191 lines
		
	
	
		
			9.8 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			HTML
		
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			191 lines
		
	
	
		
			9.8 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			HTML
		
	
	
	
| <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN" 
 | |
|           "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd">
 | |
| <!-- Material used from: HTML 4.01 specs: http://www.w3.org/TR/html401/ -->
 | |
| <html>
 | |
| <head>
 | |
|   <META http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1">
 | |
|   <title>Comparing clang to other open source compilers</title>
 | |
|   <link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="menu.css">
 | |
|   <link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="content.css">
 | |
| </head>
 | |
| <body>
 | |
|   <!--#include virtual="menu.html.incl"-->
 | |
|   <div id="content">
 | |
|     <h1>Clang vs Other Open Source Compilers</h1>
 | |
|     
 | |
|     <p>Building an entirely new compiler front-end is a big task, and it isn't
 | |
|        always clear to people why we decided to do this.  Here we compare clang
 | |
|        and its goals to other open source compiler front-ends that are
 | |
|        available.  We restrict the discussion to very specific objective points
 | |
|        to avoid controversy where possible.  Also, software is infinitely
 | |
|        mutable, so we don't talk about little details that can be fixed with 
 | |
|        a reasonable amount of effort: we'll talk about issues that are 
 | |
|        difficult to fix for architectural or political reasons.</p>
 | |
|        
 | |
|     <p>The goal of this list is to describe how differences in goals lead to
 | |
|        different strengths and weaknesses, not to make some compiler look bad.
 | |
|        This will hopefully help you to evaluate whether using clang is a good
 | |
|        idea for your personal goals.  Because we don't know specifically what
 | |
|        <em>you</em> want to do, we describe the features of these compilers in
 | |
|        terms of <em>our</em> goals: if you are only interested in static
 | |
|        analysis, you may not care that something lacks codegen support, for
 | |
|        example.</p>
 | |
|        
 | |
|     <p>Please email <a href="get_involved.html">cfe-dev</a> if you think we should add another compiler to this
 | |
|        list or if you think some characterization is unfair here.</p>
 | |
|     
 | |
|     <ul>
 | |
|     <li><a href="#gcc">Clang vs GCC</a> (GNU Compiler Collection)</li>
 | |
|     <li><a href="#elsa">Clang vs Elsa</a> (Elkhound-based C++ Parser)</li>
 | |
|     <li><a href="#pcc">Clang vs PCC</a> (Portable C Compiler)</li>
 | |
|     </ul>
 | |
|     
 | |
|     
 | |
|     <!--=====================================================================-->
 | |
|     <h2><a name="gcc">Clang vs GCC (GNU Compiler Collection)</a></h2>
 | |
|     <!--=====================================================================-->
 | |
|     
 | |
|     <p>Pro's of GCC vs clang:</p>
 | |
|     
 | |
|     <ul>
 | |
|     <li>GCC supports languages that clang does not aim to, such as Java, Ada,
 | |
|         FORTRAN, Go, etc.</li>
 | |
|     <li>GCC supports more targets than LLVM.</li>
 | |
|     <li>GCC supports many language extensions, some of which are not implemented
 | |
|     by Clang. For instance, in C mode, GCC supports
 | |
|     <a href="http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Nested-Functions.html">nested
 | |
|     functions</a> and has an
 | |
|     <a href="https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Variable-Length.html">extension
 | |
|     allowing VLAs in structs</a>.
 | |
|     </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <p>Pro's of clang vs GCC:</p>
 | |
|     
 | |
|     <ul>
 | |
|     <li>The Clang ASTs and design are intended to be <a 
 | |
|         href="features.html#simplecode">easily understandable</a> by
 | |
|         anyone who is familiar with the languages involved and who has a basic
 | |
|         understanding of how a compiler works.  GCC has a very old codebase
 | |
|         which presents a steep learning curve to new developers.</li>
 | |
|     <li>Clang is designed as an API from its inception, allowing it to be reused
 | |
|         by source analysis tools, refactoring, IDEs (etc) as well as for code
 | |
|         generation.  GCC is built as a monolithic static compiler, which makes
 | |
|         it extremely difficult to use as an API and integrate into other tools.
 | |
|         Further, its historic design and <a 
 | |
|         href="http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/2007-11/msg00460.html">current</a>
 | |
|         <a href="http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/2004-12/msg00888.html">policy</a> 
 | |
|         makes it difficult to decouple the front-end from the rest of the
 | |
|         compiler. </li>
 | |
|     <li>Various GCC design decisions make it very difficult to reuse: its build
 | |
|         system is difficult to modify, you can't link multiple targets into one
 | |
|         binary, you can't link multiple front-ends into one binary, it uses a
 | |
|         custom garbage collector, uses global variables extensively, is not
 | |
|         reentrant or multi-threadable, etc.  Clang has none of these problems.
 | |
|         </li>
 | |
|     <li>Clang does not implicitly simplify code as it parses it like GCC does.
 | |
|         Doing so causes many problems for source analysis tools: as one simple
 | |
|         example, if you write "x-x" in your source code, the GCC AST will
 | |
|         contain "0", with no mention of 'x'.  This is extremely bad for a
 | |
|         refactoring tool that wants to rename 'x'.</li>
 | |
|     <li>Clang can serialize its AST out to disk and read it back into another 
