Provided by: ocaml_4.14.1-1ubuntu1_amd64 bug

NAME

       ocamlopt - The OCaml native-code compiler

SYNOPSIS

       ocamlopt [ options ] filename ...

       ocamlopt.opt (same options)

DESCRIPTION

       The OCaml high-performance native-code compiler ocamlopt(1) compiles OCaml source files to
       native code object files and link these object files to produce standalone executables.

       The ocamlopt(1) command has a command-line interface very close to that of ocamlc(1).   It
       accepts  the  same  types  of arguments and processes them sequentially, after all options
       have been processed:

       Arguments ending in .mli are taken to be source files  for  compilation  unit  interfaces.
       Interfaces  specify the names exported by compilation units: they declare value names with
       their types, define public data types, declare abstract data types, and so  on.  From  the
       file x.mli, the ocamlopt(1) compiler produces a compiled interface in the file x.cmi.  The
       interface produced is identical to that produced by the bytecode compiler ocamlc(1).

       Arguments ending in .ml are taken to be source files for compilation unit implementations.
       Implementations  provide  definitions for the names exported by the unit, and also contain
       expressions to be evaluated for their side-effects.  From the file x.ml,  the  ocamlopt(1)
       compiler  produces  two  files:  x.o, containing native object code, and x.cmx, containing
       extra information for linking and optimization of the clients of the  unit.  The  compiled
       implementation  should  always  be referred to under the name x.cmx (when given a .o file,
       ocamlopt(1) assumes that it contains code compiled from C, not from OCaml).

       The implementation is checked against the interface file x.mli (if it exists) as described
       in the manual for ocamlc(1).

       Arguments  ending  in  .cmx  are taken to be compiled object code.  These files are linked
       together, along with the object files obtained by compiling .ml arguments  (if  any),  and
       the  OCaml  standard  library,  to  produce a native-code executable program. The order in
       which .cmx and .ml arguments are presented on the command line  is  relevant:  compilation
       units  are  initialized  in  that  order at run-time, and it is a link-time error to use a
       component of a unit before having initialized it. Hence, a  given  x.cmx  file  must  come
       before all .cmx files that refer to the unit x.

       Arguments  ending in .cmxa are taken to be libraries of object code.  Such a library packs
       in two files lib.cmxa and lib.a a set of object files (.cmx/.o files). Libraries are build
       with  ocamlopt -a (see the description of the -a option below). The object files contained
       in the library are linked as regular .cmx files (see above), in the order  specified  when
       the  library  was  built.  The  only  difference  is that if an object file contained in a
       library is not referenced anywhere in the program, then it is not linked in.

       Arguments ending in .c are passed to the C compiler, which generates  a  .o  object  file.
       This object file is linked with the program.

       Arguments  ending  in  .o  or  .a are assumed to be C object files and libraries. They are
       linked with the program.

       The output of the linking phase is a regular  Unix  executable  file.  It  does  not  need
       ocamlrun(1) to run.

       ocamlopt.opt  is  the  same compiler as ocamlopt, but compiled with itself instead of with
       the bytecode compiler ocamlc(1).  Thus, it behaves exactly  like  ocamlopt,  but  compiles
       faster.  ocamlopt.opt is not available in all installations of OCaml.

OPTIONS

       The following command-line options are recognized by ocamlopt(1).

       -a     Build  a library (.cmxa/.a file) with the object files (.cmx/.o files) given on the
              command line, instead of linking them into an executable  file.  The  name  of  the
              library must be set with the -o option.

              If  -cclib or -ccopt  options  are  passed  on  the command line, these options are
              stored  in  the  resulting  .cmxa  library.   Then,  linking  with   this   library
              automatically  adds back the -cclib and -ccopt options as if they had been provided
              on the command line, unless  the  -noautolink  option  is  given.  Additionally,  a
              substring $CAMLORIGIN inside a  -ccopt options will be replaced by the full path to
              the .cma library, excluding the filename.

       -absname
              Show absolute filenames in error messages.

       -annot Deprecated since OCaml 4.11. Please use -bin-annot instead.

       -bin-annot
              Dump detailed information about the compilation (types, bindings, tail-calls,  etc)
              in  binary  format.  The  information for file src.ml is put into file src.cmt.  In
              case of a type error, dump all the information inferred by the type-checker  before
              the  error.   The  annotation files produced by -bin-annot contain more information
              and are much more compact than the files produced by -annot.

