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A simple tutorial about how to use the CIL compiler frontend
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zanderso/cil-template
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This is a simple tutorial about how to use the CIL compiler frontend to do static and dynamic program analysis. Author: Zach Anderson (zanderso@acm.org) 1. Intro 2. Building and Installing 3. Files 4. Bugs and Feedback 5. Citation 1. Intro: ------ CIL is a frontend for C compilers. It takes C code as input, which can then be analyzed or instrumented, and then spits out C code, which can be passed to your favorite C compiler. This process can be automated such that your CIL-based front-end can be made to look like gcc, or whatever, and used directly in your build process. This tutorial creates such a frontend, and demonstrates, in tutorial form, some nifty things that might be done with it. 2a. Building and Installing (Ubuntu): ------------------------ There are a few dependencies: . Everything you need to build C programs . OCaml . cmake - Ubuntu packages: cmake cmake-data . CIL - Build and install from http://cil.sf.net . Please let me know if I've forgotten anything Dependencies only for the theorem proving example (tut11.ml): . why3 . theorem provers (e.g. alt-ergo) . pass -DBUILD_TUT11=true to cmake to include this example Dependencies only for the automated test generation example (tut15.ml): . Yices SMT solver (http://yices.csl.sri.com/) . ocamlyices (https://github.com/polazarus/ocamlyices) . pass -DBUILD_TUT15 to cmake to include this example Then, to obtain and build: $ hg clone https://bitbucket.org/zanderso/cil-template $ mkdir build $ cd build $ cmake [-DBUILD_TUT11=true] [-DBUILD_TUT15=true] .. $ make $ sudo make install Then, enter the test directory and build a program like so: $ ciltutcc -o test1 test1.c $ ./test1 The generated ciltutcc takes all of the usual gcc arguments, in addition to the following: --trace - shows all of the commands run --save-temps - saves all of the intermediate files --enable-tutN - enables the pass defined by tutN.ml And others that you can define in src/ciltutoptions.ml If you do: $ ciltutcc --save-temps -o test1 test1.c A file called test1.cil.c will be created showing the source file created by the frontend before it is passed on to gcc. [Ocamlyices installation] $ git clone git://github.com/polazarus/ocamlyices.git $ cd ocamlyices (Download yices for your platform from http://yices.csl.sri.com/download.shtml into the ocamlyices directory. If the version statically linked with gmp doesn't work, then try the dynamically linked version.) $ sudo ./install-yices.sh [the tar.gz file you dl'd] $ autoconf [if needed] $ ./configure $ make $ sudo make install [Alt-Ergo installation] $ wget http://alt-ergo.lri.fr/http/alt-ergo-0.94.tar.gz $ tar zxf alt-ergo-0.94.tar.gz $ cd alt-ergo-0.94 $ autoconf [if needed] $ ./configure $ make $ sudo make install [Why3 Installation] $ git clone https://gforge.inria.fr/git/why3/why3.git $ cd why3 $ autoconf [if needed] $ ./configure $ make $ make byte $ sudo make install $ sudo make install-lib $ why3config 2b. Building and Installing (Mac OS X) ------------- This project should build and install on 10.8 using the MacPorts OCaml install. I have not yet tried to get tutorials 11 and 15 running on it yet, though. (It appears that there is some problem with linking the calls from C -> OCaml in tut15.c, but Why3, Alt-Ergo, and Ocamlyices *should* build without problems---I just haven't tried it yet.) Anyway, here's what you'll need to do: 1. install XCode and be sure to install the "Unix" or "Command line" tools. 2. install MacPorts from http://www.macports.org 3. Do: $ sudo port install ocaml ocaml-findlib lablgl lablgtk lablgtk2 mercurial cmake ocaml-ocamlgraph 4. Install CIL: $ git clone git://cil.git.sourceforge.net/gitroot/cil/cil $ cd cil $ ./configure; make; sudo make install 5. Build cil-tutorial As above 6. Let me know if I've missed any steps =) 3. Files: --------- CMakeLists.txt - Add additional filenames to CILTUT_SRC on line 48 to add additional OCaml modules. Other parts of the Makefile can probably remain unchanged unless you need to do something weird. src/main.ml - Reads in a source file, calls into the various tutorial modules, spits out the result. Hopefully it is obvious where to add code to call into any new modules that you write. src/ciltutoptions.ml - Defines command line options. src/tut*.ml - Tutorial modules explaining how to use CIL. ciltut-include/ciltut.h - Various function and macro definitions needed for building ciltut-lib and the things in test/. ciltut-lib/ - The runtime library. The files in src/tut*.c go along with the corresponding .ml files. ciltut_libc.c has utility functions. To add new code to the runtime, add file names to the CMakeLists.txt file under the src/ directory in the obvious place. lib/Ciltut.pm - A perl script that sits in front of the actual compiler frontend. It is used for massaging the command line a bit. For example, it makes sure that the final result links against the code in ciltut-lib/. test/tut*.c - Test programs for the various tutorial modules. LICENSE - All the code in this project is licensed under a standard 3-clause BSD license. 4. Bugs, and Feedback: -------------- Please use the issue tracker on bitbucket to report bugs, make suggestions, give feedback, etc.. 5. Citation: ------------ If you use cil-template as a starting point for your project, please make the following citation: Zachary Anderson. A CIL Tutorial: Using CIL for Language Extensions and Program Analysis, <the date given on the document>. <http://the.download.url>. At the time this README file was written, this evaluates to: Zachary Anderson. A CIL Tutorial: Using CIL for Language Extensions and Program Analysis, January 2013. http://www.inf.ethz.ch/~azachary. Or in bibtex format: @misc{ciltut, title = {A {CIL} Tutorial: Using {CIL} for Language Extensions and Program Analysis}, author = {Zachary Anderson}, month = Jan, year = 2013, note = {\url{http://www.inf.ethz.ch/~azachary/}}, }
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