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8 @settitle GNAT Reference Manual
13 @dircategory GNU Ada Tools
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24 GNAT Reference Manual , Jun 06, 2018
28 Copyright @copyright{} 2008-2018, Free Software Foundation
34 @title GNAT Reference Manual
39 @c %** start of user preamble
41 @c %** end of user preamble
45 @top GNAT Reference Manual
50 @anchor{gnat_rm doc}@anchor{0}
51 @emph{GNAT, The GNU Ada Development Environment}
54 @include gcc-common.texi
55 GCC version @value{version-GCC}@*
58 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
59 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or
60 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
61 Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts being "GNAT Reference
62 Manual", and with no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is
63 included in the section entitled @ref{1,,GNU Free Documentation License}.
67 * Implementation Defined Pragmas::
68 * Implementation Defined Aspects::
69 * Implementation Defined Attributes::
70 * Standard and Implementation Defined Restrictions::
71 * Implementation Advice::
72 * Implementation Defined Characteristics::
73 * Intrinsic Subprograms::
74 * Representation Clauses and Pragmas::
75 * Standard Library Routines::
76 * The Implementation of Standard I/O::
78 * Interfacing to Other Languages::
79 * Specialized Needs Annexes::
80 * Implementation of Specific Ada Features::
81 * Implementation of Ada 2012 Features::
82 * Obsolescent Features::
83 * Compatibility and Porting Guide::
84 * GNU Free Documentation License::
88 --- The Detailed Node Listing ---
92 * What This Reference Manual Contains::
94 * Related Information::
96 Implementation Defined Pragmas
98 * Pragma Abort_Defer::
99 * Pragma Abstract_State::
106 * Pragma Allow_Integer_Address::
109 * Pragma Assert_And_Cut::
110 * Pragma Assertion_Policy::
112 * Pragma Assume_No_Invalid_Values::
113 * Pragma Async_Readers::
114 * Pragma Async_Writers::
115 * Pragma Attribute_Definition::
116 * Pragma C_Pass_By_Copy::
118 * Pragma Check_Float_Overflow::
119 * Pragma Check_Name::
120 * Pragma Check_Policy::
122 * Pragma Common_Object::
123 * Pragma Compile_Time_Error::
124 * Pragma Compile_Time_Warning::
125 * Pragma Compiler_Unit::
126 * Pragma Compiler_Unit_Warning::
127 * Pragma Complete_Representation::
128 * Pragma Complex_Representation::
129 * Pragma Component_Alignment::
130 * Pragma Constant_After_Elaboration::
131 * Pragma Contract_Cases::
132 * Pragma Convention_Identifier::
134 * Pragma CPP_Constructor::
135 * Pragma CPP_Virtual::
136 * Pragma CPP_Vtable::
138 * Pragma Deadline_Floor::
139 * Pragma Default_Initial_Condition::
141 * Pragma Debug_Policy::
142 * Pragma Default_Scalar_Storage_Order::
143 * Pragma Default_Storage_Pool::
145 * Pragma Detect_Blocking::
146 * Pragma Disable_Atomic_Synchronization::
147 * Pragma Dispatching_Domain::
148 * Pragma Effective_Reads::
149 * Pragma Effective_Writes::
150 * Pragma Elaboration_Checks::
152 * Pragma Enable_Atomic_Synchronization::
153 * Pragma Export_Function::
154 * Pragma Export_Object::
155 * Pragma Export_Procedure::
156 * Pragma Export_Value::
157 * Pragma Export_Valued_Procedure::
158 * Pragma Extend_System::
159 * Pragma Extensions_Allowed::
160 * Pragma Extensions_Visible::
162 * Pragma External_Name_Casing::
164 * Pragma Favor_Top_Level::
165 * Pragma Finalize_Storage_Only::
166 * Pragma Float_Representation::
170 * Pragma Ignore_Pragma::
171 * Pragma Implementation_Defined::
172 * Pragma Implemented::
173 * Pragma Implicit_Packing::
174 * Pragma Import_Function::
175 * Pragma Import_Object::
176 * Pragma Import_Procedure::
177 * Pragma Import_Valued_Procedure::
178 * Pragma Independent::
179 * Pragma Independent_Components::
180 * Pragma Initial_Condition::
181 * Pragma Initialize_Scalars::
182 * Pragma Initializes::
183 * Pragma Inline_Always::
184 * Pragma Inline_Generic::
186 * Pragma Interface_Name::
187 * Pragma Interrupt_Handler::
188 * Pragma Interrupt_State::
190 * Pragma Keep_Names::
193 * Pragma Linker_Alias::
194 * Pragma Linker_Constructor::
195 * Pragma Linker_Destructor::
196 * Pragma Linker_Section::
198 * Pragma Loop_Invariant::
199 * Pragma Loop_Optimize::
200 * Pragma Loop_Variant::
201 * Pragma Machine_Attribute::
203 * Pragma Main_Storage::
204 * Pragma Max_Queue_Length::
206 * Pragma No_Component_Reordering::
207 * Pragma No_Elaboration_Code_All::
208 * Pragma No_Heap_Finalization::
211 * Pragma No_Run_Time::
212 * Pragma No_Strict_Aliasing::
213 * Pragma No_Tagged_Streams::
214 * Pragma Normalize_Scalars::
215 * Pragma Obsolescent::
216 * Pragma Optimize_Alignment::
218 * Pragma Overflow_Mode::
219 * Pragma Overriding_Renamings::
220 * Pragma Partition_Elaboration_Policy::
223 * Pragma Persistent_BSS::
226 * Pragma Postcondition::
227 * Pragma Post_Class::
228 * Pragma Rename_Pragma::
230 * Pragma Precondition::
232 * Pragma Predicate_Failure::
233 * Pragma Preelaborable_Initialization::
234 * Pragma Prefix_Exception_Messages::
236 * Pragma Priority_Specific_Dispatching::
238 * Pragma Profile_Warnings::
239 * Pragma Propagate_Exceptions::
240 * Pragma Provide_Shift_Operators::
241 * Pragma Psect_Object::
242 * Pragma Pure_Function::
245 * Pragma Refined_Depends::
246 * Pragma Refined_Global::
247 * Pragma Refined_Post::
248 * Pragma Refined_State::
249 * Pragma Relative_Deadline::
250 * Pragma Remote_Access_Type::
251 * Pragma Restricted_Run_Time::
252 * Pragma Restriction_Warnings::
253 * Pragma Reviewable::
254 * Pragma Secondary_Stack_Size::
255 * Pragma Share_Generic::
257 * Pragma Short_Circuit_And_Or::
258 * Pragma Short_Descriptors::
259 * Pragma Simple_Storage_Pool_Type::
260 * Pragma Source_File_Name::
261 * Pragma Source_File_Name_Project::
262 * Pragma Source_Reference::
263 * Pragma SPARK_Mode::
264 * Pragma Static_Elaboration_Desired::
265 * Pragma Stream_Convert::
266 * Pragma Style_Checks::
269 * Pragma Suppress_All::
270 * Pragma Suppress_Debug_Info::
271 * Pragma Suppress_Exception_Locations::
272 * Pragma Suppress_Initialization::
274 * Pragma Task_Storage::
276 * Pragma Thread_Local_Storage::
277 * Pragma Time_Slice::
279 * Pragma Type_Invariant::
280 * Pragma Type_Invariant_Class::
281 * Pragma Unchecked_Union::
282 * Pragma Unevaluated_Use_Of_Old::
283 * Pragma Unimplemented_Unit::
284 * Pragma Universal_Aliasing::
285 * Pragma Universal_Data::
286 * Pragma Unmodified::
287 * Pragma Unreferenced::
288 * Pragma Unreferenced_Objects::
289 * Pragma Unreserve_All_Interrupts::
290 * Pragma Unsuppress::
291 * Pragma Use_VADS_Size::
293 * Pragma Validity_Checks::
295 * Pragma Volatile_Full_Access::
296 * Pragma Volatile_Function::
297 * Pragma Warning_As_Error::
299 * Pragma Weak_External::
300 * Pragma Wide_Character_Encoding::
302 Implementation Defined Aspects
304 * Aspect Abstract_State::
306 * Aspect Async_Readers::
307 * Aspect Async_Writers::
308 * Aspect Constant_After_Elaboration::
309 * Aspect Contract_Cases::
311 * Aspect Default_Initial_Condition::
313 * Aspect Dimension_System::
314 * Aspect Disable_Controlled::
315 * Aspect Effective_Reads::
316 * Aspect Effective_Writes::
317 * Aspect Extensions_Visible::
318 * Aspect Favor_Top_Level::
321 * Aspect Initial_Condition::
322 * Aspect Initializes::
323 * Aspect Inline_Always::
325 * Aspect Invariant'Class::
327 * Aspect Linker_Section::
329 * Aspect Max_Queue_Length::
330 * Aspect No_Elaboration_Code_All::
332 * Aspect No_Tagged_Streams::
333 * Aspect Object_Size::
334 * Aspect Obsolescent::
336 * Aspect Persistent_BSS::
338 * Aspect Pure_Function::
339 * Aspect Refined_Depends::
340 * Aspect Refined_Global::
341 * Aspect Refined_Post::
342 * Aspect Refined_State::
343 * Aspect Remote_Access_Type::
344 * Aspect Secondary_Stack_Size::
345 * Aspect Scalar_Storage_Order::
347 * Aspect Simple_Storage_Pool::
348 * Aspect Simple_Storage_Pool_Type::
349 * Aspect SPARK_Mode::
350 * Aspect Suppress_Debug_Info::
351 * Aspect Suppress_Initialization::
353 * Aspect Thread_Local_Storage::
354 * Aspect Universal_Aliasing::
355 * Aspect Universal_Data::
356 * Aspect Unmodified::
357 * Aspect Unreferenced::
358 * Aspect Unreferenced_Objects::
359 * Aspect Value_Size::
360 * Aspect Volatile_Full_Access::
361 * Aspect Volatile_Function::
364 Implementation Defined Attributes
366 * Attribute Abort_Signal::
367 * Attribute Address_Size::
368 * Attribute Asm_Input::
369 * Attribute Asm_Output::
370 * Attribute Atomic_Always_Lock_Free::
372 * Attribute Bit_Position::
373 * Attribute Code_Address::
374 * Attribute Compiler_Version::
375 * Attribute Constrained::
376 * Attribute Default_Bit_Order::
377 * Attribute Default_Scalar_Storage_Order::
379 * Attribute Descriptor_Size::
380 * Attribute Elaborated::
381 * Attribute Elab_Body::
382 * Attribute Elab_Spec::
383 * Attribute Elab_Subp_Body::
385 * Attribute Enabled::
386 * Attribute Enum_Rep::
387 * Attribute Enum_Val::
388 * Attribute Epsilon::
389 * Attribute Fast_Math::
390 * Attribute Finalization_Size::
391 * Attribute Fixed_Value::
392 * Attribute From_Any::
393 * Attribute Has_Access_Values::
394 * Attribute Has_Discriminants::
396 * Attribute Integer_Value::
397 * Attribute Invalid_Value::
398 * Attribute Iterable::
400 * Attribute Library_Level::
401 * Attribute Lock_Free::
402 * Attribute Loop_Entry::
403 * Attribute Machine_Size::
404 * Attribute Mantissa::
405 * Attribute Maximum_Alignment::
406 * Attribute Mechanism_Code::
407 * Attribute Null_Parameter::
408 * Attribute Object_Size::
410 * Attribute Passed_By_Reference::
411 * Attribute Pool_Address::
412 * Attribute Range_Length::
413 * Attribute Restriction_Set::
415 * Attribute Safe_Emax::
416 * Attribute Safe_Large::
417 * Attribute Safe_Small::
418 * Attribute Scalar_Storage_Order::
419 * Attribute Simple_Storage_Pool::
421 * Attribute Storage_Unit::
422 * Attribute Stub_Type::
423 * Attribute System_Allocator_Alignment::
424 * Attribute Target_Name::
425 * Attribute To_Address::
427 * Attribute Type_Class::
428 * Attribute Type_Key::
429 * Attribute TypeCode::
430 * Attribute Unconstrained_Array::
431 * Attribute Universal_Literal_String::
432 * Attribute Unrestricted_Access::
434 * Attribute Valid_Scalars::
435 * Attribute VADS_Size::
436 * Attribute Value_Size::
437 * Attribute Wchar_T_Size::
438 * Attribute Word_Size::
440 Standard and Implementation Defined Restrictions
442 * Partition-Wide Restrictions::
443 * Program Unit Level Restrictions::
445 Partition-Wide Restrictions
447 * Immediate_Reclamation::
448 * Max_Asynchronous_Select_Nesting::
449 * Max_Entry_Queue_Length::
450 * Max_Protected_Entries::
451 * Max_Select_Alternatives::
452 * Max_Storage_At_Blocking::
455 * No_Abort_Statements::
456 * No_Access_Parameter_Allocators::
457 * No_Access_Subprograms::
459 * No_Anonymous_Allocators::
460 * No_Asynchronous_Control::
463 * No_Default_Initialization::
466 * No_Direct_Boolean_Operators::
468 * No_Dispatching_Calls::
469 * No_Dynamic_Attachment::
470 * No_Dynamic_Priorities::
471 * No_Entry_Calls_In_Elaboration_Code::
472 * No_Enumeration_Maps::
473 * No_Exception_Handlers::
474 * No_Exception_Propagation::
475 * No_Exception_Registration::
479 * No_Floating_Point::
480 * No_Implicit_Conditionals::
481 * No_Implicit_Dynamic_Code::
482 * No_Implicit_Heap_Allocations::
483 * No_Implicit_Protected_Object_Allocations::
484 * No_Implicit_Task_Allocations::
485 * No_Initialize_Scalars::
487 * No_Local_Allocators::
488 * No_Local_Protected_Objects::
489 * No_Local_Timing_Events::
490 * No_Long_Long_Integers::
491 * No_Multiple_Elaboration::
492 * No_Nested_Finalization::
493 * No_Protected_Type_Allocators::
494 * No_Protected_Types::
497 * No_Relative_Delay::
498 * No_Requeue_Statements::
499 * No_Secondary_Stack::
500 * No_Select_Statements::
501 * No_Specific_Termination_Handlers::
502 * No_Specification_of_Aspect::
503 * No_Standard_Allocators_After_Elaboration::
504 * No_Standard_Storage_Pools::
505 * No_Stream_Optimizations::
507 * No_Task_Allocators::
508 * No_Task_At_Interrupt_Priority::
509 * No_Task_Attributes_Package::
510 * No_Task_Hierarchy::
511 * No_Task_Termination::
513 * No_Terminate_Alternatives::
514 * No_Unchecked_Access::
515 * No_Unchecked_Conversion::
516 * No_Unchecked_Deallocation::
520 * Static_Priorities::
521 * Static_Storage_Size::
523 Program Unit Level Restrictions
525 * No_Elaboration_Code::
526 * No_Dynamic_Sized_Objects::
528 * No_Implementation_Aspect_Specifications::
529 * No_Implementation_Attributes::
530 * No_Implementation_Identifiers::
531 * No_Implementation_Pragmas::
532 * No_Implementation_Restrictions::
533 * No_Implementation_Units::
534 * No_Implicit_Aliasing::
535 * No_Implicit_Loops::
536 * No_Obsolescent_Features::
537 * No_Wide_Characters::
538 * Static_Dispatch_Tables::
541 Implementation Advice
543 * RM 1.1.3(20); Error Detection: RM 1 1 3 20 Error Detection.
544 * RM 1.1.3(31); Child Units: RM 1 1 3 31 Child Units.
545 * RM 1.1.5(12); Bounded Errors: RM 1 1 5 12 Bounded Errors.
546 * RM 2.8(16); Pragmas: RM 2 8 16 Pragmas.
547 * RM 2.8(17-19); Pragmas: RM 2 8 17-19 Pragmas.
548 * RM 3.5.2(5); Alternative Character Sets: RM 3 5 2 5 Alternative Character Sets.
549 * RM 3.5.4(28); Integer Types: RM 3 5 4 28 Integer Types.
550 * RM 3.5.4(29); Integer Types: RM 3 5 4 29 Integer Types.
551 * RM 3.5.5(8); Enumeration Values: RM 3 5 5 8 Enumeration Values.
552 * RM 3.5.7(17); Float Types: RM 3 5 7 17 Float Types.
553 * RM 3.6.2(11); Multidimensional Arrays: RM 3 6 2 11 Multidimensional Arrays.
554 * RM 9.6(30-31); Duration'Small: RM 9 6 30-31 Duration'Small.
555 * RM 10.2.1(12); Consistent Representation: RM 10 2 1 12 Consistent Representation.
556 * RM 11.4.1(19); Exception Information: RM 11 4 1 19 Exception Information.
557 * RM 11.5(28); Suppression of Checks: RM 11 5 28 Suppression of Checks.
558 * RM 13.1 (21-24); Representation Clauses: RM 13 1 21-24 Representation Clauses.
559 * RM 13.2(6-8); Packed Types: RM 13 2 6-8 Packed Types.
560 * RM 13.3(14-19); Address Clauses: RM 13 3 14-19 Address Clauses.
561 * RM 13.3(29-35); Alignment Clauses: RM 13 3 29-35 Alignment Clauses.
562 * RM 13.3(42-43); Size Clauses: RM 13 3 42-43 Size Clauses.
563 * RM 13.3(50-56); Size Clauses: RM 13 3 50-56 Size Clauses.
564 * RM 13.3(71-73); Component Size Clauses: RM 13 3 71-73 Component Size Clauses.
565 * RM 13.4(9-10); Enumeration Representation Clauses: RM 13 4 9-10 Enumeration Representation Clauses.
566 * RM 13.5.1(17-22); Record Representation Clauses: RM 13 5 1 17-22 Record Representation Clauses.
567 * RM 13.5.2(5); Storage Place Attributes: RM 13 5 2 5 Storage Place Attributes.
568 * RM 13.5.3(7-8); Bit Ordering: RM 13 5 3 7-8 Bit Ordering.
569 * RM 13.7(37); Address as Private: RM 13 7 37 Address as Private.
570 * RM 13.7.1(16); Address Operations: RM 13 7 1 16 Address Operations.
571 * RM 13.9(14-17); Unchecked Conversion: RM 13 9 14-17 Unchecked Conversion.
572 * RM 13.11(23-25); Implicit Heap Usage: RM 13 11 23-25 Implicit Heap Usage.
573 * RM 13.11.2(17); Unchecked Deallocation: RM 13 11 2 17 Unchecked Deallocation.
574 * RM 13.13.2(17); Stream Oriented Attributes: RM 13 13 2 17 Stream Oriented Attributes.
575 * RM A.1(52); Names of Predefined Numeric Types: RM A 1 52 Names of Predefined Numeric Types.
576 * RM A.3.2(49); Ada.Characters.Handling: RM A 3 2 49 Ada Characters Handling.
577 * RM A.4.4(106); Bounded-Length String Handling: RM A 4 4 106 Bounded-Length String Handling.
