This is the home of a D compiler. SDC is at the moment, particularly stupid; it is a work in progress. Feel free to poke around, but don't expect it to compile your code.
The project currently provides a collection of tools:
This compiler is based on libd for D code analysis. It uses LLVM and libd-llvm for codegen and JIT CTFE. It uses libsdrt to support various runtime facilities required by programs compiled by SDC.
The code is released under the MIT license (see the LICENCE file for more details). Contact me at deadalnix@gmail.com.
SDC requires latest DMD release to compile.
Right now, SDC is a work in progress and unusable for any production work. Its intent is to provide a D compiler as a library (libd) in order to improve the overall D toolchain by enabling the possibility of developing new tools.
SDC now supports many very advanced features (static ifs, string mixins, CTFE) of D, but not many basic ones. This is a development choice to allow the architecturing of the compiler around the hardest features of the language. As a consequence, SDC has a solid base to build upon.
See the tests directory for a sample of what is/should-be working. You can also build SDC's runtime library, that is compiled using SDC.
You'll need make
and the latest DMD installed and LLVM 19.
Run make
.
Then you can run the test suite using make check
. There should be no
regressions.
SDC requires a recent version of LLVM. If the default llvm-config on your system
is too old, you can specify a newer version via LLVM_CONFIG
. For instance, on
a debian system, you want to use LLVM_CONFIG=llvm-config-11 make
.
You'll need make
and the latest DMD installed. You'll also need a recent
version of LLVM if you don't already have it. One way to install llvm that's
been tested is to use Homebrew, a package manager for OS X. After
installing it by following instructions from the web page, run the command
brew install llvm11
, followed by LLVM_CONFIG=llvm-config-11 make
. If you
are using MacPorts instead, you can run sudo port install llvm-11
,
followed by LLVM_CONFIG=llvm-config-mp-11 make
. You'll also need a recent
version of nasm
; if nasm
does not recognise the macho64
output format, try
upgrading nasm
to a newer version.
On Linux, you can also use the Nix package manager to automatically fetch
dependencies and build SDC for you. You may need to use the unstable nix
channel, to have a new enough dmd
to build SDC. Clone or download this
repository.
To build the executable, run
nix-build -E "(import <nixpkgs> {}).callPackage ./. {}"
or
nix-build -E "(import <nixpkgs> {}).callPackage ./. {dflags=\"-O -release\";}"
from the project root directory.