       -c     Compile only. Suppress the linking phase of the compilation. Source code files  are
              turned  into  compiled  files,  but  no executable file is produced. This option is
              useful to compile modules separately.

       -cc ccomp
              Use ccomp as the C linker called to  build  the  final  executable  and  as  the  C
              compiler for compiling .c source files.

       -cclib -llibname
              Pass  the  -llibname  option  to  the linker. This causes the given C library to be
              linked with the program.

       -ccopt option
              Pass the given option to the C compiler  and  linker.  For  instance,  -ccopt -Ldir
              causes the C linker to search for C libraries in directory dir.

       -color mode
              Enable  or  disable  colors  in compiler messages (especially warnings and errors).
              The following modes are supported:

              auto use heuristics to enable colors only if the output  supports  them  (an  ANSI-
              compatible tty terminal);

              always enable colors unconditionally;

              never disable color output.

              The environment variable "OCAML_COLOR" is considered if -color is not provided. Its
              values are auto/always/never as above.

              If -color is not provided, "OCAML_COLOR" is not set and  the  environment  variable
              "NO_COLOR" is set, then color output is disabled. Otherwise, the default setting is
              auto, and the current heuristic checks that the "TERM" environment variable  exists
              and is not empty or "dumb", and that isatty(stderr) holds.

       -error-style mode
              Control  the  way error messages and warnings are printed.  The following modes are
              supported:

              short only print the error and its location;

              contextual like "short", but also display the source code snippet corresponding  to
              the location of the error.

              The default setting is contextual.

              The  environment  variable "OCAML_ERROR_STYLE" is considered if -error-style is not
              provided. Its values are short/contextual as above.

       -compact
              Optimize the produced code for space rather than for time. This results in  smaller
              but slightly slower programs. The default is to optimize for speed.

       -config
              Print   the   version   number  of  ocamlopt(1)  and  a  detailed  summary  of  its
              configuration, then exit.

       -config-var
              Print the value of a specific configuration variable from the -config output,  then
              exit. If the variable does not exist, the exit code is non-zero.

       -depend ocamldep-args
              Compute dependencies, as ocamldep would do.

       -for-pack module-path
              Generate  an  object  file (.cmx and .o files) that can later be included as a sub-
              module (with the given access path) of a compilation unit constructed  with  -pack.
              For  instance,  ocamlopt -for-pack P -c A.ml will generate a.cmx and a.o files that
              can later be used with ocamlopt -pack -o P.cmx a.cmx.

       -g     Add debugging information while compiling and linking. This option is  required  in
              order  to  produce  stack  backtraces  when  the  program terminates on an uncaught
              exception (see ocamlrun(1)).

       -i     Cause the compiler to print all defined names (with their inferred types  or  their
              definitions)  when  compiling an implementation (.ml file). No compiled files (.cmo
              and .cmi files) are produced.  This can be useful to check the  types  inferred  by
              the  compiler. Also, since the output follows the syntax of interfaces, it can help
              in writing an explicit interface (.mli file) for a file: just redirect the standard
              output  of  the  compiler  to  a  .mli  file,  and  edit  that  file  to remove all
              declarations of unexported names.

       -I directory
              Add the given directory to the list of directories searched for compiled  interface
              files (.cmi), compiled object code files (.cmx), and libraries (.cmxa). By default,
              the current directory is searched  first,  then  the  standard  library  directory.
              Directories added with -I are searched after the current directory, in the order in
              which they were given  on  the  command  line,  but  before  the  standard  library
              directory. See also option -nostdlib.

              If  the given directory starts with +, it is taken relative to the standard library
              directory. For instance, -I +compiler-libs adds the subdirectory  compiler-libs  of
              the standard library to the search path.

       -impl filename
              Compile  the  file filename as an implementation file, even if its extension is not
              .ml.

       -inline n
              Set aggressiveness of inlining to n, where n  is  a  positive  integer.  Specifying
              -inline  0  prevents  all  functions from being inlined, except those whose body is
              smaller than the call site. Thus, inlining causes no expansion in  code  size.  The
              default  aggressiveness, -inline 1, allows slightly larger functions to be inlined,
              resulting in a slight expansion in code size. Higher values for the -inline  option
              cause  larger and larger functions to become candidate for inlining, but can result
              in a serious increase in code size.

