLVM)
The Low-Level Virtual Machine (LLVM) is a collection of libraries and tools that make it easy to build compilers, optimizers, Just-In-Time code generators, and many other compiler-related programs. This is a dependency package providing the default llvm package.
llvm-6.0
Modular compiler and toolchain technologies
LLVM is a collection of libraries and tools that make it easy to build compilers, optimizers, just-in-time code generators, and many other compiler-related programs. LLVM uses a single, language-independent virtual instruction set both as an offline code representation (to communicate code between compiler phases and to run-time systems) and as the compiler internal representation (to analyze and transform programs). This persistent code representation allows a common set of sophisticated compiler techniques to be applied at compile-time, link-time, install-time, run-time, or "idle-time" (between program runs). The strengths of the LLVM infrastructure are its extremely simple design (which makes it easy to understand and use), source-language independence, powerful mid-level optimizer, automated compiler debugging support, extensibility, and its stability and reliability. LLVM is currently being used to host a wide variety of academic research projects and commercial projects. LLVM includes C and C++ front-ends, a front-end for a Forth-like language (Stacker), a young scheme front-end, and Java support is in development. LLVM can generate code for X86, SparcV9, PowerPC or many other architectures.
llvm-7
Modular compiler and toolchain technologies
LLVM is a collection of libraries and tools that make it easy to build compilers, optimizers, just-in-time code generators, and many other compiler-related programs. LLVM uses a single, language-independent virtual instruction set both as an offline code representation (to communicate code between compiler phases and to run-time systems) and as the compiler internal representation (to analyze and transform programs). This persistent code representation allows a common set of sophisticated compiler techniques to be applied at compile-time, link-time, install-time, run-time, or "idle-time" (between program runs). The strengths of the LLVM infrastructure are its extremely simple design (which makes it easy to understand and use), source-language independence, powerful mid-level optimizer, automated compiler debugging support, extensibility, and its stability and reliability. LLVM is currently being used to host a wide variety of academic research projects and commercial projects. LLVM includes C and C++ front-ends, a front-end for a Forth-like language (Stacker), a young scheme front-end, and Java support is in development. LLVM can generate code for X86, SparcV9, PowerPC or many other architectures.