578 * RM A.5.2(46-47); Random Number Generation: RM A 5 2 46-47 Random Number Generation.
579 * RM A.10.7(23); Get_Immediate: RM A 10 7 23 Get_Immediate.
580 * RM B.1(39-41); Pragma Export: RM B 1 39-41 Pragma Export.
581 * RM B.2(12-13); Package Interfaces: RM B 2 12-13 Package Interfaces.
582 * RM B.3(63-71); Interfacing with C: RM B 3 63-71 Interfacing with C.
583 * RM B.4(95-98); Interfacing with COBOL: RM B 4 95-98 Interfacing with COBOL.
584 * RM B.5(22-26); Interfacing with Fortran: RM B 5 22-26 Interfacing with Fortran.
585 * RM C.1(3-5); Access to Machine Operations: RM C 1 3-5 Access to Machine Operations.
586 * RM C.1(10-16); Access to Machine Operations: RM C 1 10-16 Access to Machine Operations.
587 * RM C.3(28); Interrupt Support: RM C 3 28 Interrupt Support.
588 * RM C.3.1(20-21); Protected Procedure Handlers: RM C 3 1 20-21 Protected Procedure Handlers.
589 * RM C.3.2(25); Package Interrupts: RM C 3 2 25 Package Interrupts.
590 * RM C.4(14); Pre-elaboration Requirements: RM C 4 14 Pre-elaboration Requirements.
591 * RM C.5(8); Pragma Discard_Names: RM C 5 8 Pragma Discard_Names.
592 * RM C.7.2(30); The Package Task_Attributes: RM C 7 2 30 The Package Task_Attributes.
593 * RM D.3(17); Locking Policies: RM D 3 17 Locking Policies.
594 * RM D.4(16); Entry Queuing Policies: RM D 4 16 Entry Queuing Policies.
595 * RM D.6(9-10); Preemptive Abort: RM D 6 9-10 Preemptive Abort.
596 * RM D.7(21); Tasking Restrictions: RM D 7 21 Tasking Restrictions.
597 * RM D.8(47-49); Monotonic Time: RM D 8 47-49 Monotonic Time.
598 * RM E.5(28-29); Partition Communication Subsystem: RM E 5 28-29 Partition Communication Subsystem.
599 * RM F(7); COBOL Support: RM F 7 COBOL Support.
600 * RM F.1(2); Decimal Radix Support: RM F 1 2 Decimal Radix Support.
601 * RM G; Numerics: RM G Numerics.
602 * RM G.1.1(56-58); Complex Types: RM G 1 1 56-58 Complex Types.
603 * RM G.1.2(49); Complex Elementary Functions: RM G 1 2 49 Complex Elementary Functions.
604 * RM G.2.4(19); Accuracy Requirements: RM G 2 4 19 Accuracy Requirements.
605 * RM G.2.6(15); Complex Arithmetic Accuracy: RM G 2 6 15 Complex Arithmetic Accuracy.
606 * RM H.6(15/2); Pragma Partition_Elaboration_Policy: RM H 6 15/2 Pragma Partition_Elaboration_Policy.
608 Intrinsic Subprograms
610 * Intrinsic Operators::
611 * Compilation_ISO_Date::
615 * Exception_Information::
616 * Exception_Message::
620 * Shifts and Rotates::
623 Representation Clauses and Pragmas
625 * Alignment Clauses::
627 * Storage_Size Clauses::
628 * Size of Variant Record Objects::
629 * Biased Representation::
630 * Value_Size and Object_Size Clauses::
631 * Component_Size Clauses::
632 * Bit_Order Clauses::
633 * Effect of Bit_Order on Byte Ordering::
634 * Pragma Pack for Arrays::
635 * Pragma Pack for Records::
636 * Record Representation Clauses::
637 * Handling of Records with Holes::
638 * Enumeration Clauses::
640 * Use of Address Clauses for Memory-Mapped I/O::
641 * Effect of Convention on Representation::
642 * Conventions and Anonymous Access Types::
643 * Determining the Representations chosen by GNAT::
645 The Implementation of Standard I/O
647 * Standard I/O Packages::
653 * Wide_Wide_Text_IO::
657 * Filenames encoding::
658 * File content encoding::
660 * Operations on C Streams::
661 * Interfacing to C Streams::
665 * Stream Pointer Positioning::
666 * Reading and Writing Non-Regular Files::
668 * Treating Text_IO Files as Streams::
669 * Text_IO Extensions::
670 * Text_IO Facilities for Unbounded Strings::
674 * Stream Pointer Positioning: Stream Pointer Positioning<2>.
675 * Reading and Writing Non-Regular Files: Reading and Writing Non-Regular Files<2>.
679 * Stream Pointer Positioning: Stream Pointer Positioning<3>.
680 * Reading and Writing Non-Regular Files: Reading and Writing Non-Regular Files<3>.
684 * Ada.Characters.Latin_9 (a-chlat9.ads): Ada Characters Latin_9 a-chlat9 ads.
685 * Ada.Characters.Wide_Latin_1 (a-cwila1.ads): Ada Characters Wide_Latin_1 a-cwila1 ads.
686 * Ada.Characters.Wide_Latin_9 (a-cwila1.ads): Ada Characters Wide_Latin_9 a-cwila1 ads.
687 * Ada.Characters.Wide_Wide_Latin_1 (a-chzla1.ads): Ada Characters Wide_Wide_Latin_1 a-chzla1 ads.
688 * Ada.Characters.Wide_Wide_Latin_9 (a-chzla9.ads): Ada Characters Wide_Wide_Latin_9 a-chzla9 ads.
689 * Ada.Containers.Formal_Doubly_Linked_Lists (a-cfdlli.ads): Ada Containers Formal_Doubly_Linked_Lists a-cfdlli ads.
690 * Ada.Containers.Formal_Hashed_Maps (a-cfhama.ads): Ada Containers Formal_Hashed_Maps a-cfhama ads.
691 * Ada.Containers.Formal_Hashed_Sets (a-cfhase.ads): Ada Containers Formal_Hashed_Sets a-cfhase ads.
692 * Ada.Containers.Formal_Ordered_Maps (a-cforma.ads): Ada Containers Formal_Ordered_Maps a-cforma ads.
693 * Ada.Containers.Formal_Ordered_Sets (a-cforse.ads): Ada Containers Formal_Ordered_Sets a-cforse ads.
694 * Ada.Containers.Formal_Vectors (a-cofove.ads): Ada Containers Formal_Vectors a-cofove ads.
695 * Ada.Containers.Formal_Indefinite_Vectors (a-cfinve.ads): Ada Containers Formal_Indefinite_Vectors a-cfinve ads.
696 * Ada.Containers.Functional_Vectors (a-cofuve.ads): Ada Containers Functional_Vectors a-cofuve ads.
697 * Ada.Containers.Functional_Sets (a-cofuse.ads): Ada Containers Functional_Sets a-cofuse ads.
698 * Ada.Containers.Functional_Maps (a-cofuma.ads): Ada Containers Functional_Maps a-cofuma ads.
699 * Ada.Containers.Bounded_Holders (a-coboho.ads): Ada Containers Bounded_Holders a-coboho ads.
700 * Ada.Command_Line.Environment (a-colien.ads): Ada Command_Line Environment a-colien ads.
701 * Ada.Command_Line.Remove (a-colire.ads): Ada Command_Line Remove a-colire ads.
702 * Ada.Command_Line.Response_File (a-clrefi.ads): Ada Command_Line Response_File a-clrefi ads.
703 * Ada.Direct_IO.C_Streams (a-diocst.ads): Ada Direct_IO C_Streams a-diocst ads.
704 * Ada.Exceptions.Is_Null_Occurrence (a-einuoc.ads): Ada Exceptions Is_Null_Occurrence a-einuoc ads.
705 * Ada.Exceptions.Last_Chance_Handler (a-elchha.ads): Ada Exceptions Last_Chance_Handler a-elchha ads.
706 * Ada.Exceptions.Traceback (a-exctra.ads): Ada Exceptions Traceback a-exctra ads.
707 * Ada.Sequential_IO.C_Streams (a-siocst.ads): Ada Sequential_IO C_Streams a-siocst ads.
708 * Ada.Streams.Stream_IO.C_Streams (a-ssicst.ads): Ada Streams Stream_IO C_Streams a-ssicst ads.
709 * Ada.Strings.Unbounded.Text_IO (a-suteio.ads): Ada Strings Unbounded Text_IO a-suteio ads.
710 * Ada.Strings.Wide_Unbounded.Wide_Text_IO (a-swuwti.ads): Ada Strings Wide_Unbounded Wide_Text_IO a-swuwti ads.
711 * Ada.Strings.Wide_Wide_Unbounded.Wide_Wide_Text_IO (a-szuzti.ads): Ada Strings Wide_Wide_Unbounded Wide_Wide_Text_IO a-szuzti ads.
712 * Ada.Text_IO.C_Streams (a-tiocst.ads): Ada Text_IO C_Streams a-tiocst ads.
713 * Ada.Text_IO.Reset_Standard_Files (a-tirsfi.ads): Ada Text_IO Reset_Standard_Files a-tirsfi ads.
714 * Ada.Wide_Characters.Unicode (a-wichun.ads): Ada Wide_Characters Unicode a-wichun ads.
715 * Ada.Wide_Text_IO.C_Streams (a-wtcstr.ads): Ada Wide_Text_IO C_Streams a-wtcstr ads.
716 * Ada.Wide_Text_IO.Reset_Standard_Files (a-wrstfi.ads): Ada Wide_Text_IO Reset_Standard_Files a-wrstfi ads.
717 * Ada.Wide_Wide_Characters.Unicode (a-zchuni.ads): Ada Wide_Wide_Characters Unicode a-zchuni ads.
718 * Ada.Wide_Wide_Text_IO.C_Streams (a-ztcstr.ads): Ada Wide_Wide_Text_IO C_Streams a-ztcstr ads.
719 * Ada.Wide_Wide_Text_IO.Reset_Standard_Files (a-zrstfi.ads): Ada Wide_Wide_Text_IO Reset_Standard_Files a-zrstfi ads.
720 * GNAT.Altivec (g-altive.ads): GNAT Altivec g-altive ads.
721 * GNAT.Altivec.Conversions (g-altcon.ads): GNAT Altivec Conversions g-altcon ads.
722 * GNAT.Altivec.Vector_Operations (g-alveop.ads): GNAT Altivec Vector_Operations g-alveop ads.
723 * GNAT.Altivec.Vector_Types (g-alvety.ads): GNAT Altivec Vector_Types g-alvety ads.
724 * GNAT.Altivec.Vector_Views (g-alvevi.ads): GNAT Altivec Vector_Views g-alvevi ads.
725 * GNAT.Array_Split (g-arrspl.ads): GNAT Array_Split g-arrspl ads.
726 * GNAT.AWK (g-awk.ads): GNAT AWK g-awk ads.
727 * GNAT.Bind_Environment (g-binenv.ads): GNAT Bind_Environment g-binenv ads.
728 * GNAT.Bounded_Buffers (g-boubuf.ads): GNAT Bounded_Buffers g-boubuf ads.
729 * GNAT.Bounded_Mailboxes (g-boumai.ads): GNAT Bounded_Mailboxes g-boumai ads.
730 * GNAT.Bubble_Sort (g-bubsor.ads): GNAT Bubble_Sort g-bubsor ads.
731 * GNAT.Bubble_Sort_A (g-busora.ads): GNAT Bubble_Sort_A g-busora ads.
732 * GNAT.Bubble_Sort_G (g-busorg.ads): GNAT Bubble_Sort_G g-busorg ads.
733 * GNAT.Byte_Order_Mark (g-byorma.ads): GNAT Byte_Order_Mark g-byorma ads.
734 * GNAT.Byte_Swapping (g-bytswa.ads): GNAT Byte_Swapping g-bytswa ads.
735 * GNAT.Calendar (g-calend.ads): GNAT Calendar g-calend ads.
736 * GNAT.Calendar.Time_IO (g-catiio.ads): GNAT Calendar Time_IO g-catiio ads.
737 * GNAT.CRC32 (g-crc32.ads): GNAT CRC32 g-crc32 ads.
738 * GNAT.Case_Util (g-casuti.ads): GNAT Case_Util g-casuti ads.
739 * GNAT.CGI (g-cgi.ads): GNAT CGI g-cgi ads.
740 * GNAT.CGI.Cookie (g-cgicoo.ads): GNAT CGI Cookie g-cgicoo ads.
741 * GNAT.CGI.Debug (g-cgideb.ads): GNAT CGI Debug g-cgideb ads.
742 * GNAT.Command_Line (g-comlin.ads): GNAT Command_Line g-comlin ads.
743 * GNAT.Compiler_Version (g-comver.ads): GNAT Compiler_Version g-comver ads.
744 * GNAT.Ctrl_C (g-ctrl_c.ads): GNAT Ctrl_C g-ctrl_c ads.
745 * GNAT.Current_Exception (g-curexc.ads): GNAT Current_Exception g-curexc ads.
746 * GNAT.Debug_Pools (g-debpoo.ads): GNAT Debug_Pools g-debpoo ads.
747 * GNAT.Debug_Utilities (g-debuti.ads): GNAT Debug_Utilities g-debuti ads.
748 * GNAT.Decode_String (g-decstr.ads): GNAT Decode_String g-decstr ads.
749 * GNAT.Decode_UTF8_String (g-deutst.ads): GNAT Decode_UTF8_String g-deutst ads.
750 * GNAT.Directory_Operations (g-dirope.ads): GNAT Directory_Operations g-dirope ads.
751 * GNAT.Directory_Operations.Iteration (g-diopit.ads): GNAT Directory_Operations Iteration g-diopit ads.
752 * GNAT.Dynamic_HTables (g-dynhta.ads): GNAT Dynamic_HTables g-dynhta ads.
753 * GNAT.Dynamic_Tables (g-dyntab.ads): GNAT Dynamic_Tables g-dyntab ads.
754 * GNAT.Encode_String (g-encstr.ads): GNAT Encode_String g-encstr ads.
755 * GNAT.Encode_UTF8_String (g-enutst.ads): GNAT Encode_UTF8_String g-enutst ads.
756 * GNAT.Exception_Actions (g-excact.ads): GNAT Exception_Actions g-excact ads.
757 * GNAT.Exception_Traces (g-exctra.ads): GNAT Exception_Traces g-exctra ads.
758 * GNAT.Exceptions (g-except.ads): GNAT Exceptions g-except ads.
759 * GNAT.Expect (g-expect.ads): GNAT Expect g-expect ads.
760 * GNAT.Expect.TTY (g-exptty.ads): GNAT Expect TTY g-exptty ads.
761 * GNAT.Float_Control (g-flocon.ads): GNAT Float_Control g-flocon ads.
762 * GNAT.Formatted_String (g-forstr.ads): GNAT Formatted_String g-forstr ads.
763 * GNAT.Heap_Sort (g-heasor.ads): GNAT Heap_Sort g-heasor ads.
764 * GNAT.Heap_Sort_A (g-hesora.ads): GNAT Heap_Sort_A g-hesora ads.
765 * GNAT.Heap_Sort_G (g-hesorg.ads): GNAT Heap_Sort_G g-hesorg ads.
766 * GNAT.HTable (g-htable.ads): GNAT HTable g-htable ads.
767 * GNAT.IO (g-io.ads): GNAT IO g-io ads.
768 * GNAT.IO_Aux (g-io_aux.ads): GNAT IO_Aux g-io_aux ads.
769 * GNAT.Lock_Files (g-locfil.ads): GNAT Lock_Files g-locfil ads.
770 * GNAT.MBBS_Discrete_Random (g-mbdira.ads): GNAT MBBS_Discrete_Random g-mbdira ads.
771 * GNAT.MBBS_Float_Random (g-mbflra.ads): GNAT MBBS_Float_Random g-mbflra ads.
772 * GNAT.MD5 (g-md5.ads): GNAT MD5 g-md5 ads.
773 * GNAT.Memory_Dump (g-memdum.ads): GNAT Memory_Dump g-memdum ads.
774 * GNAT.Most_Recent_Exception (g-moreex.ads): GNAT Most_Recent_Exception g-moreex ads.
775 * GNAT.OS_Lib (g-os_lib.ads): GNAT OS_Lib g-os_lib ads.
776 * GNAT.Perfect_Hash_Generators (g-pehage.ads): GNAT Perfect_Hash_Generators g-pehage ads.
777 * GNAT.Random_Numbers (g-rannum.ads): GNAT Random_Numbers g-rannum ads.
778 * GNAT.Regexp (g-regexp.ads): GNAT Regexp g-regexp ads.
779 * GNAT.Registry (g-regist.ads): GNAT Registry g-regist ads.
780 * GNAT.Regpat (g-regpat.ads): GNAT Regpat g-regpat ads.
781 * GNAT.Rewrite_Data (g-rewdat.ads): GNAT Rewrite_Data g-rewdat ads.
782 * GNAT.Secondary_Stack_Info (g-sestin.ads): GNAT Secondary_Stack_Info g-sestin ads.
783 * GNAT.Semaphores (g-semaph.ads): GNAT Semaphores g-semaph ads.
784 * GNAT.Serial_Communications (g-sercom.ads): GNAT Serial_Communications g-sercom ads.
785 * GNAT.SHA1 (g-sha1.ads): GNAT SHA1 g-sha1 ads.
786 * GNAT.SHA224 (g-sha224.ads): GNAT SHA224 g-sha224 ads.
787 * GNAT.SHA256 (g-sha256.ads): GNAT SHA256 g-sha256 ads.
788 * GNAT.SHA384 (g-sha384.ads): GNAT SHA384 g-sha384 ads.
789 * GNAT.SHA512 (g-sha512.ads): GNAT SHA512 g-sha512 ads.
790 * GNAT.Signals (g-signal.ads): GNAT Signals g-signal ads.
791 * GNAT.Sockets (g-socket.ads): GNAT Sockets g-socket ads.
792 * GNAT.Source_Info (g-souinf.ads): GNAT Source_Info g-souinf ads.
793 * GNAT.Spelling_Checker (g-speche.ads): GNAT Spelling_Checker g-speche ads.
794 * GNAT.Spelling_Checker_Generic (g-spchge.ads): GNAT Spelling_Checker_Generic g-spchge ads.
795 * GNAT.Spitbol.Patterns (g-spipat.ads): GNAT Spitbol Patterns g-spipat ads.
796 * GNAT.Spitbol (g-spitbo.ads): GNAT Spitbol g-spitbo ads.
797 * GNAT.Spitbol.Table_Boolean (g-sptabo.ads): GNAT Spitbol Table_Boolean g-sptabo ads.
798 * GNAT.Spitbol.Table_Integer (g-sptain.ads): GNAT Spitbol Table_Integer g-sptain ads.
799 * GNAT.Spitbol.Table_VString (g-sptavs.ads): GNAT Spitbol Table_VString g-sptavs ads.
