When building the IR from an existing AST, my AST has some string values (at compile-time they are built from std::string
) and I want to set them safely as llvm::Value
to use as a part of an expression.
In this case, I don't need to bind the string at run-time, because string values are only meant to resolve stuff as variables, functions or classes at compile-time (the language doesn't support a native string type).
Whats the best way to keep my string content as llvm::Value
and still be able to retrieve it at later stages of compilation (when the nesting expressions are built)?
More concretely, if I set the llvm::Value
with:
llvm::Value* v = llvm::ConstantArray::get(llvmContext, myString.c_str());
How do I safely retrieve the string value? Is llvm::ConstantArray
the appropriate way to wrap strings?
Yes, ConstantArray is what you should use here. In order to retrieve the value later just use ConstantArray::getAsCString(). If you have assertions turned on, it will assert if something will went wrong (e.g. you will try to grab string from the array w/o zero terminator).
Running http://llvm.org/demo/ on the C code
char *x = "asdf";
gives:Basically, to get the address of a string, you have to build a global containing it. You can switch http://llvm.org/demo/ to output C++ API calls if you have trouble figuring out how to do that.