Getting Involved

LLVM welcomes contributions of all kinds. To get started, please review the following topics:

Contributing to LLVM

An overview on how to contribute to LLVM.

LLVM Developer Policy

The LLVM project’s policy towards developers and their contributions.

LLVM Code-Review Policy and Practices

The LLVM project’s code-review process.

LLVM Community Support Policy

The LLVM support policy for core and non-core components.

Sphinx Quickstart Template

A template + tutorial for writing new Sphinx documentation. It is meant to be read in source form.

Code Reviews with Phabricator

Describes how to use the Phabricator code review tool hosted on http://reviews.llvm.org/ and its command line interface, Arcanist.

How to submit an LLVM bug report

Instructions for properly submitting information about any bugs you run into in the LLVM system.

LLVM Bug Life Cycle

Describes how bugs are reported, triaged and closed.

LLVM Coding Standards

Details the LLVM coding standards and provides useful information on writing efficient C++ code.

LLVM GitHub User Guide

Describes how to use the llvm-project repository on GitHub.

Bisecting LLVM code

Describes how to use git bisect on LLVM’s repository.

Policies on git repositories

Collection of policies around the git repositories.

Development Process

Information about LLVM’s development process.

Creating an LLVM Project

How-to guide and templates for new projects that use the LLVM infrastructure. The templates (directory organization, Makefiles, and test tree) allow the project code to be located outside (or inside) the llvm/ tree, while using LLVM header files and libraries.

How To Release LLVM To The Public

This is a guide to preparing LLVM releases. Most developers can ignore it.

How To Validate a New Release

This is a guide to validate a new release, during the release process. Most developers can ignore it.

How To Add Your Build Configuration To LLVM Buildbot Infrastructure

Instructions for adding new builder to LLVM buildbot master.

Advice on Packaging LLVM

Advice on packaging LLVM into a distribution.

Release notes for the current release

This describes new features, known bugs, and other limitations.

Forums & Mailing Lists

If you can’t find what you need in these docs, try consulting the Discourse forums. There are also commit mailing lists for all commits to the LLVM Project. The LLVM Community Code of Conduct applies to all these forums and mailing lists.

LLVM Discourse

The forums for all things LLVM and related sub-projects. There are categories and subcategories for a wide variety of areas within LLVM. You can also view tags or search for a specific topic.

Commits Archive (llvm-commits)

This list contains all commit messages that are made when LLVM developers commit code changes to the repository. It also serves as a forum for patch review (i.e. send patches here). It is useful for those who want to stay on the bleeding edge of LLVM development. This list is very high volume.

Bugs & Patches Archive (llvm-bugs)

This list gets emailed every time a bug is opened and closed. It is higher volume than the LLVM-dev list.

LLVM Announcements

If you just want project wide announcements such as releases, developers meetings, or blog posts, then you should check out the Announcement category on LLVM Discourse.

Online Sync-Ups

A number of regular calls are organized on specific topics. It should be expected that the range of topics will change over time. At the time of writing, the following sync-ups are organized. The LLVM Community Code of Conduct applies to all online sync-ups.

If you’d like to organize a new sync-up, please add the info in the table below. Please also create a calendar event for it and invite calendar@llvm.org to the event, so that it’ll show up on the LLVM community calendar.

LLVM regular sync-up calls

Topic

Frequency

Calendar link

Minutes/docs link

Loop Optimization Working Group

Every 2 weeks on Wednesday

ics

Minutes/docs

RISC-V

Every 2 weeks on Thursday

ics gcal

Scalable Vectors and Arm SVE

Monthly, every 3rd Tuesday

ics gcal

Minutes/docs

ML Guided Compiler Optimizations

Monthly

Minutes/docs

LLVM security group

Monthly, every 3rd Tuesday

ics gcal

Minutes/docs

CIRCT

Weekly, on Wednesday

Minutes/docs

MLIR design meetings

Weekly, on Thursdays

Minutes/docs

flang

Multiple meeting series, documented here

OpenMP

Multiple meeting series, documented here

LLVM Alias Analysis

Every 4 weeks on Tuesdays

ics

Minutes/docs

Windows/COFF related developments

Every 2 months on Thursday

Minutes/docs

Vector Predication

Every 2 weeks on Tuesdays, 3pm UTC

Minutes/docs

LLVM Pointer Authentication

Every month on Mondays

ics

Minutes/docs

MemorySSA in LLVM

Every 8 weeks on Mondays

ics gcal

Minutes/docs

LLVM Embedded Toolchains

Every 4 weeks on Thursdays

ics gcal

Minutes/docs

Clang C and C++ Language Working Group

1st and 3rd Wednesday of the month

gcal

Minutes/docs

Office hours

A number of experienced LLVM contributors make themselves available for a chat on a regular schedule, to anyone who is looking for some guidance. Please find the list of who is available when, through which medium, and what their area of expertise is. Don’t be too shy to dial in!