800 * GNAT.SSE (g-sse.ads): GNAT SSE g-sse ads.
801 * GNAT.SSE.Vector_Types (g-ssvety.ads): GNAT SSE Vector_Types g-ssvety ads.
802 * GNAT.String_Hash (g-strhas.ads): GNAT String_Hash g-strhas ads.
803 * GNAT.Strings (g-string.ads): GNAT Strings g-string ads.
804 * GNAT.String_Split (g-strspl.ads): GNAT String_Split g-strspl ads.
805 * GNAT.Table (g-table.ads): GNAT Table g-table ads.
806 * GNAT.Task_Lock (g-tasloc.ads): GNAT Task_Lock g-tasloc ads.
807 * GNAT.Time_Stamp (g-timsta.ads): GNAT Time_Stamp g-timsta ads.
808 * GNAT.Threads (g-thread.ads): GNAT Threads g-thread ads.
809 * GNAT.Traceback (g-traceb.ads): GNAT Traceback g-traceb ads.
810 * GNAT.Traceback.Symbolic (g-trasym.ads): GNAT Traceback Symbolic g-trasym ads.
811 * GNAT.UTF_32 (g-table.ads): GNAT UTF_32 g-table ads.
812 * GNAT.Wide_Spelling_Checker (g-u3spch.ads): GNAT Wide_Spelling_Checker g-u3spch ads.
813 * GNAT.Wide_Spelling_Checker (g-wispch.ads): GNAT Wide_Spelling_Checker g-wispch ads.
814 * GNAT.Wide_String_Split (g-wistsp.ads): GNAT Wide_String_Split g-wistsp ads.
815 * GNAT.Wide_Wide_Spelling_Checker (g-zspche.ads): GNAT Wide_Wide_Spelling_Checker g-zspche ads.
816 * GNAT.Wide_Wide_String_Split (g-zistsp.ads): GNAT Wide_Wide_String_Split g-zistsp ads.
817 * Interfaces.C.Extensions (i-cexten.ads): Interfaces C Extensions i-cexten ads.
818 * Interfaces.C.Streams (i-cstrea.ads): Interfaces C Streams i-cstrea ads.
819 * Interfaces.Packed_Decimal (i-pacdec.ads): Interfaces Packed_Decimal i-pacdec ads.
820 * Interfaces.VxWorks (i-vxwork.ads): Interfaces VxWorks i-vxwork ads.
821 * Interfaces.VxWorks.Int_Connection (i-vxinco.ads): Interfaces VxWorks Int_Connection i-vxinco ads.
822 * Interfaces.VxWorks.IO (i-vxwoio.ads): Interfaces VxWorks IO i-vxwoio ads.
823 * System.Address_Image (s-addima.ads): System Address_Image s-addima ads.
824 * System.Assertions (s-assert.ads): System Assertions s-assert ads.
825 * System.Atomic_Counters (s-atocou.ads): System Atomic_Counters s-atocou ads.
826 * System.Memory (s-memory.ads): System Memory s-memory ads.
827 * System.Multiprocessors (s-multip.ads): System Multiprocessors s-multip ads.
828 * System.Multiprocessors.Dispatching_Domains (s-mudido.ads): System Multiprocessors Dispatching_Domains s-mudido ads.
829 * System.Partition_Interface (s-parint.ads): System Partition_Interface s-parint ads.
830 * System.Pool_Global (s-pooglo.ads): System Pool_Global s-pooglo ads.
831 * System.Pool_Local (s-pooloc.ads): System Pool_Local s-pooloc ads.
832 * System.Restrictions (s-restri.ads): System Restrictions s-restri ads.
833 * System.Rident (s-rident.ads): System Rident s-rident ads.
834 * System.Strings.Stream_Ops (s-ststop.ads): System Strings Stream_Ops s-ststop ads.
835 * System.Unsigned_Types (s-unstyp.ads): System Unsigned_Types s-unstyp ads.
836 * System.Wch_Cnv (s-wchcnv.ads): System Wch_Cnv s-wchcnv ads.
837 * System.Wch_Con (s-wchcon.ads): System Wch_Con s-wchcon ads.
839 Interfacing to Other Languages
842 * Interfacing to C++::
843 * Interfacing to COBOL::
844 * Interfacing to Fortran::
845 * Interfacing to non-GNAT Ada code::
847 Implementation of Specific Ada Features
849 * Machine Code Insertions::
850 * GNAT Implementation of Tasking::
851 * GNAT Implementation of Shared Passive Packages::
852 * Code Generation for Array Aggregates::
853 * The Size of Discriminated Records with Default Discriminants::
854 * Strict Conformance to the Ada Reference Manual::
856 GNAT Implementation of Tasking
858 * Mapping Ada Tasks onto the Underlying Kernel Threads::
859 * Ensuring Compliance with the Real-Time Annex::
860 * Support for Locking Policies::
862 Code Generation for Array Aggregates
864 * Static constant aggregates with static bounds::
865 * Constant aggregates with unconstrained nominal types::
866 * Aggregates with static bounds::
867 * Aggregates with nonstatic bounds::
868 * Aggregates in assignment statements::
872 * pragma No_Run_Time::
874 * pragma Restricted_Run_Time::
876 * package System.Task_Info (s-tasinf.ads): package System Task_Info s-tasinf ads.
878 Compatibility and Porting Guide
880 * Writing Portable Fixed-Point Declarations::
881 * Compatibility with Ada 83::
882 * Compatibility between Ada 95 and Ada 2005::
883 * Implementation-dependent characteristics::
884 * Compatibility with Other Ada Systems::
885 * Representation Clauses::
886 * Compatibility with HP Ada 83::
888 Compatibility with Ada 83
890 * Legal Ada 83 programs that are illegal in Ada 95::
891 * More deterministic semantics::
892 * Changed semantics::
893 * Other language compatibility issues::
895 Implementation-dependent characteristics
897 * Implementation-defined pragmas::
898 * Implementation-defined attributes::
900 * Elaboration order::
901 * Target-specific aspects::
906 @node About This Guide,Implementation Defined Pragmas,Top,Top
907 @anchor{gnat_rm/about_this_guide about-this-guide}@anchor{2}@anchor{gnat_rm/about_this_guide doc}@anchor{3}@anchor{gnat_rm/about_this_guide gnat-reference-manual}@anchor{4}@anchor{gnat_rm/about_this_guide id1}@anchor{5}
908 @chapter About This Guide
912 This manual contains useful information in writing programs using the
913 GNAT compiler. It includes information on implementation dependent
914 characteristics of GNAT, including all the information required by
915 Annex M of the Ada language standard.
917 GNAT implements Ada 95, Ada 2005 and Ada 2012, and it may also be
918 invoked in Ada 83 compatibility mode.
919 By default, GNAT assumes Ada 2012,
920 but you can override with a compiler switch
921 to explicitly specify the language version.
922 (Please refer to the @emph{GNAT User's Guide} for details on these switches.)
923 Throughout this manual, references to 'Ada' without a year suffix
924 apply to all the Ada versions of the language.
926 Ada is designed to be highly portable.
927 In general, a program will have the same effect even when compiled by
928 different compilers on different platforms.
929 However, since Ada is designed to be used in a
930 wide variety of applications, it also contains a number of system
931 dependent features to be used in interfacing to the external world.
933 @geindex Implementation-dependent features
937 Note: Any program that makes use of implementation-dependent features
938 may be non-portable. You should follow good programming practice and
939 isolate and clearly document any sections of your program that make use
940 of these features in a non-portable manner.
943 * What This Reference Manual Contains::
945 * Related Information::
949 @node What This Reference Manual Contains,Conventions,,About This Guide
950 @anchor{gnat_rm/about_this_guide what-this-reference-manual-contains}@anchor{6}
951 @section What This Reference Manual Contains
954 This reference manual contains the following chapters:
960 @ref{7,,Implementation Defined Pragmas}, lists GNAT implementation-dependent
961 pragmas, which can be used to extend and enhance the functionality of the
965 @ref{8,,Implementation Defined Attributes}, lists GNAT
966 implementation-dependent attributes, which can be used to extend and
967 enhance the functionality of the compiler.
970 @ref{9,,Standard and Implementation Defined Restrictions}, lists GNAT
971 implementation-dependent restrictions, which can be used to extend and
972 enhance the functionality of the compiler.
975 @ref{a,,Implementation Advice}, provides information on generally
976 desirable behavior which are not requirements that all compilers must
977 follow since it cannot be provided on all systems, or which may be
978 undesirable on some systems.
981 @ref{b,,Implementation Defined Characteristics}, provides a guide to
982 minimizing implementation dependent features.
985 @ref{c,,Intrinsic Subprograms}, describes the intrinsic subprograms
986 implemented by GNAT, and how they can be imported into user
987 application programs.
990 @ref{d,,Representation Clauses and Pragmas}, describes in detail the
991 way that GNAT represents data, and in particular the exact set
992 of representation clauses and pragmas that is accepted.
995 @ref{e,,Standard Library Routines}, provides a listing of packages and a
996 brief description of the functionality that is provided by Ada's
997 extensive set of standard library routines as implemented by GNAT.
1000 @ref{f,,The Implementation of Standard I/O}, details how the GNAT
1001 implementation of the input-output facilities.
1004 @ref{10,,The GNAT Library}, is a catalog of packages that complement
1005 the Ada predefined library.
1008 @ref{11,,Interfacing to Other Languages}, describes how programs
1009 written in Ada using GNAT can be interfaced to other programming
1013 @ref{12,,Specialized Needs Annexes}, describes the GNAT implementation of all
1014 of the specialized needs annexes.
1017 @ref{13,,Implementation of Specific Ada Features}, discusses issues related
1018 to GNAT's implementation of machine code insertions, tasking, and several
1022 @ref{14,,Implementation of Ada 2012 Features}, describes the status of the
1023 GNAT implementation of the Ada 2012 language standard.
1026 @ref{15,,Obsolescent Features} documents implementation dependent features,
1027 including pragmas and attributes, which are considered obsolescent, since
1028 there are other preferred ways of achieving the same results. These
1029 obsolescent forms are retained for backwards compatibility.
1032 @ref{16,,Compatibility and Porting Guide} presents some guidelines for
1033 developing portable Ada code, describes the compatibility issues that
1034 may arise between GNAT and other Ada compilation systems (including those
1035 for Ada 83), and shows how GNAT can expedite porting applications
1036 developed in other Ada environments.
1039 @ref{1,,GNU Free Documentation License} contains the license for this document.
1042 @geindex Ada 95 Language Reference Manual
1044 @geindex Ada 2005 Language Reference Manual
1046 This reference manual assumes a basic familiarity with the Ada 95 language, as
1048 @cite{International Standard ANSI/ISO/IEC-8652:1995}.
1049 It does not require knowledge of the new features introduced by Ada 2005 or
1051 All three reference manuals are included in the GNAT documentation
1054 @node Conventions,Related Information,What This Reference Manual Contains,About This Guide
1055 @anchor{gnat_rm/about_this_guide conventions}@anchor{17}
1056 @section Conventions
1059 @geindex Conventions
1060 @geindex typographical
1062 @geindex Typographical conventions
1064 Following are examples of the typographical and graphic conventions used
1071 @code{Functions}, @code{utility program names}, @code{standard names},
1087 [optional information or parameters]
1090 Examples are described by text
1093 and then shown this way.
1097 Commands that are entered by the user are shown as preceded by a prompt string
1098 comprising the @code{$} character followed by a space.
1101 @node Related Information,,Conventions,About This Guide
1102 @anchor{gnat_rm/about_this_guide related-information}@anchor{18}
1103 @section Related Information
1106 See the following documents for further information on GNAT:
1112 @cite{GNAT User's Guide for Native Platforms},
1113 which provides information on how to use the
1114 GNAT development environment.
1117 @cite{Ada 95 Reference Manual}, the Ada 95 programming language standard.
1120 @cite{Ada 95 Annotated Reference Manual}, which is an annotated version
1121 of the Ada 95 standard. The annotations describe
1122 detailed aspects of the design decision, and in particular contain useful
1123 sections on Ada 83 compatibility.
1126 @cite{Ada 2005 Reference Manual}, the Ada 2005 programming language standard.
1129 @cite{Ada 2005 Annotated Reference Manual}, which is an annotated version
1130 of the Ada 2005 standard. The annotations describe
1131 detailed aspects of the design decision.
1134 @cite{Ada 2012 Reference Manual}, the Ada 2012 programming language standard.
1137 @cite{DEC Ada@comma{} Technical Overview and Comparison on DIGITAL Platforms},
1138 which contains specific information on compatibility between GNAT and
1142 @cite{DEC Ada@comma{} Language Reference Manual}, part number AA-PYZAB-TK, which
1143 describes in detail the pragmas and attributes provided by the DEC Ada 83
1147 @node Implementation Defined Pragmas,Implementation Defined Aspects,About This Guide,Top
1148 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas implementation-defined-pragmas}@anchor{7}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas doc}@anchor{19}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id1}@anchor{1a}
1149 @chapter Implementation Defined Pragmas
1152 Ada defines a set of pragmas that can be used to supply additional
1153 information to the compiler. These language defined pragmas are
1154 implemented in GNAT and work as described in the Ada Reference Manual.
1156 In addition, Ada allows implementations to define additional pragmas
1157 whose meaning is defined by the implementation. GNAT provides a number
1158 of these implementation-defined pragmas, which can be used to extend
1159 and enhance the functionality of the compiler. This section of the GNAT
1160 Reference Manual describes these additional pragmas.
1162 Note that any program using these pragmas might not be portable to other
1163 compilers (although GNAT implements this set of pragmas on all
1164 platforms). Therefore if portability to other compilers is an important
1165 consideration, the use of these pragmas should be minimized.
1168 * Pragma Abort_Defer::
1169 * Pragma Abstract_State::
1176 * Pragma Allow_Integer_Address::
1179 * Pragma Assert_And_Cut::
1180 * Pragma Assertion_Policy::
1182 * Pragma Assume_No_Invalid_Values::
1183 * Pragma Async_Readers::
1184 * Pragma Async_Writers::
1185 * Pragma Attribute_Definition::
1186 * Pragma C_Pass_By_Copy::
1188 * Pragma Check_Float_Overflow::
1189 * Pragma Check_Name::
1190 * Pragma Check_Policy::
1192 * Pragma Common_Object::
1193 * Pragma Compile_Time_Error::
1194 * Pragma Compile_Time_Warning::
1195 * Pragma Compiler_Unit::
1196 * Pragma Compiler_Unit_Warning::
1197 * Pragma Complete_Representation::
1198 * Pragma Complex_Representation::
1199 * Pragma Component_Alignment::
1200 * Pragma Constant_After_Elaboration::
1201 * Pragma Contract_Cases::
1202 * Pragma Convention_Identifier::
1203 * Pragma CPP_Class::
1204 * Pragma CPP_Constructor::
1205 * Pragma CPP_Virtual::
1206 * Pragma CPP_Vtable::
1208 * Pragma Deadline_Floor::
1209 * Pragma Default_Initial_Condition::
1211 * Pragma Debug_Policy::
1212 * Pragma Default_Scalar_Storage_Order::
1213 * Pragma Default_Storage_Pool::
1215 * Pragma Detect_Blocking::
1216 * Pragma Disable_Atomic_Synchronization::
1217 * Pragma Dispatching_Domain::
1218 * Pragma Effective_Reads::
1219 * Pragma Effective_Writes::
1220 * Pragma Elaboration_Checks::
1221 * Pragma Eliminate::
1222 * Pragma Enable_Atomic_Synchronization::
1223 * Pragma Export_Function::
1224 * Pragma Export_Object::
1225 * Pragma Export_Procedure::
1226 * Pragma Export_Value::
1227 * Pragma Export_Valued_Procedure::
1228 * Pragma Extend_System::
1229 * Pragma Extensions_Allowed::
1230 * Pragma Extensions_Visible::
1232 * Pragma External_Name_Casing::
1233 * Pragma Fast_Math::
1234 * Pragma Favor_Top_Level::
1235 * Pragma Finalize_Storage_Only::
1236 * Pragma Float_Representation::
1240 * Pragma Ignore_Pragma::
1241 * Pragma Implementation_Defined::
1242 * Pragma Implemented::
1243 * Pragma Implicit_Packing::
1244 * Pragma Import_Function::
1245 * Pragma Import_Object::
1246 * Pragma Import_Procedure::
1247 * Pragma Import_Valued_Procedure::
1248 * Pragma Independent::
1249 * Pragma Independent_Components::
1250 * Pragma Initial_Condition::
1251 * Pragma Initialize_Scalars::
1252 * Pragma Initializes::
1253 * Pragma Inline_Always::
1254 * Pragma Inline_Generic::
1255 * Pragma Interface::
1256 * Pragma Interface_Name::
1257 * Pragma Interrupt_Handler::
1258 * Pragma Interrupt_State::
1259 * Pragma Invariant::
1260 * Pragma Keep_Names::
1262 * Pragma Link_With::
1263 * Pragma Linker_Alias::
1264 * Pragma Linker_Constructor::
1265 * Pragma Linker_Destructor::
1266 * Pragma Linker_Section::
1267 * Pragma Lock_Free::
1268 * Pragma Loop_Invariant::
1269 * Pragma Loop_Optimize::
1270 * Pragma Loop_Variant::
1271 * Pragma Machine_Attribute::
1273 * Pragma Main_Storage::
1274 * Pragma Max_Queue_Length::
1276 * Pragma No_Component_Reordering::
1277 * Pragma No_Elaboration_Code_All::
1278 * Pragma No_Heap_Finalization::
1279 * Pragma No_Inline::
1280 * Pragma No_Return::
1281 * Pragma No_Run_Time::
1282 * Pragma No_Strict_Aliasing::
1283 * Pragma No_Tagged_Streams::
1284 * Pragma Normalize_Scalars::
1285 * Pragma Obsolescent::
1286 * Pragma Optimize_Alignment::
1288 * Pragma Overflow_Mode::
1289 * Pragma Overriding_Renamings::
1290 * Pragma Partition_Elaboration_Policy::
1293 * Pragma Persistent_BSS::
1296 * Pragma Postcondition::
1297 * Pragma Post_Class::
1298 * Pragma Rename_Pragma::
1300 * Pragma Precondition::
1301 * Pragma Predicate::
1302 * Pragma Predicate_Failure::
1303 * Pragma Preelaborable_Initialization::
1304 * Pragma Prefix_Exception_Messages::
1305 * Pragma Pre_Class::
1306 * Pragma Priority_Specific_Dispatching::
1308 * Pragma Profile_Warnings::
1309 * Pragma Propagate_Exceptions::
1310 * Pragma Provide_Shift_Operators::
1311 * Pragma Psect_Object::
1312 * Pragma Pure_Function::
1314 * Pragma Ravenscar::
1315 * Pragma Refined_Depends::
1316 * Pragma Refined_Global::
1317 * Pragma Refined_Post::
1318 * Pragma Refined_State::
1319 * Pragma Relative_Deadline::
1320 * Pragma Remote_Access_Type::
1321 * Pragma Restricted_Run_Time::
1322 * Pragma Restriction_Warnings::
1323 * Pragma Reviewable::
1324 * Pragma Secondary_Stack_Size::
1325 * Pragma Share_Generic::
1327 * Pragma Short_Circuit_And_Or::
1328 * Pragma Short_Descriptors::
1329 * Pragma Simple_Storage_Pool_Type::
1330 * Pragma Source_File_Name::
1331 * Pragma Source_File_Name_Project::
1332 * Pragma Source_Reference::
1333 * Pragma SPARK_Mode::
1334 * Pragma Static_Elaboration_Desired::
1335 * Pragma Stream_Convert::
1336 * Pragma Style_Checks::
1339 * Pragma Suppress_All::
1340 * Pragma Suppress_Debug_Info::
1341 * Pragma Suppress_Exception_Locations::
1342 * Pragma Suppress_Initialization::
1343 * Pragma Task_Name::
1344 * Pragma Task_Storage::
1345 * Pragma Test_Case::
1346 * Pragma Thread_Local_Storage::
1347 * Pragma Time_Slice::
1349 * Pragma Type_Invariant::
1350 * Pragma Type_Invariant_Class::
1351 * Pragma Unchecked_Union::
1352 * Pragma Unevaluated_Use_Of_Old::
1353 * Pragma Unimplemented_Unit::
1354 * Pragma Universal_Aliasing::
1355 * Pragma Universal_Data::
1356 * Pragma Unmodified::
1357 * Pragma Unreferenced::
1358 * Pragma Unreferenced_Objects::
1359 * Pragma Unreserve_All_Interrupts::
1360 * Pragma Unsuppress::
1361 * Pragma Use_VADS_Size::
1363 * Pragma Validity_Checks::
1365 * Pragma Volatile_Full_Access::
1366 * Pragma Volatile_Function::
1367 * Pragma Warning_As_Error::
1369 * Pragma Weak_External::
1370 * Pragma Wide_Character_Encoding::
1374 @node Pragma Abort_Defer,Pragma Abstract_State,,Implementation Defined Pragmas
1375 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-abort-defer}@anchor{1b}
1376 @section Pragma Abort_Defer
1379 @geindex Deferring aborts
1387 This pragma must appear at the start of the statement sequence of a
1388 handled sequence of statements (right after the @code{begin}). It has
1389 the effect of deferring aborts for the sequence of statements (but not
1390 for the declarations or handlers, if any, associated with this statement
1393 @node Pragma Abstract_State,Pragma Ada_83,Pragma Abort_Defer,Implementation Defined Pragmas
1394 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-abstract-state}@anchor{1c}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id2}@anchor{1d}
1395 @section Pragma Abstract_State
1401 pragma Abstract_State (ABSTRACT_STATE_LIST);
1403 ABSTRACT_STATE_LIST ::=
1405 | STATE_NAME_WITH_OPTIONS
1406 | (STATE_NAME_WITH_OPTIONS @{, STATE_NAME_WITH_OPTIONS@} )
1408 STATE_NAME_WITH_OPTIONS ::=
1410 | (STATE_NAME with OPTION_LIST)
1412 OPTION_LIST ::= OPTION @{, OPTION@}
1418 SIMPLE_OPTION ::= Ghost | Synchronous
1420 NAME_VALUE_OPTION ::=
1421 Part_Of => ABSTRACT_STATE
1422 | External [=> EXTERNAL_PROPERTY_LIST]
1424 EXTERNAL_PROPERTY_LIST ::=
1426 | (EXTERNAL_PROPERTY @{, EXTERNAL_PROPERTY@} )
1428 EXTERNAL_PROPERTY ::=
1429 Async_Readers [=> boolean_EXPRESSION]
1430 | Async_Writers [=> boolean_EXPRESSION]
1431 | Effective_Reads [=> boolean_EXPRESSION]
1432 | Effective_Writes [=> boolean_EXPRESSION]
1433 others => boolean_EXPRESSION
1435 STATE_NAME ::= defining_identifier
1437 ABSTRACT_STATE ::= name
1440 For the semantics of this pragma, see the entry for aspect @code{Abstract_State} in
1441 the SPARK 2014 Reference Manual, section 7.1.4.
