David Abdurachmanov 432c91f534 Set code model to Large for PowerPC64 (aka ppc64le)
This is needed because TOC and text sections can be more than 2GB
apart. LLVM SectionMemoryManager is not aware of the design limits of
ppc64le while allocating memory for JIT'ed sections. DSO limit was set
to 2GB by design. While running CMSSW ROOT/Cling puts TOC and .text.func
~2.7GB apart in VA space. Usually was triggered by TFormula in CMSSW.

IBM has modified global entry function prologue. TOC is now stored in
64-bit value before global entry to allow addressing beyond 2GB.
This was merged to Clang months ago, but is only applicable to large
code model.

Later IBM propagated this further:

- binutils patches are here:
https://sourceware.org/ml/binutils/2015-11/msg00232.html
https://sourceware.org/ml/binutils/2015-11/msg00233.html
and will be available with binutils 2.26

- GCC patch is here:
https://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2015-12/msg00355.html
and will be available with GCC 6.0.

- LLVM patch is here:
http://lists.llvm.org/pipermail/llvm-commits/Week-of-Mon-20160111/324454.html
and will be available with LLVM 3.8.

- Kernel patches (module loader etc.) are here:
https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=a61674bdfc7c2bf909c4010699607b62b69b7bec
https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/commit/?id=2e50c4bef77511b42cc226865d6bc568fa7f8769
and will be available with Linux 4.5.

Signed-off-by: David Abdurachmanov <David.Abdurachmanov@cern.ch>
2016-11-07 13:02:51 +01:00
2014-08-13 16:08:36 +02:00
2016-08-09 21:44:07 +02:00
2016-10-18 17:53:22 +02:00
2016-07-22 20:54:47 +02:00
2016-10-26 15:10:30 +02:00
2016-08-09 20:58:07 +02:00
2016-09-13 19:16:08 +02:00
2016-08-18 15:44:19 +02:00
2014-08-13 16:08:36 +02:00
2016-09-17 16:23:04 +02:00
2016-08-09 21:27:58 +02:00

![Travis status](https://travis-ci.org/root-mirror/cling.svg?branch=master) ![Appveyor status](https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/github/vgvassilev/cling?svg=true&branch=master)

Cling - The Interactive C++ Interpreter

Overview

Cling is an interactive C++ interpreter, built on top of Clang and LLVM compiler infrastructure. Cling realizes the read-eval-print loop (REPL) concept, in order to leverage rapid application development. Implemented as a small extension to LLVM and Clang, the interpreter reuses their strengths such as the praised concise and expressive compiler diagnostics.

See also cling's web page.

Please note that some of the resources are rather old and most of the stated limitations are outdated.

Installation

Release Notes

See our release notes to find what's new.

Binaries

Our nightly binary snapshots can be found here.

Building from Source with Cling Packaging Tool

Cling's tree has a user-friendly, command-line utility written in Python called Cling Packaging Tool (CPT) which can build Cling from source and generate installer bundles for a wide range of platforms. CPT requires Python 2.7 or later.

If you have Cling's source cloned locally, you can find the tool in tools/packaging directory. Alternatively, you can download the script manually, or by using wget:

wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/root-mirror/cling/master/tools/packaging/cpt.py
chmod +x cpt.py
./cpt.py --check-requirements && ./cpt.py --create-dev-env Debug --with-workdir=./cling-build/

Full documentation of CPT can be found in tools/packaging.

Usage

./cling '#include <stdio.h>' 'printf("Hello World!\n")'`

To get started run:

./cling --help`

or type

./cling
[cling]$ .help`

Jupyter

Cling comes with a Jupyter kernel. After building cling, install Jupyter and run jupyter kernelspec install cling. It requires a fairly new Jupyter. Make sure cling is in your PATH when you start jupyter!

See also the tools/Jupyter subdirectory for more information.

Developers' Corner

Cling's latest doxygen documentation

Contributions

Every contribution is considered a donation and its copyright and any other related rights become exclusive ownership of the person who merged the code or in any other case the main developers of the "Cling Project".

We warmly welcome external contributions to the Cling! By providing code, you agree to transfer your copyright on the code to the "Cling project". Of course you will be duly credited and your name will appear on the contributors page, the release notes, and in the CREDITS file shipped with every binary and source distribution. The copyright transfer is necessary for us to be able to effectively defend the project in case of litigation.

License

Please see our LICENSE.

Releases

Our release steps to follow when cutting a new release:

  1. Update release notes
  2. Remove ~dev suffix from VERSION
  3. Add a new entry in the news section of our website
  4. Commit the changes.
  5. git tag -a v0.x -m "Tagging release v0.x"
  6. Create a draft release in github and copy the contents of the release notes.
  7. Wait for green builds.
  8. Upload binaries to github (Travis should do this automatically).
  9. Publish the tag and announce it on the mailing list.
  10. Increment the current version and append ~dev.
Description
Cling - The Interactive C++ Interpreter
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