Clang is the main supported compiler when building Chromium on all platforms.
Known clang bugs and feature requests.
This happens by default, with clang binaries being fetched by gclient during the gclient runhooks
phase. To fetch them manually, or build a local custom clang, use
tools/clang/scripts/update.py
Run gn args
and make sure there is no is_clang = false
in your args.gn file.
Build: ninja -C out/gn chrome
There are no bots that test this but is_clang = false
will revert to gcc on Linux and to Visual Studio on Windows. There is no guarantee it will work.
https://groups.google.com/a/chromium.org/group/clang/topics
The chromium style plugin is used by default when clang is used.
If you're working on the plugin, you can build it locally like so:
./tools/clang/scripts/build.py --without-android
to build the plugin.ninja -C third_party/llvm-build/Release+Asserts/
to build incrementally.To test the FindBadConstructs plugin, run:
(cd tools/clang/plugins/tests && \ ./test.py ../../../../third_party/llvm-build/Release+Asserts/bin/clang \ ../../../../third_party/llvm-build/Release+Asserts/lib/libFindBadConstructs.so)
Since the plugin is rolled with clang changes, behavior changes to the plugin should be guarded by flags to make it easy to roll clang. A general outline:
GN
and verify the new behavior.GN
.Since October 2017, clang is the default compiler on Windows. It uses MSVC's linker and SDK, so you still need to have Visual Studio with C++ support installed.
To use MSVC's compiler (if it still works), use is_clang = false
.
Current brokenness:
Set clang_base_path
in your args.gn to the llvm build directory containing bin/clang
(i.e. the directory you ran cmake). This [must][1] be an absolute path. You also need to disable chromium's clang plugin.
Here's an example that also disables debug info and enables the component build (both not strictly necessary, but they will speed up your build):
clang_base_path = getenv("HOME") + "/src/llvm-build" clang_use_chrome_plugins = false is_debug = false symbol_level = 1 is_component_build = true
You can then run head out/gn/toolchain.ninja
and check that the first to lines set cc
and cxx
to your clang binary. If things look good, run ninja -C out/gn
to build.
If your clang revision is very different from the one currently used in chromium
tools/clang/scripts/update.py
to find chromium's clang revision