Using Clang/LLVM with the Microsoft Game Development Kit (GDK)
Development of GDK titles using Clang/LLVM is officially supported using Visual Studio 2019 or 2022 and the clang/LLVM for Windows toolset v12 or later. This toolset uses the Visual C/C++ Runtime (the Universal CRT library + the Microsoft STL). Other toolsets and runtime combinations may or may not successfully run or pass title certification.
Clang/LLVM for Windows with the LLVM (clang-cl) (i.e. the ClangCL) Platform Toolset uses the Microsoft Standard C++ Library.
Clang Version | Visual Studio Update |
---|---|
clang v12 | Visual Studio 2019 (16.11) |
clang v12 | Visual Studio 2022 (17.0) |
clang v13 | Visual Studio 2022 (17.1) |
clang v13.0.1 | Visual Studio 2022 (17.2) |
clang v14 | Visual Studio 2022 (17.3) |
clang v15.0.1 | Visual Studio 2022 (17.4) |
clang v16.0.5 | Visual Studio 2022 (17.7) |
clang v17.0.3 | Visual Studio 2022 (17.9) |
clang v18.1.8 | Visual Studio 2022 (17.12) Preview |
Required Visual Studio versions and components
Visual Studio version 16.11 or later is required to use Clang/LLVM with the Microsoft Game Development Kit (GDK). The C++ Clang Tools for Windows component under Desktop Development with C++ must be selected when installing Visual Studio 2019.
Depending on which version of Visual Studio you are using the required Clang/LLVM components may be named C++ Clang Compiler for Windows and C++ Clang-cl for v142 build tools (x64/x86).
Note
If you modify your existing Visual Studio installation to add the C++ Clang Tools for Windows after the Microsoft Game Development Kit (GDK) has been installed, you'll need to repair your Microsoft Game Development Kit (GDK) installation before using Clang/LLVM.
If the C++ Clang Tools for Windows component has been installed, Microsoft Game Development Kit (GDK) setup will install support for the ClangCl platform toolset for the Gaming.Desktop.x64
platforms.
Compiler and Linker switches
For the Gaming.Desktop.x64
platforms, the clang/LLVM command-line used with clang-cl.exe
will always include:
-Wno-c++98-compat -Wno-c++98-compat-pedantic -Wno-reserved-id-macro
-Wno-pragma-pack -Wno-unknown-pragmas
-Wno-unused-command-line-argument
Supported CPU intrinsics
Clang/LLVM and GNUC treat SSE SIMD types differently than Visual C++ and the Intel Compiler. Specifically, the __m128, __m128i, __m128d types are considered opaque types rather than structs, so you cannot create C++ overloaded functions using those types. This also means direct element access via __m128.m128_f32[] will not compile on clang.
Note that for DirectXMath on Clang/LLVM, this results in all the XMVECTOR C++ overloads being disabled. You can also opt-in to this behavior on Visual C++ as well for better portability by defining the preprocessor symbol XM_NO_XMVECTOR_OVERLOADS
before including the DirectXMath headers.
For PC, you can count on SSE and SSE2 to be supported by all x64 native CPUs as this is part of the architecture definition. You can also safely require SSE3 as this is supported by all modern CPUs supported by Windows 10. For DirectXMath, this means you can define the preprocessor define _XM_SSE3_INTRINSICS_
and must build with clang/LLVM using -march=sse3
.
Visual C++ will allow you to use advanced instruction intrinsics even if you are not currently building with /arch:AVX or /arch:AVX2, but clang/LLVM will fail to build in this scenario without the proper complier switches. Be sure to do runtime CPU support checks for anything you use beyond SSE2 on PC.
DirectXMath in the Windows 10 SDK (18363) or earlier used the wrong CPUID intrinsics to implement XMVerifyCPUSupport
for Clang/LLVM. This is fixed for DirectXMath 3.14 in the Windows 10 SDK (19041) or later.
Using Clang/LLVM with msbuild
To use Clang/LLVM with an msbuild project, set the Platform Toolset to "LLVM (clang-cl)". Platform Toolset can be found under the General tab in the Visual C++ project properties dialog as shown in the following figure.
The Clang/LLVM toolset can also be set by directly setting the PlatformToolset msbuild property to ClangCl as shown in the following example.
<PlatformToolset>ClangCl</PlatformToolset>
By default, the Clang/LLVM compiler generates significantly more informational warnings compared to MSVC. Therefore for the 'TODO' places you will see both the -W#pragma-messages output as a warning, and an -Wunused-value warning:
1>Game.cpp(56,13): warning : Game.cpp: TODO in Update [-W#pragma-messages]
1>Game.cpp(58,5): warning : expression result unused [-Wunused-value]
1>Game.cpp(79,13): warning : Game.cpp: TODO in Render [-W#pragma-messages]
1>Game.cpp(81,5): warning : expression result unused [-Wunused-value]
1>Game.cpp(137,13): warning : Game.cpp: TODO in CreateDeviceDependentResources [-W#pragma-messages]
1>Game.cpp(139,5): warning : expression result unused [-Wunused-value]
1>Game.cpp(145,13): warning : Game.cpp: TODO in CreateWindowSizeDependentResources [-W#pragma-messages]
Using Clang/LLVM with cmake
The CMakeExample and CMakeGDKExample Microsoft Game Development Kit (GDK) samples provide a good starting point for integrating Clang/LLVM into your cmake projects. See the Microsoft Game Development Kit (GDK) samples for download instructions.
