extensions). If you want to force files ending with ".c" to compile as
C++, use the ``-x`` option, just like you would do it with ``gcc``::
- $ llvmc2 -x c hello.cpp
- $ # hello.cpp is really a C file
+ $ # hello.c is really a C++ file
+ $ llvmc2 -x c++ hello.c
$ ./a.out
hello
no meaning in the context of ``OptionList``, so the only properties
allowed there are ``help`` and ``required``.
-Option lists are used at the file scope. See file
+Option lists are used at file scope. See the file
``plugins/Clang/Clang.td`` for an example of ``OptionList`` usage.
.. _hooks:
$ ./a.out
hello
-For further help on command-line LLVMC usage, refer to the ``llvmc
---help`` output.
+This will invoke ``llvm-g++`` under the hood (you can see which
+commands are executed by using the ``-v`` option). For further help on
+command-line LLVMC usage, refer to the ``llvmc --help`` output.
+
Using LLVMC to generate toolchain drivers
=========================================
Contents of the file ``Simple.td`` look like this::
// Include common definitions
- include "Common.td"
+ include "llvm/CompilerDriver/Common.td"
// Tool descriptions
def gcc : Tool<