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7  <title>Comparing clang to other open source compilers</title>
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14    <h1>Clang vs Other Open Source Compilers</h1>
15
16    <p>Building an entirely new compiler front-end is a big task, and it isn't
17       always clear to people why we decided to do this.  Here we compare clang
18       and its goals to other open source compiler front-ends that are
19       available.  We restrict the discussion to very specific objective points
20       to avoid controversy where possible.  Also, software is infinitely
21       mutable, so we don't talk about little details that can be fixed with
22       a reasonable amount of effort: we'll talk about issues that are
23       difficult to fix for architectural or political reasons.</p>
24
25    <p>The goal of this list is to describe how differences in goals lead to
26       different strengths and weaknesses, not to make some compiler look bad.
27       This will hopefully help you to evaluate whether using clang is a good
28       idea for your personal goals.  Because we don't know specifically what
29       <em>you</em> want to do, we describe the features of these compilers in
30       terms of <em>our</em> goals: if you are only interested in static
31       analysis, you may not care that something lacks codegen support, for
32       example.</p>
33
34    <p>Please email cfe-dev if you think we should add another compiler to this
35       list or if you think some characterization is unfair here.</p>
36
37    <ul>
38    <li><a href="#gcc">Clang vs GCC</a> (GNU Compiler Collection)</li>
39    <li><a href="#elsa">Clang vs Elsa</a> (Elkhound-based C++ Parser)</li>
40    <li><a href="#pcc">Clang vs PCC</a> (Portable C Compiler)</li>
41    </ul>
42
43
44    <!--=====================================================================-->
45    <h2><a name="gcc">Clang vs GCC (GNU Compiler Collection)</a></h2>
46    <!--=====================================================================-->
47
48    <p>Pro's of GCC vs clang:</p>
49
50    <ul>
51    <li>GCC supports languages that clang does not aim to, such as Java, Ada,
52        FORTRAN, etc.</li>
53    <li>GCC has a few <a href="cxx_status.html">C++'0x features</a> that Clang
54        does not yet support.</li>
55    <li>GCC supports more targets than LLVM.</li>
56    <li>GCC is popular and widely adopted.</li>
57    <li>GCC does not require a C++ compiler to build it.</li>
58    </ul>
59
60    <p>Pro's of clang vs GCC:</p>
61
62    <ul>
63    <li>The Clang ASTs and design are intended to be <a
64        href="features.html#simplecode">easily understandable</a> by
65        anyone who is familiar with the languages involved and who has a basic
66        understanding of how a compiler works.  GCC has a very old codebase
67        which presents a steep learning curve to new developers.</li>
68    <li>Clang is designed as an API from its inception, allowing it to be reused
69        by source analysis tools, refactoring, IDEs (etc) as well as for code
70        generation.  GCC is built as a monolithic static compiler, which makes
71        it extremely difficult to use as an API and integrate into other tools.
72        Further, its historic design and <a
73        href="http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/2007-11/msg00460.html">current</a>
74        <a href="http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc/2004-12/msg00888.html">policy</a>
75        makes it difficult to decouple the front-end from the rest of the
76        compiler. </li>
77    <li>Various GCC design decisions make it very difficult to reuse: its build
78        system is difficult to modify, you can't link multiple targets into one
79        binary, you can't link multiple front-ends into one binary, it uses a
80        custom garbage collector, uses global variables extensively, is not
81        reentrant or multi-threadable, etc.  Clang has none of these problems.
82        </li>
83    <li>For every token, clang tracks information about where it was written and
84        where it was ultimately expanded into if it was involved in a macro.
85        GCC does not track information about macro instantiations when parsing
86        source code.  This makes it very difficult for source rewriting tools
87        (e.g. for refactoring) to work in the presence of (even simple)
88        macros.</li>
89    <li>Clang does not implicitly simplify code as it parses it like GCC does.
