This utility transpiles C code to Go assembly. It uses the LLVM toolchain to compile C code to assembly and machine code and generates Go assembly from it, as well as the corresponding Go stubs. This is useful for certain features such as using intrinsics, which are not supported by the Go ecosystem. The example folder includes matrix multiplication using intrinsics compiled to ARM Linux, x86_x64 and Apple Silicon.
- Remote compilation using a docker container with all toolchains (including Apple Silicon) pre-installed.
- Only requires
clang
andobjdump
to be installed in order to compile. - Auto-detects the appropriate version of
clang
andobjdump
to use. - Supports cross-compilation.
- Auto-generates Go stubs for the C functions by parsing C code.
- Automatically formats go assembly using
asmfmt
.
The easiest way to use this tool is to use it remotely. This will use a docker container with all the toolchains pre-installed. This is the default mode of operation and requires no additional setup. The only requirement is to have go
installed on your machine.
First, we need to install gocc
command-line tool. This will install the gocc
command in your $GOPATH/bin
folder, or $GOBIN
. Make sure to add it to your $PATH
variable as well.
go install github.com/kelindar/gocc/cmd/gocc@latest
Next, you can use it to compile your C code to Go assembly. For example, to compile the matmul_avx.c
file, you can run the following command:
gocc matmul_avx.c --arch avx2
Before you use it, you need to install the LLVM toolchain. On Ubuntu, you can do it with the following commands:
sudo apt install build-essential
bash -c "$(wget -O - https://apt.llvm.org/llvm.sh)"
For cross-compilation you will also need to install the appropriate toolchain. For example, for ARM Linux:
sudo apt install -qy binutils-aarch64-linux-gnu gcc-aarch64-linux-gnu g++-aarch64-linux-gnu
This tool does not support most of the C features, it's not a replacement for C/Go. If you are using this for production code, make sure to test the generated code thoroughly. Also, this is not meant to be general-purpose tool, but rather a tool for solving my own problems of speeding up certain routines.
- Only supports C code that can be compiled by
clang
. - Does not support C++ code or templates for now.
- Does not support call statements, thus require you to inline your C functions
- Currently limited to 4 arguments per function and must be 64-bit.
The ideas of this are built on top of others who have done similar things, such as