Vendor Documentation

The instructions on this page are aimed at vendors who ship libc++ as part of an operating system distribution, a toolchain or similar shipping vehicles. If you are a user merely trying to use libc++ in your program, you most likely want to refer to your vendor’s documentation, or to the general user documentation here.

Warning

If your operating system already provides libc++, it is important to be careful not to replace it. Replacing your system’s libc++ installation could render it non-functional. Use the CMake option CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX to select a safe place to install libc++.

The default build

The default way of building libc++, libc++abi and libunwind is to root the CMake invocation at <monorepo>/runtimes. While those projects are under the LLVM umbrella, they are different in nature from other build tools, so it makes sense to treat them as a separate set of entities. The default build can be achieved with the following CMake invocation:

$ git clone https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project.git
$ cd llvm-project
$ mkdir build
$ cmake -G Ninja -S runtimes -B build -DLLVM_ENABLE_RUNTIMES="libcxx;libcxxabi;libunwind" # Configure
$ ninja -C build cxx cxxabi unwind                                                        # Build
$ ninja -C build check-cxx check-cxxabi check-unwind                                      # Test
$ ninja -C build install-cxx install-cxxabi install-unwind                                # Install

Note

See Vendor Configuration Options below for more configuration options.

After building the various install-XXX targets, shared libraries for libc++, libc++abi and libunwind should now be present in <CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX>/lib, and headers in <CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX>/include/c++/v1. See the instructions below for information on how to use this libc++ over the default one.

In the default configuration, the runtimes will be built using the compiler available by default on your system. Of course, you can change what compiler is being used with the usual CMake variables. If you wish to build the runtimes from a just-built Clang, the bootstrapping build explained below makes this task easy.

Using the just-built libc++

Most compilers provide a way to disable the default behavior for finding the standard library and to override it with custom paths. With Clang, this can be done with:

$ clang++ -nostdinc++ -isystem <install>/include/c++/v1 \
          -nostdlib++ -L <install>/lib -lc++            \
          -Wl,-rpath,<install>/lib                      \
          test.cpp

The option -Wl,-rpath,<install>/lib adds a runtime library search path, which causes the system’s dynamic linker to look for libc++ in <install>/lib whenever the program is loaded.

The Bootstrapping build

It is possible to build Clang and then build the runtimes using that just-built compiler in a single CMake invocation. This is usually the correct way to build the runtimes when putting together a toolchain, or when the system compiler is not adequate to build them (too old, unsupported, etc.). To do this, use the following CMake invocation, and in particular notice how we’re now rooting the CMake invocation at <monorepo>/llvm:

$ mkdir build
$ cmake -G Ninja -S llvm -B build -DLLVM_ENABLE_PROJECTS="clang"                      \  # Configure
                                  -DLLVM_ENABLE_RUNTIMES="libcxx;libcxxabi;libunwind" \
                                  -DLLVM_RUNTIME_TARGETS="<target-triple>"
$ ninja -C build runtimes                                                                # Build
$ ninja -C build check-runtimes                                                          # Test
$ ninja -C build install-runtimes                                                        # Install

Note

  • This type of build is also commonly called a “Runtimes build”, but we would like to move away from that terminology, which is too confusing.

  • Adding the –fresh flag to the top-level cmake invocation in a bootstrapping build will not freshen the cmake cache of any of the enabled runtimes.

Vendor Configuration Options

This section documents configuration options that can be used by vendors when building the library. These options provide a great deal of flexibility to customize libc++, such as selecting the ABI in use, whether some features are provided, etc.

Warning

Many of these CMake options are tied to configuration macros with a corresponding name in the source code. However, these configuration macros are not intended to be customized by users directly, since many of them require the library to be built with a matching configuration. If you don’t build libc++ yourself, you should not use the options documented here.

General purpose options

LIBCXX_INSTALL_LIBRARY:BOOL

Default: ON

Toggle the installation of the library portion of libc++.

LIBCXX_INSTALL_HEADERS:BOOL

Default: ON

Toggle the installation of the libc++ headers.

LIBCXX_INSTALL_MODULES:BOOL

Default: ON

Toggle the installation of the experimental libc++ module sources.

LIBCXX_ENABLE_SHARED:BOOL

Default: ON

Build libc++ as a shared library. Either LIBCXX_ENABLE_SHARED or LIBCXX_ENABLE_STATIC has to be enabled.

LIBCXX_ENABLE_STATIC:BOOL

Default: ON

Build libc++ as a static library. Either LIBCXX_ENABLE_SHARED or LIBCXX_ENABLE_STATIC has to be enabled.

LIBCXX_LIBDIR_SUFFIX:STRING

Extra suffix to append to the directory where libraries are to be installed. This option overrides LLVM_LIBDIR_SUFFIX.