The LLVM Community Code of Conduct applies to all office hours.

Of course, people take time off from time to time, so if you dial in and you don’t find anyone present, chances are they happen to be off that day.

LLVM office hours

Name

In-scope topics

When?

Where?

Languages

Kristof Beyls

General questions on how to contribute to LLVM; organizing meetups; submitting talks; and other general LLVM-related topics. Arm/AArch64 codegen. LLVM security group. LLVM Office Hours.

Every 2nd and 4th Wednesday of the month at 9.30am CET, for 30 minutes. ics

Jitsi

English, Flemish, Dutch

Alina Sbirlea

General questions on how to contribute to LLVM; women in compilers; MemorySSA, BatchAA, various loop passes, new pass manager.

Monthly, 2nd Tuesdays, 10.00am PT/7:00pm CET, for 30 minutes. ics gcal

GoogleMeet

English, Romanian

Aaron Ballman

Clang internals; frontend attributes; clang-tidy; clang-query; AST matchers

Monthly, 2nd Monday of the month at 10:00am Eastern, for 30 minutes. ics gcal

GoogleMeet

English, Norwegian (not fluently)

Johannes Doerfert (he/him)

OpenMP, LLVM-IR, interprocedural optimizations, Attributor, workshops, research, …

Every 2 weeks, Wednesdays 10:30am (Chicago Time), for 1 hour. ics

MS Teams

English, German

Tobias Grosser

General questions on how to contribute to LLVM/MLIR, Polly, Loop Optimization, FPL, Research in LLVM, PhD in CS, Summer of Code.

Monthly, last Monday of the month at 18:00 London time (typically 9am PT), for 30 minutes.

Video Call

English, German, Spanish, French

Anastasia Stulova

Clang internals for C/C++ language extensions and dialects, OpenCL, GPU, SPIR-V, how to contribute, women in compilers.

Monthly, 2nd Thursday of the month at 17:00 BST - London time (9:00am PT except for 2 weeks in spring), 1 hour slot.

GoogleMeet

English, Russian, German (not fluently)

Alexey Bader

SYCL compiler, offload tools, OpenCL and SPIR-V, how to contribute.

Monthly, 2nd Monday of the month at 9:30am PT, for 30 minutes.

GoogleMeet

English, Russian

Maksim Panchenko

BOLT internals, IR, new passes, proposals, etc.

Monthly, 2nd Wednesday of the month at 11:00am PT, for 30 minutes.

Zoom

English, Russian

Guidance for office hours hosts

  • If you’re interested in becoming an office hours host, please add your information to the list above. Please create a calendar event for it and invite calendar@llvm.org to the event so that it’ll show up on the LLVM community calendar.

  • When starting an office hours session, consider typing something like “Hi, I’m available for chats in the next half hour at video chat URL. I’m looking forward to having conversations on the video chat or here.” on the LLVM chat channels that you are already on. These could include:

    Doing this can help:
    • overcome potential anxiety to call in for a first time,

    • people who prefer to first exchange a few messages through text chat before dialing in, and

    • remind the wider community that office hours do exist.

  • If you decide to no longer host office hours, please do remove your entry from the list above.

IRC

Users and developers of the LLVM project (including subprojects such as Clang) can be found in #llvm on irc.oftc.net.

This channel has several bots.

In addition to the traditional IRC there is a Discord chat server available. To sign up, please use this invitation link.

Meetups and social events

Besides developer meetings and conferences, there are several user groups called LLVM Socials. We greatly encourage you to join one in your city. Or start a new one if there is none:

How to start LLVM Social in your town

Community wide proposals

Proposals for massive changes in how the community behaves and how the work flow can be better.

Moving LLVM Projects to GitHub

Proposal to move from SVN/Git to GitHub.

Bugpoint Redesign

Design doc for a redesign of the Bugpoint tool.

Test-Suite Extensions

Proposals for additional benchmarks/programs for llvm’s test-suite.

Variable Names Plan

Proposal to change the variable names coding standard.

Vectorization Plan

Proposal to model the process and upgrade the infrastructure of LLVM’s Loop Vectorizer.

Vector Predication Roadmap

Proposal for predicated vector instructions in LLVM.

LLVM community calendar

We aim to maintain a public calendar view of all events happening in the LLVM community such as Online Sync-Ups and Office hours. The calendar can be found at https://calendar.google.com/calendar/u/0/embed?src=calendar@llvm.org and can also be seen inline below: