commit | 6f31c5f3c73fd56a3d36a395bf0b7dcc444ed7a6 | [log] [download] |
---|---|---|
author | Rubén <rubrinbla@gmail.com> | Mon Jul 17 00:14:57 2017 +0200 |
committer | Rubén <rubrinbla@gmail.com> | Mon Jul 17 00:14:57 2017 +0200 |
tree | 313ddfd2d3d07ee1e72e41b4680f5e160aca7168 | |
parent | f080f1e527d103865d9a036b41a432691277cb89 [diff] |
Improve binary view line numbers Due to a limit on Monaco, we can't do much but wait for them to change it (Issue already submitted) This improves #484 but does NOT fix it. I'll be tracking it until we have some way of expanding the line numbers width
Compiler Explorer is an interactive compiler. The left-hand pane shows editable C/C++/Rust/Go/D/Haskell/Swift code. The right, the assembly output of having compiled the code with a given compiler and settings. Multiple compilers are supported, and the UI layout is configurable (the Golden Layout library is used for this). There is also an ispc compiler for a C variant with extensions for SPMD.
Try out one of the demo sites: C++, Rust, D, Go, Haskell, Swif, ispc.
You can support this this project on Patreon.
Compiler Explorer is written in node.js.
Assuming you have npm and node installed, simply running make
ought to get you up and running with an Explorer running on port 10240 on your local machine: http://localhost:10240/
The Makefile
will automatically install all the third party libraries needed to run; using npm
to install server-side components and bower
to install all the client-facing libraries.
If you want to point it at your own GCC or similar binaries, either edit the etc/config/compiler-explorer.defaults.properties
or else make a new one with the name compiler-explorer.local.properties
. *.local.properties
files have the highest priority when loading properties.
The config system leaves a lot to be desired, I'm working on porting CCS to javascript and then something more rational can be used.
Feel free to raise an issue on github or email me directly for more help.
There's now a Road map that gives a little insight into future plans for Compiler Explorer.
Compiler Explorer is maintained by Matt Godbolt, Rubén Rincón and Simon Brand. Multiple compiler and difference view initially implemented by Gabriel Devillers, while working for Kalray. Clang optview output by Jared Wyles.
There‘s a simple restful API that can be used to do compiles to asm and to list compilers. In general all handlers live in /api/*
endpoints, and will accept JSON or text in POSTs, and will return text responses or JSON responses depending on the request’s Accept
header.
At a later date there may be some form of rate-limiting: currently requests will be queued and dealt with exactly like interactive requests on the main site. Authentication might be required at some point in the future (for the main Compiler Explorer site anyway).
The following endpoints are defined:
GET /api/compilers
- return a list of compilersReturns a list of compilers. In text form, there's a simple formatting of the ID of the compiler and its description. In JSON, all the information is returned as an array of compilers, with the id
key being the primary identifier of each compiler.
POST /api/compiler/<compiler-id>/compile
- perform a compilationTo specify a compilation request as a JSON document, post it as the appropriate type and send an object of the form: {'source': 'source to compile', 'options': 'compiler flags', 'filters': {'filter': true}}
. The filters are an JSON object with true/false. If not supplied, defaults are used. If supplied, the filters are used as-is.
A text compilation request has the source as the body of the post, and uses query parameters to pass the options and filters. Filters are supplied as a comma-separated string. Use the query parameter filters=XX
to set the filters directly, else addFilters=XX
to add a filter to defaults, or removeFilters
to remove from defaults. Compiler parameters should be passed as options=-O2
and default to empty.
Filters include binary
, labels
, intel
, comments
and directives
and correspond to the UI buttons on the HTML version.
The text request is designed for simplicity for command-line clients like curl
:
$ curl 'https://gcc.godbolt.org/api/compiler/g63/compile?options=-Wall' --data-binary 'int foo() { return 1; }' # Compilation provided by Compiler Explorer at gcc.godbolt.org foo(): push rbp mov rbp, rsp mov eax, 1 pop rbp ret
If JSON is present in the request's Accept
header, the compilation results are of the form:
Optional values are marked with a ‘**’
{ "code": 0 if successful, else compiler return code, "stdout": [ { "text": Output, ** "tag": { "line": Source line, "text": Parsed error for that line } }, ... ], "stderr": (format is similar to that of stdout), "asm": [ { "text": Assembly text, "source": Source line number or null if none }, ... ], "okToCache": true if output could be locally cached else false, ** "optOutput" : { "displayString" : String displayed in output, "Pass" : [ Missed | Passed | Analysis ] (Specifies the type of optimisation output), "Name" : Name of the output (mostly represents the reason for the output), "DebugLoc" : { "File": Name of file, "Line": Line number, "Column": Column number in line }, "Function": Name of function for which optimisation output is provided, "Args": Array of objects representing the arguments that the optimiser used when trying to optimise } }