LIBCXX_HERMETIC_STATIC_LIBRARY:BOOL

Default: OFF

Do not export any symbols from the static libc++ library. This is useful when the static libc++ library is being linked into shared libraries that may be used in with other shared libraries that use different C++ library. We want to avoid exporting any libc++ symbols in that case.

LIBCXX_ENABLE_FILESYSTEM:BOOL

Default: ON except on Windows when using MSVC.

This option can be used to enable or disable the filesystem components on platforms that may not support them. For example on Windows when using MSVC.

LIBCXX_ENABLE_WIDE_CHARACTERS:BOOL

Default: ON

This option can be used to disable support for wchar_t in the library. It also allows the library to work on top of a C Standard Library that does not provide support for wchar_t. This is especially useful in embedded settings where C Standard Libraries don’t always provide all the usual bells and whistles.

LIBCXX_ENABLE_TIME_ZONE_DATABASE:BOOL

Default: ON

Whether to include support for time zones in the library. Disabling time zone support can be useful when porting to platforms that don’t ship the IANA time zone database. When time zones are not supported, time zone support in <chrono> will be disabled.

LIBCXX_INSTALL_LIBRARY_DIR:PATH

Default: lib${LIBCXX_LIBDIR_SUFFIX}

Path where built libc++ libraries should be installed. If a relative path, relative to CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX.

LIBCXX_INSTALL_INCLUDE_DIR:PATH

Default: include/c++/v1

Path where target-agnostic libc++ headers should be installed. If a relative path, relative to CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX.

LIBCXX_INSTALL_INCLUDE_TARGET_DIR:PATH

Default: include/c++/v1 or include/${LLVM_DEFAULT_TARGET_TRIPLE}/c++/v1

Path where target-specific libc++ headers should be installed. If a relative path, relative to CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX.

LIBCXX_SHARED_OUTPUT_NAME:STRING

Default: c++

Output name for the shared libc++ runtime library.

{LIBCXX,LIBCXXABI,LIBUNWIND}_ADDITIONAL_COMPILE_FLAGS:STRING

Default: ""

Additional compile flags to use when building the runtimes. This should be a CMake ;-delimited list of individual compiler options to use. For options that must be passed as-is to the compiler without deduplication (e.g. -Xclang -foo option groups), consider using SHELL: as documented here.

LIBCXX_ADDITIONAL_LIBRARIES:STRING

Default: ""

Additional libraries libc++ is linked to which can be provided in cache.

LIBCXX_ENABLE_EXCEPTIONS:BOOL

Default: ON

Build libc++ with exception support.

LIBCXX_ENABLE_RTTI:BOOL

Default: ON

Build libc++ with run time type information. This option may only be set to OFF when LIBCXX_ENABLE_EXCEPTIONS=OFF.

LIBCXX_INCLUDE_TESTS:BOOL

Default: ON (or value of LLVM_INCLUDE_TESTS)

Build the libc++ test suite, which includes various types of tests like conformance tests, vendor-specific tests and benchmarks.

LIBCXX_INCLUDE_BENCHMARKS:BOOL

Default: ON

Build the libc++ benchmark tests and the Google Benchmark library needed to support them.

LIBCXX_ASSERTION_HANDLER_FILE:PATH

Default:: "${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/vendor/llvm/default_assertion_handler.in"

Specify the path to a header that contains a custom implementation of the assertion handler that gets invoked when a hardening assertion fails. If provided, this header will be included by the library, replacing the default assertion handler. If this is specified as a relative path, it is assumed to be relative to <monorepo>/libcxx.

ABI Specific Options

The following options allow building libc++ for a different ABI version.

LIBCXX_ABI_VERSION:STRING

Default: 1

Defines the target ABI version of libc++.

LIBCXX_ABI_UNSTABLE:BOOL

Default: OFF

Build the “unstable” ABI version of libc++. Includes all ABI changing features on top of the current stable version.

LIBCXX_ABI_NAMESPACE:STRING

Default: __n where n is the current ABI version.

This option defines the name of the inline ABI versioning namespace. It can be used for building custom versions of libc++ with unique symbol names in order to prevent conflicts or ODR issues with other libc++ versions.

Warning

When providing a custom namespace, it’s the vendor’s responsibility to ensure the name won’t cause conflicts with other names defined by libc++, both now and in the future. In particular, inline namespaces of the form __[0-9]+ could cause conflicts with future versions of the library, and so should be avoided.

LIBCXX_ABI_DEFINES:STRING

Default: ""

A semicolon-separated list of ABI macros to persist in the site config header. See include/__config for the list of ABI macros.

LIBCXX_CXX_ABI:STRING

Values: none, libcxxabi, system-libcxxabi, libcxxrt, libstdc++, libsupc++, vcruntime.

Select the ABI library to build libc++ against.