       -insn-sched
              Enables the instruction scheduling pass in the compiler backend.

       -intf filename
              Compile the file filename as an interface file, even if its extension is not .mli.

       -intf-suffix string
              Recognize file names ending with string as interface files (instead of the  default
              .mli).

       -keep-docs
              Keep documentation strings in generated .cmi files.

       -keep-locs
              Keep locations in generated .cmi files.

       -labels
              Labels  are  not ignored in types, labels may be used in applications, and labelled
              parameters can be given in any order.  This is the default.

       -linkall
              Force all modules contained in libraries to be linked  in.  If  this  flag  is  not
              given,  unreferenced  modules are not linked in. When building a library (-a flag),
              setting the -linkall flag forces all subsequent links of  programs  involving  that
              library  to link all the modules contained in the library.  When compiling a module
              (option -c), setting the -linkall option ensures that this module  will  always  be
              linked if it is put in a library and this library is linked.

       -linscan
              Use  linear scan register allocation.  Compiling with this allocator is faster than
              with the usual graph coloring allocator, sometimes quite drastically  so  for  long
              functions and modules. On the other hand, the generated code can be a bit slower.

       -match-context-rows
              Set  number  of  rows  of  context  used during pattern matching compilation. Lower
              values cause faster compilation, but less optimized code. The default value is 32.

       -no-alias-deps
              Do not record dependencies for module aliases.

       -no-app-funct
              Deactivates the applicative behaviour of functors. With this option,  each  functor
              application  generates  new types in its result and applying the same functor twice
              to the same argument yields two incompatible structures.

       -noassert
              Do not compile assertion checks.  Note that the special form assert false is always
              compiled  because  it  is  typed  specially.   This flag has no effect when linking
              already-compiled files.

       -noautolink
              When  linking  .cmxa  libraries,  ignore  -cclib and -ccopt   options   potentially
              contained  in  the  libraries  (if  these  options  were  given  when  building the
              libraries).  This can be useful if a library contains incorrect specifications of C
              libraries  or C options; in this case, during linking, set -noautolink and pass the
              correct C libraries and options on the command line.

       -nodynlink
              Allow the compiler to use some optimizations that are valid only for code  that  is
              never dynlinked.

       -no-insn-sched
              Disables the instruction scheduling pass in the compiler backend.

       -nostdlib
              Do  not automatically add the standard library directory to the list of directories
              searched for compiled interface files (.cmi), compiled object  code  files  (.cmx),
              and libraries (.cmxa). See also option -I.

       -nolabels
              Ignore  non-optional  labels  in  types. Labels cannot be used in applications, and
              parameter order becomes strict.

       -o exec-file
              Specify the name of the output file produced by the linker. The default output name
              is  a.out,  in  keeping with the Unix tradition. If the -a option is given, specify
              the name of the library produced. If the -pack option is given, specify the name of
              the  packed  object file produced.  If the -output-obj option is given, specify the
              name of the output file produced. If the -shared option is given, specify the  name
              of  plugin  file  produced.   This  can also be used when compiling an interface or
              implementation file, without linking, in which case it sets the name of the cmi  or
              cmo file, and also sets the module name to the file name up to the first dot.

       -opaque
              When  compiling  a  .mli  interface  file,  this has the same effect as the -opaque
              option of the bytecode compiler. When compiling a  .ml  implementation  file,  this
              produces  a  .cmx file without cross-module optimization information, which reduces
              recompilation on module change.

       -open module
              Opens the given module before processing the interface or implementation files.  If
              several  -open  options  are  given,  they  are  processed in order, just as if the
              statements open! module1;; ... open! moduleN;; were added at the top of each file.

       -output-obj
              Cause the linker to produce a C object file instead of an executable file. This  is
              useful  to wrap OCaml code as a C library, callable from any C program. The name of
              the output object file must be set with the -o option.  This  option  can  also  be
              used    to   produce   a   compiled   shared/dynamic   library   (.so   extension).
              -output-complete-obj Same as -output-obj except the object file  produced  includes
              the runtime and autolink libraries.