90        Doing so causes many problems for source analysis tools: as one simple
91        example, if you write "x-x" in your source code, the GCC AST will
92        contain "0", with no mention of 'x'.  This is extremely bad for a
93        refactoring tool that wants to rename 'x'.</li>
94    <li>Clang can serialize its AST out to disk and read it back into another
95        program, which is useful for whole program analysis.  GCC does not have
96        this.  GCC's PCH mechanism (which is just a dump of the compiler
97        memory image) is related, but is architecturally only
98        able to read the dump back into the exact same executable as the one
99        that produced it (it is not a structured format).</li>
100    <li>Clang is <a href="features.html#performance">much faster and uses far
101        less memory</a> than GCC.</li>
102    <li>Clang aims to provide extremely clear and concise diagnostics (error and
103        warning messages), and includes support for <a
104        href="diagnostics.html">expressive diagnostics</a>.  GCC's warnings are
105        sometimes acceptable, but are often confusing and it does not support
106        expressive diagnostics.  Clang also preserves typedefs in diagnostics
107        consistently, showing macro expansions and many other features.</li>
108    <li>GCC is licensed under the GPL license.  clang uses a BSD license, which
109        allows it to be used by projects that do not themselves want to be
110        GPL.</li>
111    <li>Clang inherits a number of features from its use of LLVM as a backend,
112        including support for a bytecode representation for intermediate code,
113        pluggable optimizers, link-time optimization support, Just-In-Time
114        compilation, ability to link in multiple code generators, etc.</li>
115    <li><a href="compatibility.html#c++">Clang's support for C++</a> is more
116        compliant than GCC's in many ways (e.g. conformant two phase name
117        lookup).</li>
118    </ul>
119
120    <!--=====================================================================-->
121    <h2><a name="elsa">Clang vs Elsa (Elkhound-based C++ Parser)</a></h2>
122    <!--=====================================================================-->
123
124    <p>Pro's of Elsa vs clang:</p>
125
126    <ul>
127    <li>Elsa's parser and AST is designed to be easily extensible by adding
128        grammar rules.  Clang has a very simple and easily hackable parser,
129        but requires you to write C++ code to do it.</li>
130    </ul>
131
132    <p>Pro's of clang vs Elsa:</p>
133
134    <ul>
135    <li>Clang's C and C++ support is far more mature and practically useful than
136        Elsa's, and includes many C++'0x features.</li>
137    <li>The Elsa community is extremely small and major development work seems
138        to have ceased in 2005. Work continued to be used by other small
139        projects (e.g. Oink), but Oink is apparently dead now too.  Clang has a
140        vibrant community including developers that
141        are paid to work on it full time.  In practice this means that you can
142        file bugs against Clang and they will often be fixed for you.  If you
143        use Elsa, you are (mostly) on your own for bug fixes and feature
144        enhancements.</li>
145    <li>Elsa is not built as a stack of reusable libraries like clang is.  It is
146        very difficult to use part of Elsa without the whole front-end.  For
147        example, you cannot use Elsa to parse C/ObjC code without building an
148        AST.  You can do this in Clang and it is much faster than building an
149        AST.</li>
150    <li>Elsa does not have an integrated preprocessor, which makes it extremely
151        difficult to accurately map from a source location in the AST back to
152        its original position before preprocessing.  Like GCC, it does not keep
153        track of macro expansions.</li>
154    <li>Elsa is even slower and uses more memory than GCC, which itself requires
155        far more space and time than clang.</li>
156    <li>Elsa only does partial semantic analysis.  It is intended to work on
157        code that is already validated by GCC, so it does not do many semantic
158        checks required by the languages it implements.</li>
159    <li>Elsa does not support Objective-C.</li>
160    <li>Elsa does not support native code generation.</li>
161    </ul>
162
163
164    <!--=====================================================================-->
165    <h2><a name="pcc">Clang vs PCC (Portable C Compiler)</a></h2>
166    <!--=====================================================================-->
167
168    <p>Pro's of PCC vs clang:</p>
169
170    <ul>
171    <li>The PCC source base is very small and builds quickly with just a C
172        compiler.</li>
173    </ul>
174
175    <p>Pro's of clang vs PCC:</p>
176
177    <ul>
178    <li>PCC dates from the 1970's and has been dormant for most of that time.
179        The clang + llvm communities are very active.</li>
180    <li>PCC doesn't support Objective-C or C++ and doesn't aim to support
181        C++.</li>
182    <li>PCC's code generation is very limited compared to LLVM.  It produces very
183        inefficient code and does not support many important targets.</li>
184    <li>Like Elsa, PCC's does not have an integrated preprocessor, making it
185        extremely difficult to use it for source analysis tools.</li>
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