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LLVM-AR(1) LLVM LLVM-AR(1)
NAME
llvm-ar - LLVM archiver
SYNOPSIS
llvm-ar [-]{dmpqrstx}[abcDilLNoOPsSTuUvV] [relpos] [count] archive
[files...]
DESCRIPTION
The llvm-ar command is similar to the common Unix utility, ar. It
archives several files, such as objects and LLVM bitcode files into a
single archive library that can be linked into a program. However, the
archive can contain any kind of file. By default, llvm-ar generates a
symbol table that makes linking faster because only the symbol table
needs to be consulted, not each individual file member of the archive.
The llvm-ar command can be used to read archive files in SVR4, GNU, BSD
, Big Archive, and Darwin format, and write in the GNU, BSD, Big
Archive, and Darwin style archive files. If an SVR4 format archive is
used with the r (replace), d (delete), m (move) or q (quick update)
operations, the archive will be reconstructed in the format defined by
--format.
Here's where llvm-ar departs from previous ar implementations:
The following option is not supported
[f] - truncate inserted filenames
The following options are ignored for compatibility
--plugin=<string> - load a plugin which adds support for other file
formats
[l] - ignored in ar
Symbol Table
Since llvm-ar supports bitcode files, the symbol table it creates
includes both native and bitcode symbols.
Deterministic Archives
By default, llvm-ar always uses zero for timestamps and UIDs/GIDs to
write archives in a deterministic mode. This is equivalent to the D
modifier being enabled by default. If you wish to maintain
compatibility with other ar implementations, you can pass the U
modifier to write actual timestamps and UIDs/GIDs.
Windows Paths
When on Windows llvm-ar treats the names of archived files in the
same case sensitive manner as the operating system. When on a
non-Windows machine llvm-ar does not consider character case.
OPTIONS
llvm-ar operations are compatible with other ar implementations.
However, there are a few modifiers (L) that are not found in other ar
implementations. The options for llvm-ar specify a single basic
Operation to perform on the archive, a variety of Modifiers for that
Operation, the name of the archive file, and an optional list of file
names. If the files option is not specified, it generally means either
"none" or "all" members, depending on the operation. The Options,
d [NT] Delete files from the archive. The N and T modifiers apply to
this operation. The files options specify which members should
be removed from the archive. It is not an error if a specified
file does not appear in the archive. If no files are specified,
the archive is not modified.
m [abi]
Move files from one location in the archive to another. The a,
b, and i modifiers apply to this operation. The files will all
be moved to the location given by the modifiers. If no modifiers
are used, the files will be moved to the end of the archive. If
no files are specified, the archive is not modified.
p [v] Print files to the standard output stream. If no files are
specified, the entire archive is printed. With the v modifier,
llvm-ar also prints out the name of the file being output.
Printing binary files is ill-advised as they might confuse your
terminal settings. The p operation never modifies the archive.
q [LT] Quickly append files to the end of the archive without removing
duplicates. If no files are specified, the archive is not
modified. The behavior when appending one archive to another
depends upon whether the L and T modifiers are used:
o Appending a regular archive to a regular archive will append
the archive file. If the L modifier is specified the members
will be appended instead.
o Appending a regular archive to a thin archive requires the T
modifier and will append the archive file. The L modifier is
not supported.
o Appending a thin archive to a regular archive will append the
archive file. If the L modifier is specified the members will
be appended instead.
o Appending a thin archive to a thin archive will always quick
append its members.
r [abTu]
Replace existing files or insert them at the end of the archive
if they do not exist. The a, b, T and u modifiers apply to this
operation. If no files are specified, the archive is not
modified.
t[v] .. option:: t [vO]
Print the table of contents. Without any modifiers, this operation
just prints the names of the members to the standard output stream.
With the v modifier, llvm-ar also prints out the file type
(B=bitcode, S=symbol table, blank=regular file), the permission
mode, the owner and group, are ignored when extracting files and set
to placeholder values when adding size, and the date. With the O
modifier, display member offsets. If any files are specified, the
listing is only for those files. If no files are specified, the
table of contents for the whole archive is printed.
V A synonym for the --version option.
x [oP] Extract archive members back to files. The o modifier applies to
Operations section to determine which modifiers are applicable to which
operations.
a When inserting or moving member files, this option specifies the
destination of the new files as being after the relpos member.
If relpos is not found, the files are placed at the end of the
archive. relpos cannot be consumed without either a, b or i.
b When inserting or moving member files, this option specifies the
destination of the new files as being before the relpos member.
