opt - Man Page
LLVM optimizer
Examples (TL;DR)
- Run an optimization or analysis on a bitcode file:
opt -passname path/to/file.bc -S -o file_opt.bc
- Output the Control Flow Graph of a function to a
.dot
file:opt -dot-cfg -S path/to/file.bc -disable-output
- Optimize the program at level 2 and output the result to another file:
opt -O2 path/to/file.bc -S -o path/to/output_file.bc
Synopsis
opt [options] [filename]
Description
The opt command is the modular LLVM optimizer and analyzer. It takes LLVM source files as input, runs the specified optimizations or analyses on it, and then outputs the optimized file. The optimizations available via opt depend upon what libraries were linked into it as well as any additional libraries that have been loaded with the -load option. Use the -help option to determine what optimizations you can use.
If filename is omitted from the command line or is "-", opt reads its input from standard input. Inputs can be in either the LLVM assembly language format (.ll) or the LLVM bitcode format (.bc).
If an output filename is not specified with the -o option, opt writes its output to the standard output.
Options
- -f
Enable binary output on terminals. Normally, opt will refuse to write raw bitcode output if the output stream is a terminal. With this option, opt will write raw bitcode regardless of the output device.
- -help
Print a summary of command line options.
- -o <filename>
Specify the output filename.
- -S
Write output in LLVM intermediate language (instead of bitcode).
- -{passname}
opt provides the ability to run any of LLVM's optimization or analysis passes in any order. The -help option lists all the passes available. The order in which the options occur on the command line are the order in which they are executed (within pass constraints).
- -strip-debug
This option causes opt to strip debug information from the module before applying other optimizations. It is essentially the same as -strip but it ensures that stripping of debug information is done first.
- -verify-each
This option causes opt to add a verify pass after every pass otherwise specified on the command line (including -verify). This is useful for cases where it is suspected that a pass is creating an invalid module but it is not clear which pass is doing it.
- -stats
Print statistics.
- -time-passes
Record the amount of time needed for each pass and print it to standard error.
- -debug
If this is a debug build, this option will enable debug printouts from passes which use the LLVM_DEBUG() macro. See the LLVM Programmer's Manual, section #DEBUG for more information.
- -load=<plugin>
Load the dynamic object plugin. This object should register new optimization or analysis passes. Once loaded, the object will add new command line options to enable various optimizations or analyses. To see the new complete list of optimizations, use the -help and -load options together. For example:
opt -load=plugin.so -help
- -print-passes
Print all available passes and exit.
Exit Status
If opt succeeds, it will exit with 0. Otherwise, if an error occurs, it will exit with a non-zero value.
Author
Maintained by the LLVM Team (https://llvm.org/).
Copyright
2003-2024, LLVM Project
Referenced By
bugpoint(1), bugpoint-17(1), bugpoint-18(1).