       -pack  Build  an  object  file  (.cmx  and .o files) and its associated compiled interface
              (.cmi) that combines the .cmx object files given on the command line,  making  them
              appear  as  sub-modules  of the output .cmx file.  The name of the output .cmx file
              must     be     given     with     the     -o      option.       For      instance,
              ocamlopt -pack -o P.cmx A.cmx B.cmx C.cmx  generates  compiled files P.cmx, P.o and
              P.cmi  describing  a  compilation  unit  having  three  sub-modules  A,  B  and  C,
              corresponding  to  the  contents of the object files A.cmx, B.cmx and C.cmx.  These
              contents can be referenced as P.A, P.B and P.C in the remainder of the program.

              The .cmx object files being combined must have been compiled with  the  appropriate
              -for-pack  option.   In  the  example  above, A.cmx, B.cmx and C.cmx must have been
              compiled with ocamlopt -for-pack P.

              Multiple levels of packing can be achieved by combining -pack with -for-pack.   See
              The OCaml user's manual, chapter "Native-code compilation" for more details.

       -pp command
              Cause  the  compiler  to  call  the given command as a preprocessor for each source
              file. The output of command  is  redirected  to  an  intermediate  file,  which  is
              compiled.  If  there  are  no  compilation errors, the intermediate file is deleted
              afterwards.

       -ppx command
              After parsing, pipe the abstract syntax tree through the preprocessor command.  The
              module Ast_mapper(3) implements the external interface of a preprocessor.

       -principal
              Check  information  path  during  type-checking,  to  make  sure that all types are
              derived in a principal way. All programs  accepted  in  -principal  mode  are  also
              accepted in default mode with equivalent types, but different binary signatures.

       -rectypes
              Allow  arbitrary  recursive types during type-checking.  By default, only recursive
              types where the recursion goes through an object type are supported. Note that once
              you  have  created  an  interface  using  this  flag, you must use it again for all
              dependencies.

       -runtime-variant suffix
              Add suffix to the name of the runtime library that will be used by the program.  If
              OCaml  was  configured  with  option  -with-debug-runtime,  then  the  d  suffix is
              supported and gives a debug version of the runtime.

       -S     Keep the assembly code produced during the compilation. The assembly code  for  the
              source file x.ml is saved in the file x.s.

       -stop-after pass
              Stop  compilation  after the given compilation pass. The currently supported passes
              are: parsing, typing, scheduling, emit.

       -save-ir-after pass
              Save intermediate representation after the given compilation  pass.  The  currently
              supported passes are: scheduling.

       -safe-string
              Enforce the separation between types string and bytes, thereby making strings read-
              only. This is the default.

       -shared
              Build a plugin (usually .cmxs) that can be  dynamically  loaded  with  the  Dynlink
              module. The name of the plugin must be set with the -o option. A plugin can include
              a number of OCaml modules and libraries, and extra native objects (.o,  .a  files).
              Building  native  plugins  is  only supported for some operating system. Under some
              systems (currently, only Linux AMD 64), all the OCaml code linked in a plugin  must
              have  been  compiled without the -nodynlink flag. Some constraints might also apply
              to the way the extra native objects have been compiled (under Linux  AMD  64,  they
              must contain only position-independent code).

       -short-paths
              When  a  type  is  visible  under  several  module-paths, use the shortest one when
              printing the type's name in inferred interfaces and error and warning messages.

       -strict-sequence
              The left-hand part of a sequence must have type unit.

       -unboxed-types
              When a type is unboxable (i.e. a record  with  a  single  argument  or  a  concrete
              datatype  with  a  single  constructor  of  one argument) it will be unboxed unless
              annotated with [@@ocaml.boxed].

       -no-unboxed-types
              When a type is unboxable  it will be boxed unless annotated with [@@ocaml.unboxed].
              This is the default.

       -unsafe
              Turn   bound  checking  off  for  array  and  string  accesses  (the  v.(i)ands.[i]
              constructs). Programs compiled with  -unsafe  are  therefore  faster,  but  unsafe:
              anything  can  happen  if  the  program  accesses an array or string outside of its
              bounds. Additionally, turn off the check for zero divisor in integer  division  and
              modulus  operations.   With  -unsafe,  an integer division (or modulus) by zero can
              halt the program or continue with  an  unspecified  result  instead  of  raising  a
              Division_by_zero exception.