1443 @node Pragma Ada_83,Pragma Ada_95,Pragma Abstract_State,Implementation Defined Pragmas
1444 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-ada-83}@anchor{1e}
1445 @section Pragma Ada_83
1454 A configuration pragma that establishes Ada 83 mode for the unit to
1455 which it applies, regardless of the mode set by the command line
1456 switches. In Ada 83 mode, GNAT attempts to be as compatible with
1457 the syntax and semantics of Ada 83, as defined in the original Ada
1458 83 Reference Manual as possible. In particular, the keywords added by Ada 95
1459 and Ada 2005 are not recognized, optional package bodies are allowed,
1460 and generics may name types with unknown discriminants without using
1461 the @code{(<>)} notation. In addition, some but not all of the additional
1462 restrictions of Ada 83 are enforced.
1464 Ada 83 mode is intended for two purposes. Firstly, it allows existing
1465 Ada 83 code to be compiled and adapted to GNAT with less effort.
1466 Secondly, it aids in keeping code backwards compatible with Ada 83.
1467 However, there is no guarantee that code that is processed correctly
1468 by GNAT in Ada 83 mode will in fact compile and execute with an Ada
1469 83 compiler, since GNAT does not enforce all the additional checks
1472 @node Pragma Ada_95,Pragma Ada_05,Pragma Ada_83,Implementation Defined Pragmas
1473 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-ada-95}@anchor{1f}
1474 @section Pragma Ada_95
1483 A configuration pragma that establishes Ada 95 mode for the unit to which
1484 it applies, regardless of the mode set by the command line switches.
1485 This mode is set automatically for the @code{Ada} and @code{System}
1486 packages and their children, so you need not specify it in these
1487 contexts. This pragma is useful when writing a reusable component that
1488 itself uses Ada 95 features, but which is intended to be usable from
1489 either Ada 83 or Ada 95 programs.
1491 @node Pragma Ada_05,Pragma Ada_2005,Pragma Ada_95,Implementation Defined Pragmas
1492 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-ada-05}@anchor{20}
1493 @section Pragma Ada_05
1500 pragma Ada_05 (local_NAME);
1503 A configuration pragma that establishes Ada 2005 mode for the unit to which
1504 it applies, regardless of the mode set by the command line switches.
1505 This pragma is useful when writing a reusable component that
1506 itself uses Ada 2005 features, but which is intended to be usable from
1507 either Ada 83 or Ada 95 programs.
1509 The one argument form (which is not a configuration pragma)
1510 is used for managing the transition from
1511 Ada 95 to Ada 2005 in the run-time library. If an entity is marked
1512 as Ada_2005 only, then referencing the entity in Ada_83 or Ada_95
1513 mode will generate a warning. In addition, in Ada_83 or Ada_95
1514 mode, a preference rule is established which does not choose
1515 such an entity unless it is unambiguously specified. This avoids
1516 extra subprograms marked this way from generating ambiguities in
1517 otherwise legal pre-Ada_2005 programs. The one argument form is
1518 intended for exclusive use in the GNAT run-time library.
1520 @node Pragma Ada_2005,Pragma Ada_12,Pragma Ada_05,Implementation Defined Pragmas
1521 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-ada-2005}@anchor{21}
1522 @section Pragma Ada_2005
1531 This configuration pragma is a synonym for pragma Ada_05 and has the
1532 same syntax and effect.
1534 @node Pragma Ada_12,Pragma Ada_2012,Pragma Ada_2005,Implementation Defined Pragmas
1535 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-ada-12}@anchor{22}
1536 @section Pragma Ada_12
1543 pragma Ada_12 (local_NAME);
1546 A configuration pragma that establishes Ada 2012 mode for the unit to which
1547 it applies, regardless of the mode set by the command line switches.
1548 This mode is set automatically for the @code{Ada} and @code{System}
1549 packages and their children, so you need not specify it in these
1550 contexts. This pragma is useful when writing a reusable component that
1551 itself uses Ada 2012 features, but which is intended to be usable from
1552 Ada 83, Ada 95, or Ada 2005 programs.
1554 The one argument form, which is not a configuration pragma,
1555 is used for managing the transition from Ada
1556 2005 to Ada 2012 in the run-time library. If an entity is marked
1557 as Ada_2012 only, then referencing the entity in any pre-Ada_2012
1558 mode will generate a warning. In addition, in any pre-Ada_2012
1559 mode, a preference rule is established which does not choose
1560 such an entity unless it is unambiguously specified. This avoids
1561 extra subprograms marked this way from generating ambiguities in
1562 otherwise legal pre-Ada_2012 programs. The one argument form is
1563 intended for exclusive use in the GNAT run-time library.
1565 @node Pragma Ada_2012,Pragma Allow_Integer_Address,Pragma Ada_12,Implementation Defined Pragmas
1566 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-ada-2012}@anchor{23}
1567 @section Pragma Ada_2012
1576 This configuration pragma is a synonym for pragma Ada_12 and has the
1577 same syntax and effect.
1579 @node Pragma Allow_Integer_Address,Pragma Annotate,Pragma Ada_2012,Implementation Defined Pragmas
1580 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-allow-integer-address}@anchor{24}
1581 @section Pragma Allow_Integer_Address
1587 pragma Allow_Integer_Address;
1590 In almost all versions of GNAT, @code{System.Address} is a private
1591 type in accordance with the implementation advice in the RM. This
1592 means that integer values,
1593 in particular integer literals, are not allowed as address values.
1594 If the configuration pragma
1595 @code{Allow_Integer_Address} is given, then integer expressions may
1596 be used anywhere a value of type @code{System.Address} is required.
1597 The effect is to introduce an implicit unchecked conversion from the
1598 integer value to type @code{System.Address}. The reverse case of using
1599 an address where an integer type is required is handled analogously.
1600 The following example compiles without errors:
1603 pragma Allow_Integer_Address;
1604 with System; use System;
1605 package AddrAsInt is
1608 for X'Address use 16#1240#;
1609 for Y use at 16#3230#;
1610 m : Address := 16#4000#;
1611 n : constant Address := 4000;
1612 p : constant Address := Address (X + Y);
1613 v : Integer := y'Address;
1614 w : constant Integer := Integer (Y'Address);
1615 type R is new integer;
1618 for Z'Address use RR;
1622 Note that pragma @code{Allow_Integer_Address} is ignored if @code{System.Address}
1623 is not a private type. In implementations of @code{GNAT} where
1624 System.Address is a visible integer type,
1625 this pragma serves no purpose but is ignored
1626 rather than rejected to allow common sets of sources to be used
1627 in the two situations.
1629 @node Pragma Annotate,Pragma Assert,Pragma Allow_Integer_Address,Implementation Defined Pragmas
1630 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-annotate}@anchor{25}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id3}@anchor{26}
1631 @section Pragma Annotate
1637 pragma Annotate (IDENTIFIER [, IDENTIFIER @{, ARG@}] [, entity => local_NAME]);
1639 ARG ::= NAME | EXPRESSION
1642 This pragma is used to annotate programs. IDENTIFIER identifies
1643 the type of annotation. GNAT verifies that it is an identifier, but does
1644 not otherwise analyze it. The second optional identifier is also left
1645 unanalyzed, and by convention is used to control the action of the tool to
1646 which the annotation is addressed. The remaining ARG arguments
1647 can be either string literals or more generally expressions.
1648 String literals are assumed to be either of type
1649 @code{Standard.String} or else @code{Wide_String} or @code{Wide_Wide_String}
1650 depending on the character literals they contain.
1651 All other kinds of arguments are analyzed as expressions, and must be
1652 unambiguous. The last argument if present must have the identifier
1653 @code{Entity} and GNAT verifies that a local name is given.
1655 The analyzed pragma is retained in the tree, but not otherwise processed
1656 by any part of the GNAT compiler, except to generate corresponding note
1657 lines in the generated ALI file. For the format of these note lines, see
1658 the compiler source file lib-writ.ads. This pragma is intended for use by
1659 external tools, including ASIS. The use of pragma Annotate does not
1660 affect the compilation process in any way. This pragma may be used as
1661 a configuration pragma.
1663 @node Pragma Assert,Pragma Assert_And_Cut,Pragma Annotate,Implementation Defined Pragmas
1664 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-assert}@anchor{27}
1665 @section Pragma Assert
1673 [, string_EXPRESSION]);
1676 The effect of this pragma depends on whether the corresponding command
1677 line switch is set to activate assertions. The pragma expands into code
1678 equivalent to the following:
1681 if assertions-enabled then
1682 if not boolean_EXPRESSION then
1683 System.Assertions.Raise_Assert_Failure
1684 (string_EXPRESSION);
1689 The string argument, if given, is the message that will be associated
1690 with the exception occurrence if the exception is raised. If no second
1691 argument is given, the default message is @code{file}:@code{nnn},
1692 where @code{file} is the name of the source file containing the assert,
1693 and @code{nnn} is the line number of the assert.
1695 Note that, as with the @code{if} statement to which it is equivalent, the
1696 type of the expression is either @code{Standard.Boolean}, or any type derived
1697 from this standard type.
1699 Assert checks can be either checked or ignored. By default they are ignored.
1700 They will be checked if either the command line switch @emph{-gnata} is
1701 used, or if an @code{Assertion_Policy} or @code{Check_Policy} pragma is used
1702 to enable @code{Assert_Checks}.
1704 If assertions are ignored, then there
1705 is no run-time effect (and in particular, any side effects from the
1706 expression will not occur at run time). (The expression is still
1707 analyzed at compile time, and may cause types to be frozen if they are
1708 mentioned here for the first time).
1710 If assertions are checked, then the given expression is tested, and if
1711 it is @code{False} then @code{System.Assertions.Raise_Assert_Failure} is called
1712 which results in the raising of @code{Assert_Failure} with the given message.
1714 You should generally avoid side effects in the expression arguments of
1715 this pragma, because these side effects will turn on and off with the
1716 setting of the assertions mode, resulting in assertions that have an
1717 effect on the program. However, the expressions are analyzed for
1718 semantic correctness whether or not assertions are enabled, so turning
1719 assertions on and off cannot affect the legality of a program.
1721 Note that the implementation defined policy @code{DISABLE}, given in a
1722 pragma @code{Assertion_Policy}, can be used to suppress this semantic analysis.
1724 Note: this is a standard language-defined pragma in versions
1725 of Ada from 2005 on. In GNAT, it is implemented in all versions
1726 of Ada, and the DISABLE policy is an implementation-defined
1729 @node Pragma Assert_And_Cut,Pragma Assertion_Policy,Pragma Assert,Implementation Defined Pragmas
1730 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-assert-and-cut}@anchor{28}
1731 @section Pragma Assert_And_Cut
1737 pragma Assert_And_Cut (
1739 [, string_EXPRESSION]);
1742 The effect of this pragma is identical to that of pragma @code{Assert},
1743 except that in an @code{Assertion_Policy} pragma, the identifier
1744 @code{Assert_And_Cut} is used to control whether it is ignored or checked
1747 The intention is that this be used within a subprogram when the
1748 given test expresion sums up all the work done so far in the
1749 subprogram, so that the rest of the subprogram can be verified
1750 (informally or formally) using only the entry preconditions,
1751 and the expression in this pragma. This allows dividing up
1752 a subprogram into sections for the purposes of testing or
1753 formal verification. The pragma also serves as useful
1756 @node Pragma Assertion_Policy,Pragma Assume,Pragma Assert_And_Cut,Implementation Defined Pragmas
1757 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-assertion-policy}@anchor{29}
1758 @section Pragma Assertion_Policy
1764 pragma Assertion_Policy (CHECK | DISABLE | IGNORE | SUPPRESSIBLE);
1766 pragma Assertion_Policy (
1767 ASSERTION_KIND => POLICY_IDENTIFIER
1768 @{, ASSERTION_KIND => POLICY_IDENTIFIER@});
1770 ASSERTION_KIND ::= RM_ASSERTION_KIND | ID_ASSERTION_KIND
1772 RM_ASSERTION_KIND ::= Assert |
1780 Type_Invariant'Class
1782 ID_ASSERTION_KIND ::= Assertions |
1796 Statement_Assertions
1798 POLICY_IDENTIFIER ::= Check | Disable | Ignore | Suppressible
1801 This is a standard Ada 2012 pragma that is available as an
1802 implementation-defined pragma in earlier versions of Ada.
1803 The assertion kinds @code{RM_ASSERTION_KIND} are those defined in
1804 the Ada standard. The assertion kinds @code{ID_ASSERTION_KIND}
1805 are implementation defined additions recognized by the GNAT compiler.
1807 The pragma applies in both cases to pragmas and aspects with matching
1808 names, e.g. @code{Pre} applies to the Pre aspect, and @code{Precondition}
1809 applies to both the @code{Precondition} pragma
1810 and the aspect @code{Precondition}. Note that the identifiers for
1811 pragmas Pre_Class and Post_Class are Pre'Class and Post'Class (not
1812 Pre_Class and Post_Class), since these pragmas are intended to be
1813 identical to the corresponding aspects).
1815 If the policy is @code{CHECK}, then assertions are enabled, i.e.
1816 the corresponding pragma or aspect is activated.
1817 If the policy is @code{IGNORE}, then assertions are ignored, i.e.
1818 the corresponding pragma or aspect is deactivated.
1819 This pragma overrides the effect of the @emph{-gnata} switch on the
1821 If the policy is @code{SUPPRESSIBLE}, then assertions are enabled by default,
1822 however, if the @emph{-gnatp} switch is specified all assertions are ignored.
1824 The implementation defined policy @code{DISABLE} is like
1825 @code{IGNORE} except that it completely disables semantic
1826 checking of the corresponding pragma or aspect. This is
1827 useful when the pragma or aspect argument references subprograms
1828 in a with'ed package which is replaced by a dummy package
1829 for the final build.
1831 The implementation defined assertion kind @code{Assertions} applies to all
1832 assertion kinds. The form with no assertion kind given implies this
1833 choice, so it applies to all assertion kinds (RM defined, and
1834 implementation defined).
1836 The implementation defined assertion kind @code{Statement_Assertions}
1837 applies to @code{Assert}, @code{Assert_And_Cut},
1838 @code{Assume}, @code{Loop_Invariant}, and @code{Loop_Variant}.
1840 @node Pragma Assume,Pragma Assume_No_Invalid_Values,Pragma Assertion_Policy,Implementation Defined Pragmas
1841 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-assume}@anchor{2a}
1842 @section Pragma Assume
1850 [, string_EXPRESSION]);
1853 The effect of this pragma is identical to that of pragma @code{Assert},
1854 except that in an @code{Assertion_Policy} pragma, the identifier
1855 @code{Assume} is used to control whether it is ignored or checked
1858 The intention is that this be used for assumptions about the
1859 external environment. So you cannot expect to verify formally
1860 or informally that the condition is met, this must be
1861 established by examining things outside the program itself.
1862 For example, we may have code that depends on the size of
1863 @code{Long_Long_Integer} being at least 64. So we could write:
1866 pragma Assume (Long_Long_Integer'Size >= 64);
1869 This assumption cannot be proved from the program itself,
1870 but it acts as a useful run-time check that the assumption
1871 is met, and documents the need to ensure that it is met by
1872 reference to information outside the program.
1874 @node Pragma Assume_No_Invalid_Values,Pragma Async_Readers,Pragma Assume,Implementation Defined Pragmas
1875 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-assume-no-invalid-values}@anchor{2b}
1876 @section Pragma Assume_No_Invalid_Values
1879 @geindex Invalid representations
1881 @geindex Invalid values
1886 pragma Assume_No_Invalid_Values (On | Off);
1889 This is a configuration pragma that controls the assumptions made by the
1890 compiler about the occurrence of invalid representations (invalid values)
1893 The default behavior (corresponding to an Off argument for this pragma), is
1894 to assume that values may in general be invalid unless the compiler can
1895 prove they are valid. Consider the following example:
1898 V1 : Integer range 1 .. 10;
1899 V2 : Integer range 11 .. 20;
1901 for J in V2 .. V1 loop
1906 if V1 and V2 have valid values, then the loop is known at compile
1907 time not to execute since the lower bound must be greater than the
1908 upper bound. However in default mode, no such assumption is made,
1909 and the loop may execute. If @code{Assume_No_Invalid_Values (On)}
1910 is given, the compiler will assume that any occurrence of a variable
1911 other than in an explicit @code{'Valid} test always has a valid
1912 value, and the loop above will be optimized away.
1914 The use of @code{Assume_No_Invalid_Values (On)} is appropriate if
1915 you know your code is free of uninitialized variables and other
1916 possible sources of invalid representations, and may result in
1917 more efficient code. A program that accesses an invalid representation
1918 with this pragma in effect is erroneous, so no guarantees can be made
1921 It is peculiar though permissible to use this pragma in conjunction
1922 with validity checking (-gnatVa). In such cases, accessing invalid
1923 values will generally give an exception, though formally the program
1924 is erroneous so there are no guarantees that this will always be the
1925 case, and it is recommended that these two options not be used together.
1927 @node Pragma Async_Readers,Pragma Async_Writers,Pragma Assume_No_Invalid_Values,Implementation Defined Pragmas
1928 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-async-readers}@anchor{2c}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id4}@anchor{2d}
1929 @section Pragma Async_Readers
1935 pragma Asynch_Readers [ (boolean_EXPRESSION) ];
1938 For the semantics of this pragma, see the entry for aspect @code{Async_Readers} in
1939 the SPARK 2014 Reference Manual, section 7.1.2.
1941 @node Pragma Async_Writers,Pragma Attribute_Definition,Pragma Async_Readers,Implementation Defined Pragmas
1942 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id5}@anchor{2e}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-async-writers}@anchor{2f}
1943 @section Pragma Async_Writers
1949 pragma Asynch_Writers [ (boolean_EXPRESSION) ];
1952 For the semantics of this pragma, see the entry for aspect @code{Async_Writers} in
1953 the SPARK 2014 Reference Manual, section 7.1.2.
1955 @node Pragma Attribute_Definition,Pragma C_Pass_By_Copy,Pragma Async_Writers,Implementation Defined Pragmas
1956 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-attribute-definition}@anchor{30}
1957 @section Pragma Attribute_Definition
1963 pragma Attribute_Definition
1964 ([Attribute =>] ATTRIBUTE_DESIGNATOR,
1965 [Entity =>] LOCAL_NAME,
1966 [Expression =>] EXPRESSION | NAME);
1969 If @code{Attribute} is a known attribute name, this pragma is equivalent to
1970 the attribute definition clause:
1973 for Entity'Attribute use Expression;
1976 If @code{Attribute} is not a recognized attribute name, the pragma is
1977 ignored, and a warning is emitted. This allows source
1978 code to be written that takes advantage of some new attribute, while remaining
1979 compilable with earlier compilers.
1981 @node Pragma C_Pass_By_Copy,Pragma Check,Pragma Attribute_Definition,Implementation Defined Pragmas
1982 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-c-pass-by-copy}@anchor{31}
1983 @section Pragma C_Pass_By_Copy
1986 @geindex Passing by copy
1991 pragma C_Pass_By_Copy
1992 ([Max_Size =>] static_integer_EXPRESSION);
1995 Normally the default mechanism for passing C convention records to C
1996 convention subprograms is to pass them by reference, as suggested by RM
1997 B.3(69). Use the configuration pragma @code{C_Pass_By_Copy} to change
1998 this default, by requiring that record formal parameters be passed by
1999 copy if all of the following conditions are met:
2005 The size of the record type does not exceed the value specified for
2009 The record type has @code{Convention C}.
2012 The formal parameter has this record type, and the subprogram has a
2013 foreign (non-Ada) convention.
2016 If these conditions are met the argument is passed by copy; i.e., in a
2017 manner consistent with what C expects if the corresponding formal in the
2018 C prototype is a struct (rather than a pointer to a struct).
2020 You can also pass records by copy by specifying the convention
2021 @code{C_Pass_By_Copy} for the record type, or by using the extended
2022 @code{Import} and @code{Export} pragmas, which allow specification of
2023 passing mechanisms on a parameter by parameter basis.
2025 @node Pragma Check,Pragma Check_Float_Overflow,Pragma C_Pass_By_Copy,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2026 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-check}@anchor{32}
2027 @section Pragma Check
2032 @geindex Named assertions
2038 [Name =>] CHECK_KIND,
2039 [Check =>] Boolean_EXPRESSION
2040 [, [Message =>] string_EXPRESSION] );
2042 CHECK_KIND ::= IDENTIFIER |
2045 Type_Invariant'Class |
2049 This pragma is similar to the predefined pragma @code{Assert} except that an
2050 extra identifier argument is present. In conjunction with pragma
2051 @code{Check_Policy}, this can be used to define groups of assertions that can
2052 be independently controlled. The identifier @code{Assertion} is special, it
2053 refers to the normal set of pragma @code{Assert} statements.
2055 Checks introduced by this pragma are normally deactivated by default. They can
2056 be activated either by the command line option @emph{-gnata}, which turns on
2057 all checks, or individually controlled using pragma @code{Check_Policy}.
2059 The identifiers @code{Assertions} and @code{Statement_Assertions} are not
2060 permitted as check kinds, since this would cause confusion with the use
2061 of these identifiers in @code{Assertion_Policy} and @code{Check_Policy}
2062 pragmas, where they are used to refer to sets of assertions.
2064 @node Pragma Check_Float_Overflow,Pragma Check_Name,Pragma Check,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2065 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-check-float-overflow}@anchor{33}
2066 @section Pragma Check_Float_Overflow
2069 @geindex Floating-point overflow
2074 pragma Check_Float_Overflow;
2077 In Ada, the predefined floating-point types (@code{Short_Float},
2078 @code{Float}, @code{Long_Float}, @code{Long_Long_Float}) are
2079 defined to be @emph{unconstrained}. This means that even though each
2080 has a well-defined base range, an operation that delivers a result
2081 outside this base range is not required to raise an exception.
2082 This implementation permission accommodates the notion
2083 of infinities in IEEE floating-point, and corresponds to the
2084 efficient execution mode on most machines. GNAT will not raise
2085 overflow exceptions on these machines; instead it will generate
2086 infinities and NaN's as defined in the IEEE standard.
2088 Generating infinities, although efficient, is not always desirable.
2089 Often the preferable approach is to check for overflow, even at the
2090 (perhaps considerable) expense of run-time performance.
2091 This can be accomplished by defining your own constrained floating-point subtypes -- i.e., by supplying explicit
2092 range constraints -- and indeed such a subtype
2093 can have the same base range as its base type. For example:
2096 subtype My_Float is Float range Float'Range;
2099 Here @code{My_Float} has the same range as
2100 @code{Float} but is constrained, so operations on
2101 @code{My_Float} values will be checked for overflow
2104 This style will achieve the desired goal, but
2105 it is often more convenient to be able to simply use
2106 the standard predefined floating-point types as long
2107 as overflow checking could be guaranteed.
2108 The @code{Check_Float_Overflow}
2109 configuration pragma achieves this effect. If a unit is compiled
2110 subject to this configuration pragma, then all operations
2111 on predefined floating-point types including operations on
2112 base types of these floating-point types will be treated as
2113 though those types were constrained, and overflow checks
2114 will be generated. The @code{Constraint_Error}
2115 exception is raised if the result is out of range.
2117 This mode can also be set by use of the compiler
2118 switch @emph{-gnateF}.
2120 @node Pragma Check_Name,Pragma Check_Policy,Pragma Check_Float_Overflow,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2121 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-check-name}@anchor{34}
2122 @section Pragma Check_Name
2125 @geindex Defining check names
2127 @geindex Check names
2133 pragma Check_Name (check_name_IDENTIFIER);
2136 This is a configuration pragma that defines a new implementation
2137 defined check name (unless IDENTIFIER matches one of the predefined
2138 check names, in which case the pragma has no effect). Check names
2139 are global to a partition, so if two or more configuration pragmas
2140 are present in a partition mentioning the same name, only one new
2141 check name is introduced.
2143 An implementation defined check name introduced with this pragma may
2144 be used in only three contexts: @code{pragma Suppress},
2145 @code{pragma Unsuppress},
2146 and as the prefix of a @code{Check_Name'Enabled} attribute reference. For
2147 any of these three cases, the check name must be visible. A check
2148 name is visible if it is in the configuration pragmas applying to
2149 the current unit, or if it appears at the start of any unit that
2150 is part of the dependency set of the current unit (e.g., units that
2151 are mentioned in @code{with} clauses).
2153 Check names introduced by this pragma are subject to control by compiler
2154 switches (in particular -gnatp) in the usual manner.
2156 @node Pragma Check_Policy,Pragma Comment,Pragma Check_Name,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2157 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-check-policy}@anchor{35}
2158 @section Pragma Check_Policy
2161 @geindex Controlling assertions
2166 @geindex Check pragma control
2168 @geindex Named assertions
2174 ([Name =>] CHECK_KIND,
2175 [Policy =>] POLICY_IDENTIFIER);
2177 pragma Check_Policy (
2178 CHECK_KIND => POLICY_IDENTIFIER
2179 @{, CHECK_KIND => POLICY_IDENTIFIER@});
2181 ASSERTION_KIND ::= RM_ASSERTION_KIND | ID_ASSERTION_KIND
2183 CHECK_KIND ::= IDENTIFIER |
2186 Type_Invariant'Class |
2189 The identifiers Name and Policy are not allowed as CHECK_KIND values. This
2190 avoids confusion between the two possible syntax forms for this pragma.
2192 POLICY_IDENTIFIER ::= ON | OFF | CHECK | DISABLE | IGNORE
2195 This pragma is used to set the checking policy for assertions (specified
2196 by aspects or pragmas), the @code{Debug} pragma, or additional checks
2197 to be checked using the @code{Check} pragma. It may appear either as
2198 a configuration pragma, or within a declarative part of package. In the
2199 latter case, it applies from the point where it appears to the end of
2200 the declarative region (like pragma @code{Suppress}).
2202 The @code{Check_Policy} pragma is similar to the
2203 predefined @code{Assertion_Policy} pragma,
2204 and if the check kind corresponds to one of the assertion kinds that
2205 are allowed by @code{Assertion_Policy}, then the effect is identical.
2207 If the first argument is Debug, then the policy applies to Debug pragmas,
2208 disabling their effect if the policy is @code{OFF}, @code{DISABLE}, or
2209 @code{IGNORE}, and allowing them to execute with normal semantics if
2210 the policy is @code{ON} or @code{CHECK}. In addition if the policy is
2211 @code{DISABLE}, then the procedure call in @code{Debug} pragmas will
2212 be totally ignored and not analyzed semantically.
2214 Finally the first argument may be some other identifier than the above
2215 possibilities, in which case it controls a set of named assertions
2216 that can be checked using pragma @code{Check}. For example, if the pragma:
2219 pragma Check_Policy (Critical_Error, OFF);
2222 is given, then subsequent @code{Check} pragmas whose first argument is also
2223 @code{Critical_Error} will be disabled.
2225 The check policy is @code{OFF} to turn off corresponding checks, and @code{ON}
2226 to turn on corresponding checks. The default for a set of checks for which no
2227 @code{Check_Policy} is given is @code{OFF} unless the compiler switch
2228 @emph{-gnata} is given, which turns on all checks by default.
2230 The check policy settings @code{CHECK} and @code{IGNORE} are recognized
2231 as synonyms for @code{ON} and @code{OFF}. These synonyms are provided for
2232 compatibility with the standard @code{Assertion_Policy} pragma. The check
2233 policy setting @code{DISABLE} causes the second argument of a corresponding
2234 @code{Check} pragma to be completely ignored and not analyzed.
2236 @node Pragma Comment,Pragma Common_Object,Pragma Check_Policy,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2237 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-comment}@anchor{36}
2238 @section Pragma Comment
2244 pragma Comment (static_string_EXPRESSION);
2247 This is almost identical in effect to pragma @code{Ident}. It allows the
2248 placement of a comment into the object file and hence into the
2249 executable file if the operating system permits such usage. The
2250 difference is that @code{Comment}, unlike @code{Ident}, has
2251 no limitations on placement of the pragma (it can be placed
2252 anywhere in the main source unit), and if more than one pragma
2253 is used, all comments are retained.
2255 @node Pragma Common_Object,Pragma Compile_Time_Error,Pragma Comment,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2256 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-common-object}@anchor{37}
2257 @section Pragma Common_Object
2263 pragma Common_Object (
2264 [Internal =>] LOCAL_NAME
2265 [, [External =>] EXTERNAL_SYMBOL]
2266 [, [Size =>] EXTERNAL_SYMBOL] );
2270 | static_string_EXPRESSION
2273 This pragma enables the shared use of variables stored in overlaid
2274 linker areas corresponding to the use of @code{COMMON}
2275 in Fortran. The single
2276 object @code{LOCAL_NAME} is assigned to the area designated by
2277 the @code{External} argument.
2278 You may define a record to correspond to a series
2279 of fields. The @code{Size} argument
2280 is syntax checked in GNAT, but otherwise ignored.
2282 @code{Common_Object} is not supported on all platforms. If no
2283 support is available, then the code generator will issue a message
2284 indicating that the necessary attribute for implementation of this
2285 pragma is not available.
2287 @node Pragma Compile_Time_Error,Pragma Compile_Time_Warning,Pragma Common_Object,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2288 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-compile-time-error}@anchor{38}
2289 @section Pragma Compile_Time_Error
2295 pragma Compile_Time_Error
2296 (boolean_EXPRESSION, static_string_EXPRESSION);
2299 This pragma can be used to generate additional compile time
2301 is particularly useful in generics, where errors can be issued for
2302 specific problematic instantiations. The first parameter is a boolean
2303 expression. The pragma is effective only if the value of this expression
2304 is known at compile time, and has the value True. The set of expressions
2305 whose values are known at compile time includes all static boolean
2306 expressions, and also other values which the compiler can determine
2307 at compile time (e.g., the size of a record type set by an explicit
2308 size representation clause, or the value of a variable which was
2309 initialized to a constant and is known not to have been modified).
2310 If these conditions are met, an error message is generated using
2311 the value given as the second argument. This string value may contain
2312 embedded ASCII.LF characters to break the message into multiple lines.
2314 @node Pragma Compile_Time_Warning,Pragma Compiler_Unit,Pragma Compile_Time_Error,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2315 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-compile-time-warning}@anchor{39}
2316 @section Pragma Compile_Time_Warning
2322 pragma Compile_Time_Warning
2323 (boolean_EXPRESSION, static_string_EXPRESSION);
2326 Same as pragma Compile_Time_Error, except a warning is issued instead
2327 of an error message. Note that if this pragma is used in a package that
2328 is with'ed by a client, the client will get the warning even though it
2329 is issued by a with'ed package (normally warnings in with'ed units are
2330 suppressed, but this is a special exception to that rule).
2332 One typical use is within a generic where compile time known characteristics
2333 of formal parameters are tested, and warnings given appropriately. Another use
2334 with a first parameter of True is to warn a client about use of a package,
2335 for example that it is not fully implemented.
2337 @node Pragma Compiler_Unit,Pragma Compiler_Unit_Warning,Pragma Compile_Time_Warning,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2338 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-compiler-unit}@anchor{3a}
2339 @section Pragma Compiler_Unit
2345 pragma Compiler_Unit;
2348 This pragma is obsolete. It is equivalent to Compiler_Unit_Warning. It is
2349 retained so that old versions of the GNAT run-time that use this pragma can
2350 be compiled with newer versions of the compiler.
2352 @node Pragma Compiler_Unit_Warning,Pragma Complete_Representation,Pragma Compiler_Unit,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2353 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-compiler-unit-warning}@anchor{3b}
2354 @section Pragma Compiler_Unit_Warning
2360 pragma Compiler_Unit_Warning;
2363 This pragma is intended only for internal use in the GNAT run-time library.
2364 It indicates that the unit is used as part of the compiler build. The effect
2365 is to generate warnings for the use of constructs (for example, conditional
2366 expressions) that would cause trouble when bootstrapping using an older
2367 version of GNAT. For the exact list of restrictions, see the compiler sources
2368 and references to Check_Compiler_Unit.
2370 @node Pragma Complete_Representation,Pragma Complex_Representation,Pragma Compiler_Unit_Warning,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2371 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-complete-representation}@anchor{3c}
2372 @section Pragma Complete_Representation
2378 pragma Complete_Representation;
2381 This pragma must appear immediately within a record representation
2382 clause. Typical placements are before the first component clause
2383 or after the last component clause. The effect is to give an error
2384 message if any component is missing a component clause. This pragma
2385 may be used to ensure that a record representation clause is
2386 complete, and that this invariant is maintained if fields are
2387 added to the record in the future.
2389 @node Pragma Complex_Representation,Pragma Component_Alignment,Pragma Complete_Representation,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2390 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-complex-representation}@anchor{3d}
2391 @section Pragma Complex_Representation
2397 pragma Complex_Representation
2398 ([Entity =>] LOCAL_NAME);
2401 The @code{Entity} argument must be the name of a record type which has
2402 two fields of the same floating-point type. The effect of this pragma is
2403 to force gcc to use the special internal complex representation form for
2404 this record, which may be more efficient. Note that this may result in
2405 the code for this type not conforming to standard ABI (application
2406 binary interface) requirements for the handling of record types. For
2407 example, in some environments, there is a requirement for passing
2408 records by pointer, and the use of this pragma may result in passing
2409 this type in floating-point registers.
2411 @node Pragma Component_Alignment,Pragma Constant_After_Elaboration,Pragma Complex_Representation,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2412 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-component-alignment}@anchor{3e}
2413 @section Pragma Component_Alignment
2416 @geindex Alignments of components
2418 @geindex Pragma Component_Alignment
2423 pragma Component_Alignment (
2424 [Form =>] ALIGNMENT_CHOICE
2425 [, [Name =>] type_LOCAL_NAME]);
2427 ALIGNMENT_CHOICE ::=
2434 Specifies the alignment of components in array or record types.
2435 The meaning of the @code{Form} argument is as follows:
2439 @geindex Component_Size (in pragma Component_Alignment)
2445 @item @emph{Component_Size}
2447 Aligns scalar components and subcomponents of the array or record type
2448 on boundaries appropriate to their inherent size (naturally
2449 aligned). For example, 1-byte components are aligned on byte boundaries,
2450 2-byte integer components are aligned on 2-byte boundaries, 4-byte
2451 integer components are aligned on 4-byte boundaries and so on. These
2452 alignment rules correspond to the normal rules for C compilers on all
2453 machines except the VAX.
2455 @geindex Component_Size_4 (in pragma Component_Alignment)
2457 @item @emph{Component_Size_4}
2459 Naturally aligns components with a size of four or fewer
2460 bytes. Components that are larger than 4 bytes are placed on the next
2463 @geindex Storage_Unit (in pragma Component_Alignment)
2465 @item @emph{Storage_Unit}
2467 Specifies that array or record components are byte aligned, i.e.,
2468 aligned on boundaries determined by the value of the constant
2469 @code{System.Storage_Unit}.
2471 @geindex Default (in pragma Component_Alignment)
2473 @item @emph{Default}
2475 Specifies that array or record components are aligned on default
2476 boundaries, appropriate to the underlying hardware or operating system or
2477 both. The @code{Default} choice is the same as @code{Component_Size} (natural
2481 If the @code{Name} parameter is present, @code{type_LOCAL_NAME} must
2482 refer to a local record or array type, and the specified alignment
2483 choice applies to the specified type. The use of
2484 @code{Component_Alignment} together with a pragma @code{Pack} causes the
2485 @code{Component_Alignment} pragma to be ignored. The use of
2486 @code{Component_Alignment} together with a record representation clause
2487 is only effective for fields not specified by the representation clause.
2489 If the @code{Name} parameter is absent, the pragma can be used as either
2490 a configuration pragma, in which case it applies to one or more units in
2491 accordance with the normal rules for configuration pragmas, or it can be
2492 used within a declarative part, in which case it applies to types that
2493 are declared within this declarative part, or within any nested scope
2494 within this declarative part. In either case it specifies the alignment
2495 to be applied to any record or array type which has otherwise standard
2498 If the alignment for a record or array type is not specified (using
2499 pragma @code{Pack}, pragma @code{Component_Alignment}, or a record rep
2500 clause), the GNAT uses the default alignment as described previously.
2502 @node Pragma Constant_After_Elaboration,Pragma Contract_Cases,Pragma Component_Alignment,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2503 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id6}@anchor{3f}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-constant-after-elaboration}@anchor{40}
2504 @section Pragma Constant_After_Elaboration
2510 pragma Constant_After_Elaboration [ (boolean_EXPRESSION) ];
2513 For the semantics of this pragma, see the entry for aspect
2514 @code{Constant_After_Elaboration} in the SPARK 2014 Reference Manual, section 3.3.1.
2516 @node Pragma Contract_Cases,Pragma Convention_Identifier,Pragma Constant_After_Elaboration,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2517 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id7}@anchor{41}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-contract-cases}@anchor{42}
2518 @section Pragma Contract_Cases
2521 @geindex Contract cases
2526 pragma Contract_Cases ((CONTRACT_CASE @{, CONTRACT_CASE));
2528 CONTRACT_CASE ::= CASE_GUARD => CONSEQUENCE
2530 CASE_GUARD ::= boolean_EXPRESSION | others
2532 CONSEQUENCE ::= boolean_EXPRESSION
2535 The @code{Contract_Cases} pragma allows defining fine-grain specifications
2536 that can complement or replace the contract given by a precondition and a
2537 postcondition. Additionally, the @code{Contract_Cases} pragma can be used
2538 by testing and formal verification tools. The compiler checks its validity and,
2539 depending on the assertion policy at the point of declaration of the pragma,
2540 it may insert a check in the executable. For code generation, the contract
2544 pragma Contract_Cases (
2552 C1 : constant Boolean := Cond1; -- evaluated at subprogram entry
2553 C2 : constant Boolean := Cond2; -- evaluated at subprogram entry
2554 pragma Precondition ((C1 and not C2) or (C2 and not C1));
2555 pragma Postcondition (if C1 then Pred1);
2556 pragma Postcondition (if C2 then Pred2);
2559 The precondition ensures that one and only one of the case guards is
2560 satisfied on entry to the subprogram.
2561 The postcondition ensures that for the case guard that was True on entry,
2562 the corrresponding consequence is True on exit. Other consequence expressions
2565 A precondition @code{P} and postcondition @code{Q} can also be
2566 expressed as contract cases:
2569 pragma Contract_Cases (P => Q);
2572 The placement and visibility rules for @code{Contract_Cases} pragmas are
2573 identical to those described for preconditions and postconditions.
2575 The compiler checks that boolean expressions given in case guards and
2576 consequences are valid, where the rules for case guards are the same as
2577 the rule for an expression in @code{Precondition} and the rules for
2578 consequences are the same as the rule for an expression in
2579 @code{Postcondition}. In particular, attributes @code{'Old} and
2580 @code{'Result} can only be used within consequence expressions.
2581 The case guard for the last contract case may be @code{others}, to denote
2582 any case not captured by the previous cases. The
2583 following is an example of use within a package spec:
2586 package Math_Functions is
2588 function Sqrt (Arg : Float) return Float;
2589 pragma Contract_Cases (((Arg in 0.0 .. 99.0) => Sqrt'Result < 10.0,
2590 Arg >= 100.0 => Sqrt'Result >= 10.0,
2591 others => Sqrt'Result = 0.0));
2596 The meaning of contract cases is that only one case should apply at each
2597 call, as determined by the corresponding case guard evaluating to True,
2598 and that the consequence for this case should hold when the subprogram
2601 @node Pragma Convention_Identifier,Pragma CPP_Class,Pragma Contract_Cases,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2602 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-convention-identifier}@anchor{43}
2603 @section Pragma Convention_Identifier
2606 @geindex Conventions
2612 pragma Convention_Identifier (
2613 [Name =>] IDENTIFIER,
2614 [Convention =>] convention_IDENTIFIER);
2617 This pragma provides a mechanism for supplying synonyms for existing
2618 convention identifiers. The @code{Name} identifier can subsequently
2619 be used as a synonym for the given convention in other pragmas (including
2620 for example pragma @code{Import} or another @code{Convention_Identifier}
2621 pragma). As an example of the use of this, suppose you had legacy code
2622 which used Fortran77 as the identifier for Fortran. Then the pragma:
2625 pragma Convention_Identifier (Fortran77, Fortran);
2628 would allow the use of the convention identifier @code{Fortran77} in
2629 subsequent code, avoiding the need to modify the sources. As another
2630 example, you could use this to parameterize convention requirements
2631 according to systems. Suppose you needed to use @code{Stdcall} on
2632 windows systems, and @code{C} on some other system, then you could
2633 define a convention identifier @code{Library} and use a single
2634 @code{Convention_Identifier} pragma to specify which convention
2635 would be used system-wide.
2637 @node Pragma CPP_Class,Pragma CPP_Constructor,Pragma Convention_Identifier,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2638 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-cpp-class}@anchor{44}
2639 @section Pragma CPP_Class
2642 @geindex Interfacing with C++
2647 pragma CPP_Class ([Entity =>] LOCAL_NAME);
2650 The argument denotes an entity in the current declarative region that is
2651 declared as a record type. It indicates that the type corresponds to an
2652 externally declared C++ class type, and is to be laid out the same way
2653 that C++ would lay out the type. If the C++ class has virtual primitives
2654 then the record must be declared as a tagged record type.
2656 Types for which @code{CPP_Class} is specified do not have assignment or
2657 equality operators defined (such operations can be imported or declared
2658 as subprograms as required). Initialization is allowed only by constructor
2659 functions (see pragma @code{CPP_Constructor}). Such types are implicitly
2660 limited if not explicitly declared as limited or derived from a limited
2661 type, and an error is issued in that case.
2663 See @ref{45,,Interfacing to C++} for related information.
2665 Note: Pragma @code{CPP_Class} is currently obsolete. It is supported
2666 for backward compatibility but its functionality is available
2667 using pragma @code{Import} with @code{Convention} = @code{CPP}.
2669 @node Pragma CPP_Constructor,Pragma CPP_Virtual,Pragma CPP_Class,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2670 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-cpp-constructor}@anchor{46}
2671 @section Pragma CPP_Constructor
2674 @geindex Interfacing with C++
2679 pragma CPP_Constructor ([Entity =>] LOCAL_NAME
2680 [, [External_Name =>] static_string_EXPRESSION ]
2681 [, [Link_Name =>] static_string_EXPRESSION ]);
2684 This pragma identifies an imported function (imported in the usual way
2685 with pragma @code{Import}) as corresponding to a C++ constructor. If
2686 @code{External_Name} and @code{Link_Name} are not specified then the
2687 @code{Entity} argument is a name that must have been previously mentioned
2688 in a pragma @code{Import} with @code{Convention} = @code{CPP}. Such name
2689 must be of one of the following forms:
2695 @strong{function} @code{Fname} @strong{return} T`
2698 @strong{function} @code{Fname} @strong{return} T'Class
2701 @strong{function} @code{Fname} (...) @strong{return} T`
2704 @strong{function} @code{Fname} (...) @strong{return} T'Class
2707 where @code{T} is a limited record type imported from C++ with pragma
2708 @code{Import} and @code{Convention} = @code{CPP}.
2710 The first two forms import the default constructor, used when an object
2711 of type @code{T} is created on the Ada side with no explicit constructor.
2712 The latter two forms cover all the non-default constructors of the type.
2713 See the GNAT User's Guide for details.
2715 If no constructors are imported, it is impossible to create any objects
2716 on the Ada side and the type is implicitly declared abstract.
2718 Pragma @code{CPP_Constructor} is intended primarily for automatic generation
2719 using an automatic binding generator tool (such as the @code{-fdump-ada-spec}
2721 See @ref{45,,Interfacing to C++} for more related information.
2723 Note: The use of functions returning class-wide types for constructors is
2724 currently obsolete. They are supported for backward compatibility. The
2725 use of functions returning the type T leave the Ada sources more clear
2726 because the imported C++ constructors always return an object of type T;
2727 that is, they never return an object whose type is a descendant of type T.
2729 @node Pragma CPP_Virtual,Pragma CPP_Vtable,Pragma CPP_Constructor,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2730 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-cpp-virtual}@anchor{47}
2731 @section Pragma CPP_Virtual
2734 @geindex Interfacing to C++
2736 This pragma is now obsolete and, other than generating a warning if warnings
2737 on obsolescent features are enabled, is completely ignored.
2738 It is retained for compatibility
2739 purposes. It used to be required to ensure compoatibility with C++, but
2740 is no longer required for that purpose because GNAT generates
2741 the same object layout as the G++ compiler by default.
2743 See @ref{45,,Interfacing to C++} for related information.
2745 @node Pragma CPP_Vtable,Pragma CPU,Pragma CPP_Virtual,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2746 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-cpp-vtable}@anchor{48}
2747 @section Pragma CPP_Vtable
2750 @geindex Interfacing with C++
2752 This pragma is now obsolete and, other than generating a warning if warnings
2753 on obsolescent features are enabled, is completely ignored.
2754 It used to be required to ensure compatibility with C++, but
2755 is no longer required for that purpose because GNAT generates
2756 the same object layout as the G++ compiler by default.
2758 See @ref{45,,Interfacing to C++} for related information.
2760 @node Pragma CPU,Pragma Deadline_Floor,Pragma CPP_Vtable,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2761 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-cpu}@anchor{49}
2768 pragma CPU (EXPRESSION);
2771 This pragma is standard in Ada 2012, but is available in all earlier
2772 versions of Ada as an implementation-defined pragma.
2773 See Ada 2012 Reference Manual for details.
2775 @node Pragma Deadline_Floor,Pragma Default_Initial_Condition,Pragma CPU,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2776 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-deadline-floor}@anchor{4a}
2777 @section Pragma Deadline_Floor
2783 pragma Deadline_Floor (time_span_EXPRESSION);
2786 This pragma applies only to protected types and specifies the floor
2787 deadline inherited by a task when the task enters a protected object.
2788 It is effective only when the EDF scheduling policy is used.
2790 @node Pragma Default_Initial_Condition,Pragma Debug,Pragma Deadline_Floor,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2791 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id8}@anchor{4b}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-default-initial-condition}@anchor{4c}
2792 @section Pragma Default_Initial_Condition
2798 pragma Default_Initial_Condition [ (null | boolean_EXPRESSION) ];
2801 For the semantics of this pragma, see the entry for aspect
2802 @code{Default_Initial_Condition} in the SPARK 2014 Reference Manual, section 7.3.3.
2804 @node Pragma Debug,Pragma Debug_Policy,Pragma Default_Initial_Condition,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2805 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-debug}@anchor{4d}
2806 @section Pragma Debug
2812 pragma Debug ([CONDITION, ]PROCEDURE_CALL_WITHOUT_SEMICOLON);
2814 PROCEDURE_CALL_WITHOUT_SEMICOLON ::=
2816 | PROCEDURE_PREFIX ACTUAL_PARAMETER_PART
2819 The procedure call argument has the syntactic form of an expression, meeting
2820 the syntactic requirements for pragmas.
2822 If debug pragmas are not enabled or if the condition is present and evaluates
2823 to False, this pragma has no effect. If debug pragmas are enabled, the
2824 semantics of the pragma is exactly equivalent to the procedure call statement
2825 corresponding to the argument with a terminating semicolon. Pragmas are
2826 permitted in sequences of declarations, so you can use pragma @code{Debug} to
2827 intersperse calls to debug procedures in the middle of declarations. Debug
2828 pragmas can be enabled either by use of the command line switch @emph{-gnata}
2829 or by use of the pragma @code{Check_Policy} with a first argument of
2832 @node Pragma Debug_Policy,Pragma Default_Scalar_Storage_Order,Pragma Debug,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2833 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-debug-policy}@anchor{4e}
2834 @section Pragma Debug_Policy
2840 pragma Debug_Policy (CHECK | DISABLE | IGNORE | ON | OFF);
2843 This pragma is equivalent to a corresponding @code{Check_Policy} pragma
2844 with a first argument of @code{Debug}. It is retained for historical
2845 compatibility reasons.
2847 @node Pragma Default_Scalar_Storage_Order,Pragma Default_Storage_Pool,Pragma Debug_Policy,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2848 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-default-scalar-storage-order}@anchor{4f}
2849 @section Pragma Default_Scalar_Storage_Order
2852 @geindex Default_Scalar_Storage_Order
2854 @geindex Scalar_Storage_Order
2859 pragma Default_Scalar_Storage_Order (High_Order_First | Low_Order_First);
2862 Normally if no explicit @code{Scalar_Storage_Order} is given for a record
2863 type or array type, then the scalar storage order defaults to the ordinary
2864 default for the target. But this default may be overridden using this pragma.
2865 The pragma may appear as a configuration pragma, or locally within a package
2866 spec or declarative part. In the latter case, it applies to all subsequent
2867 types declared within that package spec or declarative part.
2869 The following example shows the use of this pragma:
2872 pragma Default_Scalar_Storage_Order (High_Order_First);
2873 with System; use System;
2882 for L2'Scalar_Storage_Order use Low_Order_First;
2891 pragma Default_Scalar_Storage_Order (Low_Order_First);
2898 type H4a is new Inner.L4;
2906 In this example record types with names starting with @emph{L} have @cite{Low_Order_First} scalar
2907 storage order, and record types with names starting with @emph{H} have @code{High_Order_First}.
2908 Note that in the case of @code{H4a}, the order is not inherited
2909 from the parent type. Only an explicitly set @code{Scalar_Storage_Order}
2910 gets inherited on type derivation.
2912 If this pragma is used as a configuration pragma which appears within a
2913 configuration pragma file (as opposed to appearing explicitly at the start
2914 of a single unit), then the binder will require that all units in a partition
2915 be compiled in a similar manner, other than run-time units, which are not
2916 affected by this pragma. Note that the use of this form is discouraged because
2917 it may significantly degrade the run-time performance of the software, instead
2918 the default scalar storage order ought to be changed only on a local basis.
2920 @node Pragma Default_Storage_Pool,Pragma Depends,Pragma Default_Scalar_Storage_Order,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2921 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-default-storage-pool}@anchor{50}
2922 @section Pragma Default_Storage_Pool
2925 @geindex Default_Storage_Pool
2930 pragma Default_Storage_Pool (storage_pool_NAME | null);
2933 This pragma is standard in Ada 2012, but is available in all earlier
2934 versions of Ada as an implementation-defined pragma.
2935 See Ada 2012 Reference Manual for details.
2937 @node Pragma Depends,Pragma Detect_Blocking,Pragma Default_Storage_Pool,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2938 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-depends}@anchor{51}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id9}@anchor{52}
2939 @section Pragma Depends
2945 pragma Depends (DEPENDENCY_RELATION);
2947 DEPENDENCY_RELATION ::=
2949 | (DEPENDENCY_CLAUSE @{, DEPENDENCY_CLAUSE@})
2951 DEPENDENCY_CLAUSE ::=
2952 OUTPUT_LIST =>[+] INPUT_LIST
2953 | NULL_DEPENDENCY_CLAUSE
2955 NULL_DEPENDENCY_CLAUSE ::= null => INPUT_LIST
2957 OUTPUT_LIST ::= OUTPUT | (OUTPUT @{, OUTPUT@})
2959 INPUT_LIST ::= null | INPUT | (INPUT @{, INPUT@})
2961 OUTPUT ::= NAME | FUNCTION_RESULT
2964 where FUNCTION_RESULT is a function Result attribute_reference
2967 For the semantics of this pragma, see the entry for aspect @code{Depends} in the
2968 SPARK 2014 Reference Manual, section 6.1.5.
2970 @node Pragma Detect_Blocking,Pragma Disable_Atomic_Synchronization,Pragma Depends,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2971 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-detect-blocking}@anchor{53}
2972 @section Pragma Detect_Blocking
2978 pragma Detect_Blocking;
2981 This is a standard pragma in Ada 2005, that is available in all earlier
2982 versions of Ada as an implementation-defined pragma.
