From 36b56886974eae4f9c5ebc96befd3e7bfe5de338 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Stephen Hines Date: Wed, 23 Apr 2014 16:57:46 -0700 Subject: Update to LLVM 3.5a. Change-Id: Ifadecab779f128e62e430c2b4f6ddd84953ed617 --- docs/GettingStartedVS.rst | 12 ++++-------- 1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) (limited to 'docs/GettingStartedVS.rst') diff --git a/docs/GettingStartedVS.rst b/docs/GettingStartedVS.rst index c46dc83..628bfdc 100644 --- a/docs/GettingStartedVS.rst +++ b/docs/GettingStartedVS.rst @@ -45,15 +45,13 @@ and software you will need. Hardware -------- -Any system that can adequately run Visual Studio 2010 is fine. The LLVM +Any system that can adequately run Visual Studio 2012 is fine. The LLVM source tree and object files, libraries and executables will consume approximately 3GB. Software -------- -You will need Visual Studio 2010 or higher. Earlier versions of Visual -Studio have bugs, are not completely compatible, or do not support the C++ -standard well enough. +You will need Visual Studio 2012 or higher. You will also need the `CMake `_ build system since it generates the project files you will use to build with. @@ -121,16 +119,14 @@ Here's the short story for getting up and running quickly with LLVM: or run it from the command line. The program will print the corresponding fibonacci value. -8. Test LLVM on Visual Studio: +8. Test LLVM in Visual Studio: * If ``%PATH%`` does not contain GnuWin32, you may specify ``LLVM_LIT_TOOLS_DIR`` on CMake for the path to GnuWin32. * You can run LLVM tests by merely building the project "check". The test results will be shown in the VS output window. -.. FIXME: Is it up-to-date? - -9. Test LLVM: +9. Test LLVM on the command line: * The LLVM tests can be run by changing directory to the llvm source directory and running: -- cgit v1.1