If relpos is not found, the files are placed at the end of the
archive. relpos cannot be consumed without either a, b or i.
This modifier is identical to the i modifier.
i A synonym for the b option.
L When quick appending an archive, instead quick append its
members. This is a feature for llvm-ar that is not found in
gnu-ar.
N When extracting or deleting a member that shares its name with
another member, the count parameter allows you to supply a
positive whole number that selects the instance of the given
name, with "1" indicating the first instance. If N is not
specified the first member of that name will be selected. If
count is not supplied, the operation fails.*count* cannot be
o When extracting files, use the modification times of any files
as they appear in the archive. By default files extracted from
the archive use the time of extraction.
O Display member offsets inside the archive.
T Alias for --thin. In many ar implementations T has a different
meaning, as specified by X/Open System interface.
v When printing files or the archive table of contents, this
modifier instructs llvm-ar to include additional information in
the output.
Modifiers (generic)
The modifiers below may be applied to any operation.
c For the r (replace)and q (quick update) operations, llvm-ar will
always create the archive if it doesn't exist. Normally,
llvm-ar will print a warning message indicating that the archive
is being created. Using this modifier turns off that warning.
D Use zero for timestamps and UIDs/GIDs. This is set by default.
P Use full paths when matching member names rather than just the
file name. This can be useful when manipulating an archive
generated by another archiver, as some allow paths as member
names. This is the default behavior for thin archives.
s This modifier requests that an archive index (or symbol table)
be added to the archive, as if using ranlib. The symbol table
will contain all the externally visible functions and global
variables defined by all the bitcode files in the archive. By
u Only update archive members with files that have more recent
timestamps.
U Use actual timestamps and UIDs/GIDs.
Other
--format=<type>
This option allows for default, gnu, darwin or bsd <type> to be
selected. When creating an archive, <type> will default to that
of the host machine.
-h, --help
Print a summary of command-line options and their meanings.
-M This option allows for MRI scripts to be read through the
standard input stream. No other options are compatible with this
option.
--output=<dir>
Specify a directory where archive members should be extracted
to. By default the current working directory is used.
--rsp-quoting=<type>
This option selects the quoting style ``<type>`` for response files,
either
``posix`` or ``windows``. The default when on Windows is ``windows``,
otherwise the
default is ``posix``.
--thin When creating or modifying an archive, this option specifies
that the archive will be thin. By default, archives are not
created as thin archives and when modifying a thin archive, it
will be converted to a regular archive.
--version
Display the version of the llvm-ar executable.
-X mode
Specifies the type of object file llvm-ar will recognise. The
mode must be one of the following:
32 Process only 32-bit object files.
64 Process only 64-bit object files.
32_64 Process both 32-bit and 64-bit object files.
any Process all object files.
The default is to process 32-bit object files (ignore 64-bit
objects). The mode can also be set with the OBJECT_MODE
environment variable. For example, OBJECT_MODE=64 causes ar to
process any 64-bit objects and ignore 32-bit objects. The -X
flag overrides the OBJECT_MODE variable.
contains a sequence of commands to be executed by the archiver. The -M
option allows for an MRI script to be passed to llvm-ar through the
standard input stream.
Note that llvm-ar has known limitations regarding the use of MRI
scripts:
o Each script can only create one archive.
o Existing archives can not be modified.
MRI Script Commands
Each command begins with the command's name and must appear on its own
line. Some commands have arguments, which must be separated from the
name by whitespace. An MRI script should begin with either a CREATE or
CREATETHIN command and will typically end with a SAVE command. Any text
after either '*' or ';' is treated as a comment.
CREATE archive
Begin creation of a regular archive with the specified name.
Subsequent commands act upon this archive.
CREATETHIN archive
Begin creation of a thin archive with the specified name.
Subsequent commands act upon this archive.
ADDLIB archive
Append the contents of archive to the current archive.
ADDMOD <file>
Append <file> to the current archive.
DELETE <file>
Delete the member of the current archive whose file name,
excluding directory components, matches <file>.
SAVE Write the current archive to the path specified in the previous
CREATE/CREATETHIN command.
END Ends the MRI script (optional).
EXIT STATUS
If llvm-ar succeeds, it will exit with 0. Otherwise, if an error
occurs, it will exit with a non-zero value.
AUTHOR
Maintained by the LLVM Team (https://llvm.org/).
COPYRIGHT
2003-2023, LLVM Project
16 2023-05-24 LLVM-AR(1)