2984 This is a configuration pragma that forces the detection of potentially
2985 blocking operations within a protected operation, and to raise Program_Error
2988 @node Pragma Disable_Atomic_Synchronization,Pragma Dispatching_Domain,Pragma Detect_Blocking,Implementation Defined Pragmas
2989 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-disable-atomic-synchronization}@anchor{54}
2990 @section Pragma Disable_Atomic_Synchronization
2993 @geindex Atomic Synchronization
2998 pragma Disable_Atomic_Synchronization [(Entity)];
3001 Ada requires that accesses (reads or writes) of an atomic variable be
3002 regarded as synchronization points in the case of multiple tasks.
3003 Particularly in the case of multi-processors this may require special
3004 handling, e.g. the generation of memory barriers. This capability may
3005 be turned off using this pragma in cases where it is known not to be
3008 The placement and scope rules for this pragma are the same as those
3009 for @code{pragma Suppress}. In particular it can be used as a
3010 configuration pragma, or in a declaration sequence where it applies
3011 till the end of the scope. If an @code{Entity} argument is present,
3012 the action applies only to that entity.
3014 @node Pragma Dispatching_Domain,Pragma Effective_Reads,Pragma Disable_Atomic_Synchronization,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3015 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-dispatching-domain}@anchor{55}
3016 @section Pragma Dispatching_Domain
3022 pragma Dispatching_Domain (EXPRESSION);
3025 This pragma is standard in Ada 2012, but is available in all earlier
3026 versions of Ada as an implementation-defined pragma.
3027 See Ada 2012 Reference Manual for details.
3029 @node Pragma Effective_Reads,Pragma Effective_Writes,Pragma Dispatching_Domain,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3030 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id10}@anchor{56}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-effective-reads}@anchor{57}
3031 @section Pragma Effective_Reads
3037 pragma Effective_Reads [ (boolean_EXPRESSION) ];
3040 For the semantics of this pragma, see the entry for aspect @code{Effective_Reads} in
3041 the SPARK 2014 Reference Manual, section 7.1.2.
3043 @node Pragma Effective_Writes,Pragma Elaboration_Checks,Pragma Effective_Reads,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3044 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id11}@anchor{58}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-effective-writes}@anchor{59}
3045 @section Pragma Effective_Writes
3051 pragma Effective_Writes [ (boolean_EXPRESSION) ];
3054 For the semantics of this pragma, see the entry for aspect @code{Effective_Writes}
3055 in the SPARK 2014 Reference Manual, section 7.1.2.
3057 @node Pragma Elaboration_Checks,Pragma Eliminate,Pragma Effective_Writes,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3058 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-elaboration-checks}@anchor{5a}
3059 @section Pragma Elaboration_Checks
3062 @geindex Elaboration control
3067 pragma Elaboration_Checks (Dynamic | Static);
3070 This is a configuration pragma which specifies the elaboration model to be
3071 used during compilation. For more information on the elaboration models of
3072 GNAT, consult the chapter on elaboration order handling in the @emph{GNAT User's
3075 The pragma may appear in the following contexts:
3081 Configuration pragmas file
3084 Prior to the context clauses of a compilation unit's initial declaration
3087 Any other placement of the pragma will result in a warning and the effects of
3088 the offending pragma will be ignored.
3090 If the pragma argument is @code{Dynamic}, then the dynamic elaboration model is in
3091 effect. If the pragma argument is @code{Static}, then the static elaboration model
3094 @node Pragma Eliminate,Pragma Enable_Atomic_Synchronization,Pragma Elaboration_Checks,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3095 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-eliminate}@anchor{5b}
3096 @section Pragma Eliminate
3099 @geindex Elimination of unused subprograms
3105 [ Unit_Name => ] IDENTIFIER | SELECTED_COMPONENT ,
3106 [ Entity => ] IDENTIFIER |
3107 SELECTED_COMPONENT |
3109 [, Source_Location => SOURCE_TRACE ] );
3111 SOURCE_TRACE ::= STRING_LITERAL
3114 This pragma indicates that the given entity is not used in the program to be
3115 compiled and built, thus allowing the compiler to
3116 eliminate the code or data associated with the named entity. Any reference to
3117 an eliminated entity causes a compile-time or link-time error.
3119 The pragma has the following semantics, where @code{U} is the unit specified by
3120 the @code{Unit_Name} argument and @code{E} is the entity specified by the @code{Entity}
3127 @code{E} must be a subprogram that is explicitly declared either:
3129 o Within @code{U}, or
3131 o Within a generic package that is instantiated in @code{U}, or
3133 o As an instance of generic subprogram instantiated in @code{U}.
3135 Otherwise the pragma is ignored.
3138 If @code{E} is overloaded within @code{U} then, in the absence of a
3139 @code{Source_Location} argument, all overloadings are eliminated.
3142 If @code{E} is overloaded within @code{U} and only some overloadings
3143 are to be eliminated, then each overloading to be eliminated
3144 must be specified in a corresponding pragma @code{Eliminate}
3145 with a @code{Source_Location} argument identifying the line where the
3146 declaration appears, as described below.
3149 If @code{E} is declared as the result of a generic instantiation, then
3150 a @code{Source_Location} argument is needed, as described below
3153 Pragma @code{Eliminate} allows a program to be compiled in a system-independent
3154 manner, so that unused entities are eliminated but without
3155 needing to modify the source text. Normally the required set of
3156 @code{Eliminate} pragmas is constructed automatically using the @code{gnatelim} tool.
3158 Any source file change that removes, splits, or
3159 adds lines may make the set of @code{Eliminate} pragmas invalid because their
3160 @code{Source_Location} argument values may get out of date.
3162 Pragma @code{Eliminate} may be used where the referenced entity is a dispatching
3163 operation. In this case all the subprograms to which the given operation can
3164 dispatch are considered to be unused (are never called as a result of a direct
3165 or a dispatching call).
3167 The string literal given for the source location specifies the line number
3168 of the declaration of the entity, using the following syntax for @code{SOURCE_TRACE}:
3171 SOURCE_TRACE ::= SOURCE_REFERENCE [ LBRACKET SOURCE_TRACE RBRACKET ]
3176 SOURCE_REFERENCE ::= FILE_NAME : LINE_NUMBER
3178 LINE_NUMBER ::= DIGIT @{DIGIT@}
3181 Spaces around the colon in a @code{SOURCE_REFERENCE} are optional.
3183 The source trace that is given as the @code{Source_Location} must obey the
3184 following rules (or else the pragma is ignored), where @code{U} is
3185 the unit @code{U} specified by the @code{Unit_Name} argument and @code{E} is the
3186 subprogram specified by the @code{Entity} argument:
3192 @code{FILE_NAME} is the short name (with no directory
3193 information) of the Ada source file for @code{U}, using the required syntax
3194 for the underlying file system (e.g. case is significant if the underlying
3195 operating system is case sensitive).
3196 If @code{U} is a package and @code{E} is a subprogram declared in the package
3197 specification and its full declaration appears in the package body,
3198 then the relevant source file is the one for the package specification;
3199 analogously if @code{U} is a generic package.
3202 If @code{E} is not declared in a generic instantiation (this includes
3203 generic subprogram instances), the source trace includes only one source
3204 line reference. @code{LINE_NUMBER} gives the line number of the occurrence
3205 of the declaration of @code{E} within the source file (as a decimal literal
3206 without an exponent or point).
3209 If @code{E} is declared by a generic instantiation, its source trace
3210 (from left to right) starts with the source location of the
3211 declaration of @code{E} in the generic unit and ends with the source
3212 location of the instantiation, given in square brackets. This approach is
3213 applied recursively with nested instantiations: the rightmost (nested
3214 most deeply in square brackets) element of the source trace is the location
3215 of the outermost instantiation, and the leftmost element (that is, outside
3216 of any square brackets) is the location of the declaration of @code{E} in
3225 pragma Eliminate (Pkg0, Proc);
3226 -- Eliminate (all overloadings of) Proc in Pkg0
3228 pragma Eliminate (Pkg1, Proc,
3229 Source_Location => "pkg1.ads:8");
3230 -- Eliminate overloading of Proc at line 8 in pkg1.ads
3232 -- Assume the following file contents:
3235 -- 2: type T is private;
3236 -- 3: package Gen_Pkg is
3237 -- 4: procedure Proc(N : T);
3243 -- 2: procedure Q is
3244 -- 3: package Inst_Pkg is new Gen_Pkg(Integer);
3245 -- ... -- No calls on Inst_Pkg.Proc
3248 -- The following pragma eliminates Inst_Pkg.Proc from Q
3249 pragma Eliminate (Q, Proc,
3250 Source_Location => "gen_pkg.ads:4[q.adb:3]");
3254 @node Pragma Enable_Atomic_Synchronization,Pragma Export_Function,Pragma Eliminate,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3255 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-enable-atomic-synchronization}@anchor{5c}
3256 @section Pragma Enable_Atomic_Synchronization
3259 @geindex Atomic Synchronization
3264 pragma Enable_Atomic_Synchronization [(Entity)];
3267 Ada requires that accesses (reads or writes) of an atomic variable be
3268 regarded as synchronization points in the case of multiple tasks.
3269 Particularly in the case of multi-processors this may require special
3270 handling, e.g. the generation of memory barriers. This synchronization
3271 is performed by default, but can be turned off using
3272 @code{pragma Disable_Atomic_Synchronization}. The
3273 @code{Enable_Atomic_Synchronization} pragma can be used to turn
3276 The placement and scope rules for this pragma are the same as those
3277 for @code{pragma Unsuppress}. In particular it can be used as a
3278 configuration pragma, or in a declaration sequence where it applies
3279 till the end of the scope. If an @code{Entity} argument is present,
3280 the action applies only to that entity.
3282 @node Pragma Export_Function,Pragma Export_Object,Pragma Enable_Atomic_Synchronization,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3283 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-export-function}@anchor{5d}
3284 @section Pragma Export_Function
3287 @geindex Argument passing mechanisms
3292 pragma Export_Function (
3293 [Internal =>] LOCAL_NAME
3294 [, [External =>] EXTERNAL_SYMBOL]
3295 [, [Parameter_Types =>] PARAMETER_TYPES]
3296 [, [Result_Type =>] result_SUBTYPE_MARK]
3297 [, [Mechanism =>] MECHANISM]
3298 [, [Result_Mechanism =>] MECHANISM_NAME]);
3302 | static_string_EXPRESSION
3307 | TYPE_DESIGNATOR @{, TYPE_DESIGNATOR@}
3311 | subtype_Name ' Access
3315 | (MECHANISM_ASSOCIATION @{, MECHANISM_ASSOCIATION@})
3317 MECHANISM_ASSOCIATION ::=
3318 [formal_parameter_NAME =>] MECHANISM_NAME
3320 MECHANISM_NAME ::= Value | Reference
3323 Use this pragma to make a function externally callable and optionally
3324 provide information on mechanisms to be used for passing parameter and
3325 result values. We recommend, for the purposes of improving portability,
3326 this pragma always be used in conjunction with a separate pragma
3327 @code{Export}, which must precede the pragma @code{Export_Function}.
3328 GNAT does not require a separate pragma @code{Export}, but if none is
3329 present, @code{Convention Ada} is assumed, which is usually
3330 not what is wanted, so it is usually appropriate to use this
3331 pragma in conjunction with a @code{Export} or @code{Convention}
3332 pragma that specifies the desired foreign convention.
3333 Pragma @code{Export_Function}
3334 (and @code{Export}, if present) must appear in the same declarative
3335 region as the function to which they apply.
3337 The @code{internal_name} must uniquely designate the function to which the
3338 pragma applies. If more than one function name exists of this name in
3339 the declarative part you must use the @code{Parameter_Types} and
3340 @code{Result_Type} parameters to achieve the required
3341 unique designation. The @cite{subtype_mark}s in these parameters must
3342 exactly match the subtypes in the corresponding function specification,
3343 using positional notation to match parameters with subtype marks.
3344 The form with an @code{'Access} attribute can be used to match an
3345 anonymous access parameter.
3347 @geindex Suppressing external name
3349 Special treatment is given if the EXTERNAL is an explicit null
3350 string or a static string expressions that evaluates to the null
3351 string. In this case, no external name is generated. This form
3352 still allows the specification of parameter mechanisms.
3354 @node Pragma Export_Object,Pragma Export_Procedure,Pragma Export_Function,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3355 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-export-object}@anchor{5e}
3356 @section Pragma Export_Object
3362 pragma Export_Object
3363 [Internal =>] LOCAL_NAME
3364 [, [External =>] EXTERNAL_SYMBOL]
3365 [, [Size =>] EXTERNAL_SYMBOL]
3369 | static_string_EXPRESSION
3372 This pragma designates an object as exported, and apart from the
3373 extended rules for external symbols, is identical in effect to the use of
3374 the normal @code{Export} pragma applied to an object. You may use a
3375 separate Export pragma (and you probably should from the point of view
3376 of portability), but it is not required. @code{Size} is syntax checked,
3377 but otherwise ignored by GNAT.
3379 @node Pragma Export_Procedure,Pragma Export_Value,Pragma Export_Object,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3380 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-export-procedure}@anchor{5f}
3381 @section Pragma Export_Procedure
3387 pragma Export_Procedure (
3388 [Internal =>] LOCAL_NAME
3389 [, [External =>] EXTERNAL_SYMBOL]
3390 [, [Parameter_Types =>] PARAMETER_TYPES]
3391 [, [Mechanism =>] MECHANISM]);
3395 | static_string_EXPRESSION
3400 | TYPE_DESIGNATOR @{, TYPE_DESIGNATOR@}
3404 | subtype_Name ' Access
3408 | (MECHANISM_ASSOCIATION @{, MECHANISM_ASSOCIATION@})
3410 MECHANISM_ASSOCIATION ::=
3411 [formal_parameter_NAME =>] MECHANISM_NAME
3413 MECHANISM_NAME ::= Value | Reference
3416 This pragma is identical to @code{Export_Function} except that it
3417 applies to a procedure rather than a function and the parameters
3418 @code{Result_Type} and @code{Result_Mechanism} are not permitted.
3419 GNAT does not require a separate pragma @code{Export}, but if none is
3420 present, @code{Convention Ada} is assumed, which is usually
3421 not what is wanted, so it is usually appropriate to use this
3422 pragma in conjunction with a @code{Export} or @code{Convention}
3423 pragma that specifies the desired foreign convention.
3425 @geindex Suppressing external name
3427 Special treatment is given if the EXTERNAL is an explicit null
3428 string or a static string expressions that evaluates to the null
3429 string. In this case, no external name is generated. This form
3430 still allows the specification of parameter mechanisms.
3432 @node Pragma Export_Value,Pragma Export_Valued_Procedure,Pragma Export_Procedure,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3433 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-export-value}@anchor{60}
3434 @section Pragma Export_Value
3440 pragma Export_Value (
3441 [Value =>] static_integer_EXPRESSION,
3442 [Link_Name =>] static_string_EXPRESSION);
3445 This pragma serves to export a static integer value for external use.
3446 The first argument specifies the value to be exported. The Link_Name
3447 argument specifies the symbolic name to be associated with the integer
3448 value. This pragma is useful for defining a named static value in Ada
3449 that can be referenced in assembly language units to be linked with
3450 the application. This pragma is currently supported only for the
3451 AAMP target and is ignored for other targets.
3453 @node Pragma Export_Valued_Procedure,Pragma Extend_System,Pragma Export_Value,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3454 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-export-valued-procedure}@anchor{61}
3455 @section Pragma Export_Valued_Procedure
3461 pragma Export_Valued_Procedure (
3462 [Internal =>] LOCAL_NAME
3463 [, [External =>] EXTERNAL_SYMBOL]
3464 [, [Parameter_Types =>] PARAMETER_TYPES]
3465 [, [Mechanism =>] MECHANISM]);
3469 | static_string_EXPRESSION
3474 | TYPE_DESIGNATOR @{, TYPE_DESIGNATOR@}
3478 | subtype_Name ' Access
3482 | (MECHANISM_ASSOCIATION @{, MECHANISM_ASSOCIATION@})
3484 MECHANISM_ASSOCIATION ::=
3485 [formal_parameter_NAME =>] MECHANISM_NAME
3487 MECHANISM_NAME ::= Value | Reference
3490 This pragma is identical to @code{Export_Procedure} except that the
3491 first parameter of @code{LOCAL_NAME}, which must be present, must be of
3492 mode @code{out}, and externally the subprogram is treated as a function
3493 with this parameter as the result of the function. GNAT provides for
3494 this capability to allow the use of @code{out} and @code{in out}
3495 parameters in interfacing to external functions (which are not permitted
3497 GNAT does not require a separate pragma @code{Export}, but if none is
3498 present, @code{Convention Ada} is assumed, which is almost certainly
3499 not what is wanted since the whole point of this pragma is to interface
3500 with foreign language functions, so it is usually appropriate to use this
3501 pragma in conjunction with a @code{Export} or @code{Convention}
3502 pragma that specifies the desired foreign convention.
3504 @geindex Suppressing external name
3506 Special treatment is given if the EXTERNAL is an explicit null
3507 string or a static string expressions that evaluates to the null
3508 string. In this case, no external name is generated. This form
3509 still allows the specification of parameter mechanisms.
3511 @node Pragma Extend_System,Pragma Extensions_Allowed,Pragma Export_Valued_Procedure,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3512 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-extend-system}@anchor{62}
3513 @section Pragma Extend_System
3524 pragma Extend_System ([Name =>] IDENTIFIER);
3527 This pragma is used to provide backwards compatibility with other
3528 implementations that extend the facilities of package @code{System}. In
3529 GNAT, @code{System} contains only the definitions that are present in
3530 the Ada RM. However, other implementations, notably the DEC Ada 83
3531 implementation, provide many extensions to package @code{System}.
3533 For each such implementation accommodated by this pragma, GNAT provides a
3534 package @code{Aux_@emph{xxx}}, e.g., @code{Aux_DEC} for the DEC Ada 83
3535 implementation, which provides the required additional definitions. You
3536 can use this package in two ways. You can @code{with} it in the normal
3537 way and access entities either by selection or using a @code{use}
3538 clause. In this case no special processing is required.
3540 However, if existing code contains references such as
3541 @code{System.@emph{xxx}} where @emph{xxx} is an entity in the extended
3542 definitions provided in package @code{System}, you may use this pragma
3543 to extend visibility in @code{System} in a non-standard way that
3544 provides greater compatibility with the existing code. Pragma
3545 @code{Extend_System} is a configuration pragma whose single argument is
3546 the name of the package containing the extended definition
3547 (e.g., @code{Aux_DEC} for the DEC Ada case). A unit compiled under
3548 control of this pragma will be processed using special visibility
3549 processing that looks in package @code{System.Aux_@emph{xxx}} where
3550 @code{Aux_@emph{xxx}} is the pragma argument for any entity referenced in
3551 package @code{System}, but not found in package @code{System}.
3553 You can use this pragma either to access a predefined @code{System}
3554 extension supplied with the compiler, for example @code{Aux_DEC} or
3555 you can construct your own extension unit following the above
3556 definition. Note that such a package is a child of @code{System}
3557 and thus is considered part of the implementation.
