clang-sys
Rust bindings for libclang
.
If you are interested in a somewhat idiomatic Rust wrapper for these bindings, see clang-rs
.
Released under the Apache License 2.0.
Documentation
Note that the documentation on https://docs.rs for this crate assumes usage of the runtime
Cargo feature as well as the Cargo feature for the latest supported version of libclang
(e.g., clang_16_0
), neither of which are enabled by default.
Due to the usage of the runtime
Cargo feature, this documentation will contain some additional types and functions to manage a dynamically loaded libclang
instance at runtime.
Due to the usage of the Cargo feature for the latest supported version of libclang
, this documentation will contain constants and functions that are not available in the oldest supported version of libclang
(3.5). All of these types and functions have a documentation comment which specifies the minimum libclang
version required to use the item.
Supported Versions
To target a version of libclang
, enable a Cargo features such as one of the following:
clang_3_5
- requireslibclang
3.5 or laterclang_3_6
- requireslibclang
3.6 or later- etc...
clang_17_0
- requireslibclang
17.0 or laterclang_18_0
- requireslibclang
18.0 or later
If you do not enable one of these features, the API provided by libclang
3.5 will be available by default.
Note: If you are using Clang 15.0 or later, you should enable the clang_15_0
feature or a more recent version feature. Clang 15.0 introduced a breaking change to the EntityKind
enum which resulted in a mismatch between the values returned by libclang
and the values for EntityKind
defined by this crate in previous versions.
Dependencies
By default, this crate will attempt to link to libclang
dynamically. In this case, this crate depends on the libclang
shared library (libclang.so
on Linux, libclang.dylib
on macOS, libclang.dll
on Windows). If you want to link to libclang
statically instead, enable the static
Cargo feature. In this case, this crate depends on the LLVM and Clang static libraries. If you don't want to link to libclang
at compiletime but instead want to load it at runtime, enable the runtime
Cargo feature.
These libraries can be either be installed as a part of Clang or downloaded here.
Note: The downloads for LLVM and Clang 3.8 and later do not include the libclang.a
static library. This means you cannot link to any of these versions of libclang
statically unless you build it from source.
Versioned Dependencies
This crate supports finding versioned instances of libclang.so
(e.g.,libclang-3.9.so
). In the case where there are multiple instances to choose from, this crate will prefer instances with higher versions. For example, the following instances of libclang.so
are listed in descending order of preference:
libclang-4.0.so
libclang-4.so
libclang-3.9.so
libclang-3.so
libclang.so
Note: On BSD distributions, versioned instances of libclang.so
matching the pattern libclang.so.*
(e.g., libclang.so.7.0
) are also included.
Note: On Linux distributions when the runtime
features is enabled, versioned instances of libclang.so
matching the pattern libclang.so.*
(e.g., libclang.so.1
) are also included.
Environment Variables
The following environment variables, if set, are used by this crate to find the required libraries and executables:
LLVM_CONFIG_PATH
(compiletime) - provides a full path to anllvm-config
executable (including the executable itself [i.e.,/usr/local/bin/llvm-config-8.0
])LIBCLANG_PATH
(compiletime) - provides a path to a directory containing alibclang
shared library or a full path to a specificlibclang
shared libraryLIBCLANG_STATIC_PATH
(compiletime) - provides a path to a directory containing LLVM and Clang static librariesCLANG_PATH
(runtime) - provides a path to aclang
executable
Linking
Dynamic
libclang
shared libraries will be searched for in the following directories:
- the directory provided by the
LIBCLANG_PATH
environment variable - the
bin
andlib
directories in the directory provided byllvm-config --libdir
- the directories provided by
LD_LIBRARY_PATH
environment variable - a list of likely directories for the target platform (e.g.,
/usr/local/lib
on Linux) - macOS only: the toolchain directory in the directory provided by
xcode-select --print-path
On Linux, running an executable that has been dynamically linked to libclang
may require you to add a path to libclang.so
to the LD_LIBRARY_PATH
environment variable. The same is true on OS X, except the DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH
environment variable is used instead.
On Windows, running an executable that has been dynamically linked to libclang
requires that libclang.dll
can be found by the executable at runtime. See here for more information.
Static
The availability of llvm-config
is not optional for static linking. Ensure that an instance of this executable can be found on your system's path or set the LLVM_CONFIG_PATH
environment variable. The required LLVM and Clang static libraries will be searched for in the same way as shared libraries are searched for, except the LIBCLANG_STATIC_PATH
environment variable is used in place of the LIBCLANG_PATH
environment variable.
Note: The libcpp
Cargo feature can be used to enable linking to libc++
instead of libstd++
when linking to libclang
statically on Linux or Haiku.
Static Library Availability
Linking to libclang
statically on *nix systems requires that the libclang.a
static library be available.
This library is usually not included in most distributions of LLVM and Clang (e.g., libclang-dev
on Debian-based systems).
If you need to link to libclang
statically then most likely the only consistent way to get your hands on libclang.a
is to build it yourself.
Here's an example of building the required static libraries and using them with clang-sys
:
git clone git@github.com:llvm/llvm-project.git
cd llvm-project
cmake -S llvm -B build -G Ninja -DLLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS=clang -DLIBCLANG_BUILD_STATIC=ON
ninja -C build
cd ..
git clone git@github.com:KyleMayes/clang-sys.git
cd clang-sys
LLVM_CONFIG_PATH=../llvm-project/build/bin/llvm-config cargo test --features static
Linking to libclang
statically requires linking a large number of big static libraries.
Using rust-lld
as a linker can greatly reduce linking times.
Runtime
The clang_sys::load
function is used to load a libclang
shared library for use in the thread in which it is called. The clang_sys::unload
function will unload the libclang
shared library. clang_sys::load
searches for a libclang
shared library in the same way one is searched for when linking to libclang
dynamically at compiletime.