 | |
|         program, which is useful for whole program analysis.  GCC does not have
 | |
|         this.  GCC's PCH mechanism (which is just a dump of the compiler 
 | |
|         memory image) is related, but is architecturally only 
 | |
|         able to read the dump back into the exact same executable as the one 
 | |
|         that produced it (it is not a structured format).</li>
 | |
|     <li>Clang is <a href="features.html#performance">much faster and uses far
 | |
|         less memory</a> than GCC.</li>
 | |
|     <li>Clang has been designed from the start to provide extremely clear and
 | |
|         concise diagnostics (error and warning messages), and includes support
 | |
|         for <a href="diagnostics.html">expressive diagnostics</a>.
 | |
|         Modern versions of GCC have made significant advances in this area,
 | |
|         incorporating various Clang features such as preserving typedefs in
 | |
|         diagnostics and showing macro expansions, but GCC is still catching
 | |
|         up.</li>
 | |
|     <li>GCC is licensed under the GPL license. <a href="features.html#license">
 | |
|         clang uses a BSD license,</a> which allows it to be embedded in
 | |
|         software that is not GPL-licensed.</li>
 | |
|     <li>Clang inherits a number of features from its use of LLVM as a backend,
 | |
|         including support for a bytecode representation for intermediate code,
 | |
|         pluggable optimizers, link-time optimization support, Just-In-Time
 | |
|         compilation, ability to link in multiple code generators, etc.</li>
 | |
|     <li><a href="compatibility.html#cxx">Clang's support for C++</a> is more
 | |
|         compliant than GCC's in many ways.</li>
 | |
|     <li>Clang supports
 | |
|         <a href="http://clang.llvm.org/docs/LanguageExtensions.html">many language
 | |
|         extensions</a>, some of which are not implemented by GCC. For instance,
 | |
|         Clang provides attributes for checking thread safety and extended vector
 | |
|         types.</li>
 | |
|     </ul>
 | |
| 
 | |
|     <!--=====================================================================-->
 | |
|     <h2><a name="elsa">Clang vs Elsa (Elkhound-based C++ Parser)</a></h2>
 | |
|     <!--=====================================================================-->
 | |
|     
 | |
|     <p>Pro's of Elsa vs clang:</p>
 | |
|     
 | |
|     <ul>
 | |
|     <li>Elsa's parser and AST is designed to be easily extensible by adding
 | |
|         grammar rules.  Clang has a very simple and easily hackable parser,
 | |
|         but requires you to write C++ code to do it.</li>
 | |
|     </ul>
 | |
|     
 | |
|     <p>Pro's of clang vs Elsa:</p>
 | |
|     
 | |
|     <ul>
 | |
|     <li>Clang's C and C++ support is far more mature and practically useful than
 | |
|         Elsa's, and includes many C++'11 features.</li>
 | |
|     <li>The Elsa community is extremely small and major development work seems
 | |
|         to have ceased in 2005. Work continued to be used by other small 
 | |
|         projects (e.g. Oink), but Oink is apparently dead now too.  Clang has a
 | |
|         vibrant community including developers that
 | |
|         are paid to work on it full time.  In practice this means that you can
 | |
|         file bugs against Clang and they will often be fixed for you.  If you
 | |
|         use Elsa, you are (mostly) on your own for bug fixes and feature
 | |
|         enhancements.</li>
 | |
|     <li>Elsa is not built as a stack of reusable libraries like clang is.  It is
 | |
|         very difficult to use part of Elsa without the whole front-end.  For
 | |
|         example, you cannot use Elsa to parse C/ObjC code without building an
 | |
|         AST.  You can do this in Clang and it is much faster than building an
 | |
|         AST.</li>
 | |
|     <li>Elsa does not have an integrated preprocessor, which makes it extremely
 | |
|         difficult to accurately map from a source location in the AST back to
 | |
|         its original position before preprocessing.  Like GCC, it does not keep
 | |
|         track of macro expansions.</li>
 | |
|     <li>Elsa is even slower and uses more memory than GCC, which itself requires 
 | |
|         far more space and time than clang.</li>
 | |
|     <li>Elsa only does partial semantic analysis.  It is intended to work on
 | |
|         code that is already validated by GCC, so it does not do many semantic
 | |
|         checks required by the languages it implements.</li>
 | |
|     <li>Elsa does not support Objective-C.</li>
 | |
|     <li>Elsa does not support native code generation.</li>
 | |
|     </ul>
 | |
|     
 | |
|     
 | |
|     <!--=====================================================================-->
 | |
|     <h2><a name="pcc">Clang vs PCC (Portable C Compiler)</a></h2>
 | |
|     <!--=====================================================================-->
 | |
|     
 | |
|     <p>Pro's of PCC vs clang:</p>
 | |
|     
 | |
|     <ul>
 | |
|     <li>The PCC source base is very small and builds quickly with just a C
 | |
|         compiler.</li>
 | |
|     </ul>
 | |
|     
 | |
|     <p>Pro's of clang vs PCC:</p>
 | |
|     
 | |
|     <ul>
 | |
|     <li>PCC dates from the 1970's and has been dormant for most of that time.
 | |
|         The clang + llvm communities are very active.</li>
 | |
|     <li>PCC doesn't support Objective-C or C++ and doesn't aim to support
 | |
|         C++.</li>
 | |
|     <li>PCC's code generation is very limited compared to LLVM.  It produces very
 | |
|         inefficient code and does not support many important targets.</li>
 | |
|     <li>Like Elsa, PCC's does not have an integrated preprocessor, making it
 | |
|         extremely difficult to use it for source analysis tools.</li>
 | |
|     </ul>
 | |
|   </div>
 | |
| </body>
 | |
| </html>
 |