llvm-6502/test/Makefile.target
2001-11-06 08:34:56 +00:00

104 lines
2.2 KiB
Makefile

## -*-Makefile-*-
##------------------------------------------------------------------------
## Common rules for generating, linking, and compiling via LLVM.
##------------------------------------------------------------------------
.PHONY: clean default
TOOLS = $(LEVEL)/tools/Debug
LLC = $(TOOLS)/llc
LAS = $(TOOLS)/as
LDIS = $(TOOLS)/dis
LOPT = $(TOOLS)/opt
LLINK = $(TOOLS)/link
LLCFLAGS =
LCC = /home/vadve/lattner/cvs/gcc_install/bin/gcc
LCFLAGS = -O2 $(LOCAL_CFLAGS) -Wall
LLCLIB = $(LEVEL)/test/runtime.o
LIBS = $(LLCLIB) $(LOCAL_LIBS)
ifeq ($(TRACE), yes)
LLCFLAGS := $(LLCFLAGS) -trace
endif
CC = /opt/SUNWspro/bin/cc
AS = /opt/SUNWspro/bin/cc
DIS = /usr/ccs/bin/dis
CFLAGS = -g -xarch=v9
CCFLAGS = $(CFLAGS)
LDFLAGS = $(CFLAGS)
ASFLAGS = -c $(CFLAGS)
## Special targets to build a program from multiple source files
##
ifdef PROG
default: $(PROG).clean.bc $(PROG).native
#.SECONDARY: $(PROG).clean.bc ## keep %.clean.bc from being deleted
$(PROG).bc: $(OBJS)
$(LLINK) -f $(OBJS) -o $@
$(PROG).native: $(OBJS:.o=.c)
gcc -o $@ $(OBJS:.o=.c) -O2 $(LOCAL_CFLAGS) -Wall
endif
## Special target to force target-dependent library to be compiled
## directly to native code.
##
$(LLCLIB):
cd $(LEVEL)/test; $(MAKE) $(@F)
runtime.o: runtime.c
$(CC) -c $(CCFLAGS) $<
clean :
rm -f *.[123] *.bc *.mc *.s *.o a.out core $(PROG)
%.mc: %.bc $(LLC) $(AS)
@echo "Generating machine instructions for $<"
$(LLC) -f -dsched y $(LLCFLAGS) $< > $@
%.trace.bc: %.bc $(LLC)
$(LLC) -f -trace $(LLCFLAGS) $<
%.o: %.c
$(LCC) $(LCFLAGS) $< -c -o $@
%.bc: %.ll
$(LAS) -f $<
%.clean.bc: %.bc
$(LOPT) -cleangcc -raise -constprop -dce < $< > $@
%.s: %.bc
$(LLC) -f $(LLCOPTS) $<
%: %.o $(LIBS)
$(CC) -o $@ $(LDFLAGS) $< $(LIBS)
##
## Use a single rule to go from %.bc to % to avoid ambiguity in
## llvm bytecode files and native object code files, both named %.o
##
%: %.clean.bc $(LIBS)
$(LLC) -f $(LLCFLAGS) -o $*.s $<
$(AS) $(ASFLAGS) $*.s
$(CC) -o $@ $(LDFLAGS) $*.o $(LIBS)
## Cancel built-in implicit rule that overrides the above rule
%: %.s
## The next two rules are for disassembling an executable or an object file
%.dis: %
$(DIS) $< > $@
%.dis: %.o
$(DIS) $< > $@