LIBCXX_CXX_ABI_INCLUDE_PATHS:PATHS

Provide additional search paths for the ABI library headers.

LIBCXX_CXX_ABI_LIBRARY_PATH:PATH

Provide the path to the ABI library that libc++ should link against. This is only useful when linking against an out-of-tree ABI library.

LIBCXX_ENABLE_STATIC_ABI_LIBRARY:BOOL

Default: OFF

If this option is enabled, libc++ will try and link the selected ABI library statically.

LIBCXX_ENABLE_ABI_LINKER_SCRIPT:BOOL

Default: ON by default on UNIX platforms other than Apple unless ‘LIBCXX_ENABLE_STATIC_ABI_LIBRARY’ is ON. Otherwise the default value is OFF.

This option generate and installs a linker script as libc++.so which links the correct ABI library.

LIBCXXABI_USE_LLVM_UNWINDER:BOOL

Default: ON

Build and use the LLVM unwinder. Note: This option can only be used when libc++abi is the C++ ABI library used.

LIBCXXABI_ADDITIONAL_LIBRARIES:STRING

Default: ""

Additional libraries libc++abi is linked to which can be provided in cache.

LLVM-specific options

LLVM_LIBDIR_SUFFIX:STRING

Extra suffix to append to the directory where libraries are to be installed. On a 64-bit architecture, one could use -DLLVM_LIBDIR_SUFFIX=64 to install libraries to /usr/lib64.

LLVM_BUILD_32_BITS:BOOL

Build 32-bits executables and libraries on 64-bits systems. This option is available only on some 64-bits Unix systems. Defaults to OFF.

LLVM_LIT_ARGS:STRING

Arguments given to lit. make check and make clang-test are affected. By default, '-sv --no-progress-bar' on Visual C++ and Xcode, '-sv' on others.

Support for Windows

Libc++ supports being built with clang-cl, but not with MSVC’s cl.exe, as cl doesn’t support the #include_next extension. Furthermore, VS 2017 or newer (19.14) is required.

Libc++ also supports being built with clang targeting MinGW environments.

CMake + Visual Studio

Building with Visual Studio currently does not permit running tests. However, it is the simplest way to build.

> cmake -G "Visual Studio 16 2019" -S runtimes -B build ^
        -T "ClangCL"                                    ^
        -DLLVM_ENABLE_RUNTIMES=libcxx                   ^
        -DLIBCXX_ENABLE_SHARED=YES                      ^
        -DLIBCXX_ENABLE_STATIC=NO
> cmake --build build

CMake + ninja (MSVC)

Building with ninja is required for development to enable tests. A couple of tests require Bash to be available, and a couple dozens of tests require other posix tools (cp, grep and similar - LLVM’s tests require the same). Without those tools the vast majority of tests can still be ran successfully.

If Git for Windows is available, that can be used to provide the bash shell by adding the right bin directory to the path, e.g. set PATH=%PATH%;C:\Program Files\Git\usr\bin.

Alternatively, one can also choose to run the whole build in a MSYS2 shell. That can be set up e.g. by starting a Visual Studio Tools Command Prompt (for getting the environment variables pointing to the headers and import libraries), and making sure that clang-cl is available in the path. From there, launch an MSYS2 shell via e.g. C:\msys64\msys2_shell.cmd -full-path -mingw64 (preserving the earlier environment, allowing the MSVC headers/libraries and clang-cl to be found).

In either case, then run:

> cmake -G Ninja -S runtimes -B build                                               ^
        -DCMAKE_C_COMPILER=clang-cl                                                 ^
        -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=clang-cl                                               ^
        -DLLVM_ENABLE_RUNTIMES=libcxx
> ninja -C build cxx
> ninja -C build check-cxx

If you are running in an MSYS2 shell and you have installed the MSYS2-provided clang package (which defaults to a non-MSVC target), you should add e.g. -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER_TARGET=x86_64-windows-msvc (replacing x86_64 with the architecture you’re targeting) to the cmake command line above. This will instruct check-cxx to use the right target triple when invoking clang++.

CMake + ninja (MinGW)

libcxx can also be built in MinGW environments, e.g. with the MinGW compilers in MSYS2. This requires clang to be available (installed with e.g. the mingw-w64-x86_64-clang package), together with CMake and ninja.

> cmake -G Ninja -S runtimes -B build                                               \
        -DCMAKE_C_COMPILER=clang                                                    \
        -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=clang++                                                \
        -DLLVM_ENABLE_LLD=ON                                                        \
        -DLLVM_ENABLE_RUNTIMES="libcxx;libcxxabi"                                   \
        -DLIBCXXABI_ENABLE_SHARED=OFF                                               \
        -DLIBCXX_ENABLE_STATIC_ABI_LIBRARY=ON
> ninja -C build cxx
> ninja -C build check-cxx

Overriding the default assertion handler

When the library wants to terminate due to a hardening assertion failure, the program is aborted by invoking a trap instruction (or in debug mode, by a special verbose termination function that prints an error message and calls std::abort()). This is done to minimize the code size impact of enabling hardening in the library. However, vendors can also override that mechanism at CMake configuration time.