Note
Make sure the C++ CMake tools for Windows Visual Studio component is installed before attempting to add Clang/LLVM support to your cmake projects. Visual Studio 2019 (16.11) ships with CMake 3.20. Visual Studio 2022 ships with CMake 3.21 or later.
Using CMakeExample
Use the following steps to enable Clang/LLVM with the CMakeExample project.
- Use Visual Studio's Open Local Folder option to open the Desktop folder in the root CMakeExample folder.
The CMakeExample was updated in March 2022 to use CMakePresets.json
rather than the older CMakeSettings.json
solution. CMake Presets are integrated with Visual Studio 2019 16.10 or later. See this blog post.
CMakePresets.json integration
- Double-click on the CMakePresets.json file in the Solution Explorer.
Edit the XdkEditionTarget
variable to match your current GDK edition.
"cacheVariables": {
"XdkEditionTarget": "230300",
"CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX": "${sourceDir}/out/install/${presetName}"
}
- Select the
x64-Debug-Clang
orx64-Release-Clang
preset.
CMakeSettings.json integration
Double-click on the CMakeSettings.json file in the Solution Explorer.
Select the "PLUS" icon and choose "x64-Clang-Debug" and/or "x64-Clang-Release" as shown in the following figure. Save the changes.
- Click "Edit Json", then cut and paste the variables section from another configuration to the new Clang configurations as in the following example. Set the XDKEditionTarget value to the one appropriate for your version of the GDK including QFE level.
"variables": [
{
"name": "XdkEditionTarget",
"value": "210400",
"type": "STRING"
}
]
- After saving all changes, select x64-Clang-Debug or x64-Clang-Release from the build configuration dropdown and build.
Using CMakeGDKExample
Use the following steps to enable Clang/LLVM with the CMakeGDKExample project.
- Use Visual Studio's Open Local Folder option to open the CMakeGDKExample folder.
CMakePresets.json integration
- Double-click on the CMakePresets.json file in the Solution Explorer.
Edit the XdkEditionTarget
variable to match your current GDK edition.
"cacheVariables": {
"XdkEditionTarget": "230300",
"CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX": "${sourceDir}/out/install/${presetName}"
}
- Select the
x64-Desktop-Clang
preset.
CMakeSettings.json integration
Double-click on the CMakeSettings.json file in the Solution Explorer.
Select the configuration you'd like to edit and set the Toolset value to "clang_cl_x64". Save and close.
For Xbox One and Xbox Series X|S configurations, select Edit Json and ensure the XdkEditionTarget variable matches your GDK edition and QFE level.
Select the desired value from the configuration dropdown and choose Rebuild All from the Build menu.
Use File -> Open -> Project/Solution to select the generated solution/project. For example:
CMakeGDKExample\out\build\GamingXboxOne-Debug\CMakeGDKExample.sln
You are now ready to build and deploy your project.
Obtaining Support
For bug reporting for the Visual C++ compiler, use Report a Problem… in Visual Studio
For bug reporting for the clang/LLVM compiler, use https://bugs.llvm.org/
For bug reports for the Microsoft Standard C++ Library (a.k.a. STL), use https://github.com/microsoft/STL/issues
Known Issues
- The Clang/LLVM toolset is significantly more verbose than Visual C++, especially when using -Wall -Wextra -Wpedantic. At a minimum, suppress the following warnings either on the command-line or as a #pragma:
#ifdef __clang__
#pragma clang diagnostic ignored "-Wc++98-compat"
#pragma clang diagnostic ignored "-Wc++98-compat-pedantic"
#pragma clang diagnostic ignored "-Wgnu-anonymous-struct"
#pragma clang diagnostic ignored "-Wlanguage-extension-token"
#pragma clang diagnostic ignored "-Wnested-anon-types"
#pragma clang diagnostic ignored "-Wreserved-id-macro"
#pragma clang diagnostic ignored "-Wunknown-pragmas"
#endif
The Microsoft Game Development Kit (GDK) tooling only works with Microsoft PDBs for debugging symbols, and do not support the CodeView or DWARF debugging information emitted in LLVM .ld files.
Clang/LLVM's implementation of Link-Time Code Generation is distinctly different than the Microsoft Visual C++ solution. Code that uses Link-Time Code Generation cannot be mixed between MSVC and clang/LLVM.
As of the October 2022 release and the Windows SDK (10.0.22621), C++ static libraries include eXtended Flow Control Guard (XFG) metadata. The
ld
linker prior to the v15 release will always emit a harmless warning when using these libraries:
lld-link: warning/error: ignoring unknown debug$S subsection kind 0xFF in file xgameruntime.lib