6

Clang and GCC have two switches, -mcpu and -march, to enable some optimizations especific for the CPU selected. i.e. -march=i686 enables internally -mmmx, -msse and so forth.

I would like know if there is some command to show what switches are enabled by march and mcpu for each CPU. I prefer just a command but I also accept answers with the location of the code with the info.

2 Answers 2

4

For gcc, try

gcc -mcpu=native -Q --help=target

The first line it prints:

gcc: warning: ‘-mcpu=’ is deprecated; use ‘-mtune=’ or ‘-march=’ instead

followed by

The following options are target specific:
  -m128bit-long-double                  [disabled]
  -m32                                  [disabled]
  -m3dnow                               [disabled]
  -m3dnowa                              [disabled]
  -m64                                  [enabled]
  -m80387                               [enabled]
  -m8bit-idiv                           [disabled]
   [...]

That answers the part for gcc.


Unfortunately, I am not familiar with clang. The best I could figure out so far is:

clang --target=i386 -### myfile.c.

where the -### makes the options to be shown. Different things are shown for arm. I am not sure if it is sufficient for you.

The file that sets the options seems to be Targets.cpp, although it is not much help as it a 5.8k line long file.

After looking at the llvm code generation, I have the impression that clang/LLVM doesn't have so many target specific options as gcc. See for example the target-specific feature matrix or the exposed (documented) options of llc.

And one more thing: clang exposes far less options of the compiler optimizations on purpose. For example there is no -finline-limit analogue exposed in clang.

Maybe -### prints everything exposed after all.

1
  • A bit offtopic, but: clang has the inlining control option. -mllvm -inline-threshold=.... There is quite a number of options available via clang -mllvm -help-hidden. Although, I won't state that clang exposes as much options as GCC does — I just don't know.
    – gluk47
    Mar 31, 2016 at 13:11
3

As already stated, gcc -Q --help=target prints information about optimizations in human-readable form.

clang doesn't seem to have a specific option for that. But you can retrieve some information if you compile simple program into LLVM IR.

Example command:

echo 'int main(){}' | clang -S -emit-llvm -x c - -o - | grep attributes.

Example output:

attributes #0 = { noinline nounwind optnone uwtable "correctly-rounded-divide-sqrt-fp-math"="false" "disable-tail-calls"="false" "frame-pointer"="all" "less-precise-fpmad"="false" "min-legal-vector-width"="0" "no-infs-fp-math"="false" "no-jump-tables"="false" "no-nans-fp-math"="false" "no-signed-zeros-fp-math"="false" "no-trapping-math"="false" "stack-protector-buffer-size"="8" "target-cpu"="x86-64" "target-features"="+cx8,+fxsr,+mmx,+sse,+sse2,+x87" "unsafe-fp-math"="false" "use-soft-float"="false" }

Tested on clang-10.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.