Under the hood, a hardening assertion will invoke the _LIBCPP_ASSERTION_HANDLER macro upon failure. A vendor may provide a header that contains a custom definition of this macro and specify the path to the header via the LIBCXX_ASSERTION_HANDLER_FILE CMake variable. If provided, this header will be included by the library and replace the default implementation. The header must not include any standard library headers (directly or transitively) because doing so will almost always create a circular dependency. The _LIBCPP_ASSERTION_HANDLER(message) macro takes a single parameter that contains an error message explaining the hardening failure and some details about the source location that triggered it.

When a hardening assertion fails, it means that the program is about to invoke library undefined behavior. For this reason, the custom assertion handler is generally expected to terminate the program. If a custom assertion handler decides to avoid doing so (e.g. it chooses to log and continue instead), it does so at its own risk – this approach should only be used in non-production builds and with an understanding of potential consequences. Furthermore, the custom assertion handler should not throw any exceptions as it may be invoked from standard library functions that are marked noexcept (so throwing will result in std::terminate being called).

Using Alternate ABI libraries

In order to implement various features like exceptions, RTTI, dynamic_cast and more, libc++ requires what we refer to as an ABI library. Typically, that library implements the Itanium C++ ABI.

By default, libc++ uses libc++abi as an ABI library. However, it is possible to use other ABI libraries too.

Using libsupc++ on Linux

You will need libstdc++ in order to provide libsupc++.

Figure out where the libsupc++ headers are on your system. On Ubuntu this is /usr/include/c++/<version> and /usr/include/c++/<version>/<target-triple>

You can also figure this out by running

$ echo | g++ -Wp,-v -x c++ - -fsyntax-only
ignoring nonexistent directory "/usr/local/include/x86_64-linux-gnu"
ignoring nonexistent directory "/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-linux-gnu/4.7/../../../../x86_64-linux-gnu/include"
#include "..." search starts here:
#include &lt;...&gt; search starts here:
/usr/include/c++/4.7
/usr/include/c++/4.7/x86_64-linux-gnu
/usr/include/c++/4.7/backward
/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-linux-gnu/4.7/include
/usr/local/include
/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-linux-gnu/4.7/include-fixed
/usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu
/usr/include
End of search list.

Note that the first two entries happen to be what we are looking for. This may not be correct on all platforms.

We can now run CMake:

$ cmake -G Ninja -S runtimes -B build       \
  -DLLVM_ENABLE_RUNTIMES="libcxx"           \
  -DLIBCXX_CXX_ABI=libstdc++                \
  -DLIBCXXABI_USE_LLVM_UNWINDER=OFF         \
  -DLIBCXX_CXX_ABI_INCLUDE_PATHS="/usr/include/c++/4.7/;/usr/include/c++/4.7/x86_64-linux-gnu/"
$ ninja -C build install-cxx

You can also substitute -DLIBCXX_CXX_ABI=libsupc++ above, which will cause the library to be linked to libsupc++ instead of libstdc++, but this is only recommended if you know that you will never need to link against libstdc++ in the same executable as libc++. GCC ships libsupc++ separately but only as a static library. If a program also needs to link against libstdc++, it will provide its own copy of libsupc++ and this can lead to subtle problems.

Using libcxxrt on Linux

You will need to keep the source tree of libcxxrt available on your build machine and your copy of the libcxxrt shared library must be placed where your linker will find it.

We can now run CMake like:

$ cmake -G Ninja -S runtimes -B build                               \
        -DLLVM_ENABLE_RUNTIMES="libcxx"                             \
        -DLIBCXX_CXX_ABI=libcxxrt                                   \
        -DLIBCXX_ENABLE_NEW_DELETE_DEFINITIONS=ON                   \
        -DLIBCXXABI_USE_LLVM_UNWINDER=OFF                           \
        -DLIBCXX_CXX_ABI_INCLUDE_PATHS=path/to/libcxxrt-sources/src
$ ninja -C build install-cxx

Unfortunately you can’t simply run clang with “-stdlib=libc++” at this point, as clang is set up to link for libc++ linked to libsupc++. To get around this you’ll have to set up your linker yourself (or patch clang). For example,

$ clang++ -stdlib=libc++ helloworld.cpp \
          -nodefaultlibs -lc++ -lcxxrt -lm -lc -lgcc_s -lgcc

Alternately, you could just add libcxxrt to your libraries list, which in most situations will give the same result:

$ clang++ -stdlib=libc++ helloworld.cpp -lcxxrt