llvm-6502/test/Bindings/Ocaml/bitwriter.ml
Gordon Henriksen 8ef426baa3 Adding ocaml language bindings for the vmcore and bitwriter libraries. These are
built atop the C language bindings, and user programs can link with them as 
such:

  # Bytecode
  ocamlc -cc g++ llvm.cma llvmbitwriter.cma -o example example.ml
  # Native
  ocamlopt -cc g++ llvm.cmxa llvmbitwriter.cmxa -o example.opt example.ml

The vmcore.ml test exercises most/all of the APIs thus far bound. Unfortunately,
they're not yet numerous enough to write hello world. But:

  $ cat example.ml
  (* example.ml *)
  
  open Llvm
  open Llvm_bitwriter
  
  let _ =
    let filename = Sys.argv.(1) in
    let m = create_module filename in
    
    let v = make_int_constant i32_type 42 false in
    let g = define_global "hello_world" v m in
    
    if not (write_bitcode_file m filename) then exit 1;
    
    dispose_module m;

  $ ocamlc -cc g++ llvm.cma llvm_bitwriter.cma -o example example.ml
  File "example.ml", line 11, characters 6-7:
  Warning Y: unused variable g.
  $ ./example example.bc
  $ llvm-dis < example.bc
  ; ModuleID = '<stdin>'
  @hello_world = global i32 42            ; <i32*> [#uses=0]

The ocaml test cases provide effective tests for the C interfaces.


git-svn-id: https://llvm.org/svn/llvm-project/llvm/trunk@42093 91177308-0d34-0410-b5e6-96231b3b80d8
2007-09-18 12:49:39 +00:00

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OCaml

(* RUN: %ocamlc llvm.cma llvm_bitwriter.cma %s -o %t
* RUN: ./%t %t.bc
* RUN: llvm-dis < %t.bc | grep caml_int_ty
*)
(* Note that this takes a moment to link, so it's best to keep the number of
individual tests low. *)
let test x = if not x then exit 1 else ()
let _ =
let m = Llvm.create_module "ocaml_test_module" in
ignore (Llvm.add_type_name "caml_int_ty" Llvm.i32_type m);
test (Llvm_bitwriter.write_bitcode_file m Sys.argv.(1))