CIL is a front-end for the C programming language that facilitates program analysis and transformation. CIL will parse and typecheck a program, and compile it into a simplified subset of C.
CIL supports ANSI C as well as most of the extensions of the GNU C and Microsoft C compilers. A Perl script acts as a drop in replacement for either gcc or Microsoft's cl, and allows merging of the source files in your project. Other features include support for control-flow and points-to analyses.
Install the latest release of CIL with opam:
opam install cil
Read the excellent CIL tutorial by Zachary Anderson, and check out the accompanying project template.
To build and install CIL, you need the OCaml compiler, perl, and ocamlfind. (Of course, you also need some C compiler, preferably gcc.)
Run the following commands to build and install CIL:
./configure
make
make test # regression test suite, optionnal
make install # as root or using sudo
If you want to install to some other directory, you can tweak the prefix during the configure step. For instance, to install in your local opam directory:
./configure --prefix=`opam config var prefix`
You can use cilly (installed in /usr/local/bin by default) as a drop-in replacement for gcc to compile and link your programs.
You can also use CIL as a library to write your own programs. For instance in the OCaml toplevel using findlib:
$ ocaml
Objective Caml version 4.00.1
# #use "topfind";;
[...]
# #require "cil";;
[...]
# Cil.cilVersion;;
- : string = "1.7.3"
The documentation is located in the doc/html/cil directory. The API documentation (generated by ocamldoc) is in the api subdirectory.
To (re)build the doc, you need Hevea and run:
make doc
You can also browse the documentation online.
CIL is maintained by Gabriel Kerneis gabriel@kerneis.info