       -unsafe-string
              Identify  the  types  string and bytes,  thereby  making strings writable.  This is
              intended for compatibility with old source code and should not  be  used  with  new
              software.

       -v     Print  the  version number of the compiler and the location of the standard library
              directory, then exit.

       -verbose
              Print all external commands before they are executed, in particular invocations  of
              the assembler, C compiler, and linker.

       -version or -vnum
              Print the version number of the compiler in short form (e.g. "3.11.0"), then exit.

       -w warning-list
              Enable,  disable,  or  mark  as  fatal  the  warnings  specified  by  the  argument
              warning-list.  See ocamlc(1) for the syntax of warning-list.

       -warn-error warning-list
              Mark as fatal the warnings specified in the argument  warning-list.   The  compiler
              will  stop  with  an error when one of these warnings is emitted.  The warning-list
              has the same meaning as for the -w option: a + sign (or an uppercase letter)  marks
              the  corresponding  warnings  as fatal, a - sign (or a lowercase letter) turns them
              back into non-fatal warnings, and a @ sign both enables  and  marks  as  fatal  the
              corresponding warnings.

              Note:  it  is  not  recommended  to  use the -warn-error option in production code,
              because it will almost certainly prevent compiling your program with later versions
              of OCaml when they add new warnings or modify existing warnings.

              The default setting is -warn-error -a+31 (only warning 31 is fatal).

       -warn-help
              Show the description of all available warning numbers.

       -where Print the location of the standard library, then exit.

       -with-runtime
              Include the runtime system in the generated program. This is the default.

       -without-runtime
              The  compiler  does  not  include the runtime system (nor a reference to it) in the
              generated program; it must be supplied separately.

       - file Process file as a file name, even if it starts with a dash (-) character.

       -help or --help
              Display a short usage summary and exit.

OPTIONS FOR THE IA32 ARCHITECTURE

       The IA32 code generator (Intel Pentium, AMD  Athlon)  supports  the  following  additional
       option:

       -ffast-math
              Use  the  IA32  instructions  to  compute  trigonometric and exponential functions,
              instead of calling the corresponding library routines.  The functions affected are:
              atan,  atan2,  cos, log, log10, sin, sqrt and tan.  The resulting code runs faster,
              but the range of supported arguments  and  the  precision  of  the  result  can  be
              reduced.   In  particular,  trigonometric operations cos, sin, tan have their range
              reduced to [-2^64, 2^64].

OPTIONS FOR THE AMD64 ARCHITECTURE

       The AMD64 code generator (64-bit versions of Intel Pentium and AMD  Athlon)  supports  the
       following additional options:

       -fPIC  Generate position-independent machine code.  This is the default.

       -fno-PIC
              Generate position-dependent machine code.

OPTIONS FOR THE POWER ARCHITECTURE

       The PowerPC code generator supports the following additional options:

       -flarge-toc
              Enables  the  PowerPC  large  model  allowing  the  TOC  (table  of contents) to be
              arbitrarily large.  This is the default since 4.11.

       -fsmall-toc
              Enables the PowerPC small model allowing  the  TOC  to  be  up  to  64  kbytes  per
              compilation unit.  Prior to 4.11 this was the default behaviour.  \nd{options}

OPTIONS FOR THE ARM ARCHITECTURE

       The ARM code generator supports the following additional options:

       -farch=armv4|armv5|armv5te|armv6|armv6t2|armv7
              Select the ARM target architecture

       -ffpu=soft|vfpv2|vfpv3-d16|vfpv3
              Select the floating-point hardware

       -fPIC  Generate position-independent machine code.

       -fno-PIC
              Generate position-dependent machine code.  This is the default.

       -fthumb
              Enable Thumb/Thumb-2 code generation

       -fno-thumb
              Disable Thumb/Thumb-2 code generation

       The  default  values for target architecture, floating-point hardware and thumb usage were
       selected at configure-time when  building  ocamlopt  itself.  This  configuration  can  be
       inspected  using  ocamlopt -config.   Target  architecture depends on the "model" setting,
       while floating-point hardware and thumb support are determined from  the  ABI  setting  in
       "system" ( linux_eabiorlinux_eabihf).

SEE ALSO

       ocamlc(1).
       The OCaml user's manual, chapter "Native-code compilation".

                                                                                      OCAMLOPT(1)