llvm-extract - extract a function from an LLVM module
SYNOPSIS
:program:`llvm-extract` [options] --func function-name [filename]
DESCRIPTION
The :program:`llvm-extract` command takes the name of a function and extracts it from the specified LLVM bitcode file. It is primarily used as a debugging tool to reduce test cases from larger programs that are triggering a bug.
In addition to extracting the bitcode of the specified function, :program:`llvm-extract` will also remove unreachable global variables, prototypes, and unused types.
The :program:`llvm-extract` command reads its input from standard input if
filename is omitted or if filename is -
. The output is always written to
standard output, unless the -o option is specified (see below).
OPTIONS
-f
Enable binary output on terminals. Normally, :program:`llvm-extract` will refuse to write raw bitcode output if the output stream is a terminal. With this option, :program:`llvm-extract` will write raw bitcode regardless of the output device.
--func function-name
Extract the function named function-name from the LLVM bitcode. May be specified multiple times to extract multiple functions at once.
--rfunc function-regular-expr
Extract the function(s) matching function-regular-expr from the LLVM bitcode. All functions matching the regular expression will be extracted. May be specified multiple times.
--glob global-name
Extract the global variable named global-name from the LLVM bitcode. May be specified multiple times to extract multiple global variables at once.
--rglob glob-regular-expr
Extract the global variable(s) matching global-regular-expr from the LLVM bitcode. All global variables matching the regular expression will be extracted. May be specified multiple times.
-help
Print a summary of command line options.
-o filename
Specify the output filename. If filename is "-" (the default), then :program:`llvm-extract` sends its output to standard output.
-S
Write output in LLVM intermediate language (instead of bitcode).
EXIT STATUS
If :program:`llvm-extract` succeeds, it will exit with 0. Otherwise, if an error occurs, it will exit with a non-zero value.