3558 To compile it you will have to use the @emph{-gnatg} switch
3559 for compiling System units, as explained in the
3562 @node Pragma Extensions_Allowed,Pragma Extensions_Visible,Pragma Extend_System,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3563 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-extensions-allowed}@anchor{63}
3564 @section Pragma Extensions_Allowed
3567 @geindex Ada Extensions
3569 @geindex GNAT Extensions
3574 pragma Extensions_Allowed (On | Off);
3577 This configuration pragma enables or disables the implementation
3578 extension mode (the use of Off as a parameter cancels the effect
3579 of the @emph{-gnatX} command switch).
3581 In extension mode, the latest version of the Ada language is
3582 implemented (currently Ada 2012), and in addition a small number
3583 of GNAT specific extensions are recognized as follows:
3588 @item @emph{Constrained attribute for generic objects}
3590 The @code{Constrained} attribute is permitted for objects of
3591 generic types. The result indicates if the corresponding actual
3595 @node Pragma Extensions_Visible,Pragma External,Pragma Extensions_Allowed,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3596 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id12}@anchor{64}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-extensions-visible}@anchor{65}
3597 @section Pragma Extensions_Visible
3603 pragma Extensions_Visible [ (boolean_EXPRESSION) ];
3606 For the semantics of this pragma, see the entry for aspect @code{Extensions_Visible}
3607 in the SPARK 2014 Reference Manual, section 6.1.7.
3609 @node Pragma External,Pragma External_Name_Casing,Pragma Extensions_Visible,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3610 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-external}@anchor{66}
3611 @section Pragma External
3618 [ Convention =>] convention_IDENTIFIER,
3619 [ Entity =>] LOCAL_NAME
3620 [, [External_Name =>] static_string_EXPRESSION ]
3621 [, [Link_Name =>] static_string_EXPRESSION ]);
3624 This pragma is identical in syntax and semantics to pragma
3625 @code{Export} as defined in the Ada Reference Manual. It is
3626 provided for compatibility with some Ada 83 compilers that
3627 used this pragma for exactly the same purposes as pragma
3628 @code{Export} before the latter was standardized.
3630 @node Pragma External_Name_Casing,Pragma Fast_Math,Pragma External,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3631 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-external-name-casing}@anchor{67}
3632 @section Pragma External_Name_Casing
3635 @geindex Dec Ada 83 casing compatibility
3637 @geindex External Names
3640 @geindex Casing of External names
3645 pragma External_Name_Casing (
3646 Uppercase | Lowercase
3647 [, Uppercase | Lowercase | As_Is]);
3650 This pragma provides control over the casing of external names associated
3651 with Import and Export pragmas. There are two cases to consider:
3657 Implicit external names
3659 Implicit external names are derived from identifiers. The most common case
3660 arises when a standard Ada Import or Export pragma is used with only two
3664 pragma Import (C, C_Routine);
3667 Since Ada is a case-insensitive language, the spelling of the identifier in
3668 the Ada source program does not provide any information on the desired
3669 casing of the external name, and so a convention is needed. In GNAT the
3670 default treatment is that such names are converted to all lower case
3671 letters. This corresponds to the normal C style in many environments.
3672 The first argument of pragma @code{External_Name_Casing} can be used to
3673 control this treatment. If @code{Uppercase} is specified, then the name
3674 will be forced to all uppercase letters. If @code{Lowercase} is specified,
3675 then the normal default of all lower case letters will be used.
3677 This same implicit treatment is also used in the case of extended DEC Ada 83
3678 compatible Import and Export pragmas where an external name is explicitly
3679 specified using an identifier rather than a string.
3682 Explicit external names
3684 Explicit external names are given as string literals. The most common case
3685 arises when a standard Ada Import or Export pragma is used with three
3689 pragma Import (C, C_Routine, "C_routine");
3692 In this case, the string literal normally provides the exact casing required
3693 for the external name. The second argument of pragma
3694 @code{External_Name_Casing} may be used to modify this behavior.
3695 If @code{Uppercase} is specified, then the name
3696 will be forced to all uppercase letters. If @code{Lowercase} is specified,
3697 then the name will be forced to all lowercase letters. A specification of
3698 @code{As_Is} provides the normal default behavior in which the casing is
3699 taken from the string provided.
3702 This pragma may appear anywhere that a pragma is valid. In particular, it
3703 can be used as a configuration pragma in the @code{gnat.adc} file, in which
3704 case it applies to all subsequent compilations, or it can be used as a program
3705 unit pragma, in which case it only applies to the current unit, or it can
3706 be used more locally to control individual Import/Export pragmas.
3708 It was primarily intended for use with OpenVMS systems, where many
3709 compilers convert all symbols to upper case by default. For interfacing to
3710 such compilers (e.g., the DEC C compiler), it may be convenient to use
3714 pragma External_Name_Casing (Uppercase, Uppercase);
3717 to enforce the upper casing of all external symbols.
3719 @node Pragma Fast_Math,Pragma Favor_Top_Level,Pragma External_Name_Casing,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3720 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-fast-math}@anchor{68}
3721 @section Pragma Fast_Math
3730 This is a configuration pragma which activates a mode in which speed is
3731 considered more important for floating-point operations than absolutely
3732 accurate adherence to the requirements of the standard. Currently the
3733 following operations are affected:
3738 @item @emph{Complex Multiplication}
3740 The normal simple formula for complex multiplication can result in intermediate
3741 overflows for numbers near the end of the range. The Ada standard requires that
3742 this situation be detected and corrected by scaling, but in Fast_Math mode such
3743 cases will simply result in overflow. Note that to take advantage of this you
3744 must instantiate your own version of @code{Ada.Numerics.Generic_Complex_Types}
3745 under control of the pragma, rather than use the preinstantiated versions.
3748 @node Pragma Favor_Top_Level,Pragma Finalize_Storage_Only,Pragma Fast_Math,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3749 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id13}@anchor{69}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-favor-top-level}@anchor{6a}
3750 @section Pragma Favor_Top_Level
3756 pragma Favor_Top_Level (type_NAME);
3759 The argument of pragma @code{Favor_Top_Level} must be a named access-to-subprogram
3760 type. This pragma is an efficiency hint to the compiler, regarding the use of
3761 @code{'Access} or @code{'Unrestricted_Access} on nested (non-library-level) subprograms.
3762 The pragma means that nested subprograms are not used with this type, or are
3763 rare, so that the generated code should be efficient in the top-level case.
3764 When this pragma is used, dynamically generated trampolines may be used on some
3765 targets for nested subprograms. See restriction @code{No_Implicit_Dynamic_Code}.
3767 @node Pragma Finalize_Storage_Only,Pragma Float_Representation,Pragma Favor_Top_Level,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3768 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-finalize-storage-only}@anchor{6b}
3769 @section Pragma Finalize_Storage_Only
3775 pragma Finalize_Storage_Only (first_subtype_LOCAL_NAME);
3778 The argument of pragma @code{Finalize_Storage_Only} must denote a local type which
3779 is derived from @code{Ada.Finalization.Controlled} or @code{Limited_Controlled}. The
3780 pragma suppresses the call to @code{Finalize} for declared library-level objects
3781 of the argument type. This is mostly useful for types where finalization is
3782 only used to deal with storage reclamation since in most environments it is
3783 not necessary to reclaim memory just before terminating execution, hence the
3784 name. Note that this pragma does not suppress Finalize calls for library-level
3785 heap-allocated objects (see pragma @code{No_Heap_Finalization}).
3787 @node Pragma Float_Representation,Pragma Ghost,Pragma Finalize_Storage_Only,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3788 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-float-representation}@anchor{6c}
3789 @section Pragma Float_Representation
3795 pragma Float_Representation (FLOAT_REP[, float_type_LOCAL_NAME]);
3797 FLOAT_REP ::= VAX_Float | IEEE_Float
3800 In the one argument form, this pragma is a configuration pragma which
3801 allows control over the internal representation chosen for the predefined
3802 floating point types declared in the packages @code{Standard} and
3803 @code{System}. This pragma is only provided for compatibility and has no effect.
3805 The two argument form specifies the representation to be used for
3806 the specified floating-point type. The argument must
3807 be @code{IEEE_Float} to specify the use of IEEE format, as follows:
3813 For a digits value of 6, 32-bit IEEE short format will be used.
3816 For a digits value of 15, 64-bit IEEE long format will be used.
3819 No other value of digits is permitted.
3822 @node Pragma Ghost,Pragma Global,Pragma Float_Representation,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3823 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-ghost}@anchor{6d}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id14}@anchor{6e}
3824 @section Pragma Ghost
3830 pragma Ghost [ (boolean_EXPRESSION) ];
3833 For the semantics of this pragma, see the entry for aspect @code{Ghost} in the SPARK
3834 2014 Reference Manual, section 6.9.
3836 @node Pragma Global,Pragma Ident,Pragma Ghost,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3837 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-global}@anchor{6f}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id15}@anchor{70}
3838 @section Pragma Global
3844 pragma Global (GLOBAL_SPECIFICATION);
3846 GLOBAL_SPECIFICATION ::=
3849 | (MODED_GLOBAL_LIST @{, MODED_GLOBAL_LIST@})
3851 MODED_GLOBAL_LIST ::= MODE_SELECTOR => GLOBAL_LIST
3853 MODE_SELECTOR ::= In_Out | Input | Output | Proof_In
3854 GLOBAL_LIST ::= GLOBAL_ITEM | (GLOBAL_ITEM @{, GLOBAL_ITEM@})
3855 GLOBAL_ITEM ::= NAME
3858 For the semantics of this pragma, see the entry for aspect @code{Global} in the
3859 SPARK 2014 Reference Manual, section 6.1.4.
3861 @node Pragma Ident,Pragma Ignore_Pragma,Pragma Global,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3862 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-ident}@anchor{71}
3863 @section Pragma Ident
3869 pragma Ident (static_string_EXPRESSION);
3872 This pragma is identical in effect to pragma @code{Comment}. It is provided
3873 for compatibility with other Ada compilers providing this pragma.
3875 @node Pragma Ignore_Pragma,Pragma Implementation_Defined,Pragma Ident,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3876 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-ignore-pragma}@anchor{72}
3877 @section Pragma Ignore_Pragma
3883 pragma Ignore_Pragma (pragma_IDENTIFIER);
3886 This is a configuration pragma
3887 that takes a single argument that is a simple identifier. Any subsequent
3888 use of a pragma whose pragma identifier matches this argument will be
3889 silently ignored. This may be useful when legacy code or code intended
3890 for compilation with some other compiler contains pragmas that match the
3891 name, but not the exact implementation, of a GNAT pragma. The use of this
3892 pragma allows such pragmas to be ignored, which may be useful in CodePeer
3893 mode, or during porting of legacy code.
3895 @node Pragma Implementation_Defined,Pragma Implemented,Pragma Ignore_Pragma,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3896 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-implementation-defined}@anchor{73}
3897 @section Pragma Implementation_Defined
3903 pragma Implementation_Defined (local_NAME);
3906 This pragma marks a previously declared entity as implementation-defined.
3907 For an overloaded entity, applies to the most recent homonym.
3910 pragma Implementation_Defined;
3913 The form with no arguments appears anywhere within a scope, most
3914 typically a package spec, and indicates that all entities that are
3915 defined within the package spec are Implementation_Defined.
3917 This pragma is used within the GNAT runtime library to identify
3918 implementation-defined entities introduced in language-defined units,
3919 for the purpose of implementing the No_Implementation_Identifiers
3922 @node Pragma Implemented,Pragma Implicit_Packing,Pragma Implementation_Defined,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3923 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-implemented}@anchor{74}
3924 @section Pragma Implemented
3930 pragma Implemented (procedure_LOCAL_NAME, implementation_kind);
3932 implementation_kind ::= By_Entry | By_Protected_Procedure | By_Any
3935 This is an Ada 2012 representation pragma which applies to protected, task
3936 and synchronized interface primitives. The use of pragma Implemented provides
3937 a way to impose a static requirement on the overriding operation by adhering
3938 to one of the three implementation kinds: entry, protected procedure or any of
3939 the above. This pragma is available in all earlier versions of Ada as an
3940 implementation-defined pragma.
3943 type Synch_Iface is synchronized interface;
3944 procedure Prim_Op (Obj : in out Iface) is abstract;
3945 pragma Implemented (Prim_Op, By_Protected_Procedure);
3947 protected type Prot_1 is new Synch_Iface with
3948 procedure Prim_Op; -- Legal
3951 protected type Prot_2 is new Synch_Iface with
3952 entry Prim_Op; -- Illegal
3955 task type Task_Typ is new Synch_Iface with
3956 entry Prim_Op; -- Illegal
3960 When applied to the procedure_or_entry_NAME of a requeue statement, pragma
3961 Implemented determines the runtime behavior of the requeue. Implementation kind
3962 By_Entry guarantees that the action of requeueing will proceed from an entry to
3963 another entry. Implementation kind By_Protected_Procedure transforms the
3964 requeue into a dispatching call, thus eliminating the chance of blocking. Kind
3965 By_Any shares the behavior of By_Entry and By_Protected_Procedure depending on
3966 the target's overriding subprogram kind.
3968 @node Pragma Implicit_Packing,Pragma Import_Function,Pragma Implemented,Implementation Defined Pragmas
3969 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-implicit-packing}@anchor{75}
3970 @section Pragma Implicit_Packing
3973 @geindex Rational Profile
3978 pragma Implicit_Packing;
3981 This is a configuration pragma that requests implicit packing for packed
3982 arrays for which a size clause is given but no explicit pragma Pack or
3983 specification of Component_Size is present. It also applies to records
3984 where no record representation clause is present. Consider this example:
3987 type R is array (0 .. 7) of Boolean;
3991 In accordance with the recommendation in the RM (RM 13.3(53)), a Size clause
3992 does not change the layout of a composite object. So the Size clause in the
3993 above example is normally rejected, since the default layout of the array uses
3994 8-bit components, and thus the array requires a minimum of 64 bits.
3996 If this declaration is compiled in a region of code covered by an occurrence
3997 of the configuration pragma Implicit_Packing, then the Size clause in this
3998 and similar examples will cause implicit packing and thus be accepted. For
3999 this implicit packing to occur, the type in question must be an array of small
4000 components whose size is known at compile time, and the Size clause must
4001 specify the exact size that corresponds to the number of elements in the array
4002 multiplied by the size in bits of the component type (both single and
4003 multi-dimensioned arrays can be controlled with this pragma).
4005 @geindex Array packing
4007 Similarly, the following example shows the use in the record case
4011 a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h : boolean;
4017 Without a pragma Pack, each Boolean field requires 8 bits, so the
4018 minimum size is 72 bits, but with a pragma Pack, 16 bits would be
4019 sufficient. The use of pragma Implicit_Packing allows this record
4020 declaration to compile without an explicit pragma Pack.
4022 @node Pragma Import_Function,Pragma Import_Object,Pragma Implicit_Packing,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4023 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-import-function}@anchor{76}
4024 @section Pragma Import_Function
4030 pragma Import_Function (
4031 [Internal =>] LOCAL_NAME,
4032 [, [External =>] EXTERNAL_SYMBOL]
4033 [, [Parameter_Types =>] PARAMETER_TYPES]
4034 [, [Result_Type =>] SUBTYPE_MARK]
4035 [, [Mechanism =>] MECHANISM]
4036 [, [Result_Mechanism =>] MECHANISM_NAME]);
4040 | static_string_EXPRESSION
4044 | TYPE_DESIGNATOR @{, TYPE_DESIGNATOR@}
4048 | subtype_Name ' Access
4052 | (MECHANISM_ASSOCIATION @{, MECHANISM_ASSOCIATION@})
4054 MECHANISM_ASSOCIATION ::=
4055 [formal_parameter_NAME =>] MECHANISM_NAME
4062 This pragma is used in conjunction with a pragma @code{Import} to
4063 specify additional information for an imported function. The pragma
4064 @code{Import} (or equivalent pragma @code{Interface}) must precede the
4065 @code{Import_Function} pragma and both must appear in the same
4066 declarative part as the function specification.
4068 The @code{Internal} argument must uniquely designate
4069 the function to which the
4070 pragma applies. If more than one function name exists of this name in
4071 the declarative part you must use the @code{Parameter_Types} and
4072 @code{Result_Type} parameters to achieve the required unique
4073 designation. Subtype marks in these parameters must exactly match the
4074 subtypes in the corresponding function specification, using positional
4075 notation to match parameters with subtype marks.
4076 The form with an @code{'Access} attribute can be used to match an
4077 anonymous access parameter.
4079 You may optionally use the @code{Mechanism} and @code{Result_Mechanism}
4080 parameters to specify passing mechanisms for the
4081 parameters and result. If you specify a single mechanism name, it
4082 applies to all parameters. Otherwise you may specify a mechanism on a
4083 parameter by parameter basis using either positional or named
4084 notation. If the mechanism is not specified, the default mechanism
4087 @node Pragma Import_Object,Pragma Import_Procedure,Pragma Import_Function,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4088 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-import-object}@anchor{77}
4089 @section Pragma Import_Object
4095 pragma Import_Object
4096 [Internal =>] LOCAL_NAME
4097 [, [External =>] EXTERNAL_SYMBOL]
4098 [, [Size =>] EXTERNAL_SYMBOL]);
4102 | static_string_EXPRESSION
4105 This pragma designates an object as imported, and apart from the
4106 extended rules for external symbols, is identical in effect to the use of
4107 the normal @code{Import} pragma applied to an object. Unlike the
4108 subprogram case, you need not use a separate @code{Import} pragma,
4109 although you may do so (and probably should do so from a portability
4110 point of view). @code{size} is syntax checked, but otherwise ignored by
4113 @node Pragma Import_Procedure,Pragma Import_Valued_Procedure,Pragma Import_Object,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4114 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-import-procedure}@anchor{78}
4115 @section Pragma Import_Procedure
4121 pragma Import_Procedure (
4122 [Internal =>] LOCAL_NAME
4123 [, [External =>] EXTERNAL_SYMBOL]
4124 [, [Parameter_Types =>] PARAMETER_TYPES]
4125 [, [Mechanism =>] MECHANISM]);
4129 | static_string_EXPRESSION
4133 | TYPE_DESIGNATOR @{, TYPE_DESIGNATOR@}
4137 | subtype_Name ' Access
4141 | (MECHANISM_ASSOCIATION @{, MECHANISM_ASSOCIATION@})
4143 MECHANISM_ASSOCIATION ::=
4144 [formal_parameter_NAME =>] MECHANISM_NAME
4146 MECHANISM_NAME ::= Value | Reference
4149 This pragma is identical to @code{Import_Function} except that it
4150 applies to a procedure rather than a function and the parameters
4151 @code{Result_Type} and @code{Result_Mechanism} are not permitted.
4153 @node Pragma Import_Valued_Procedure,Pragma Independent,Pragma Import_Procedure,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4154 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-import-valued-procedure}@anchor{79}
4155 @section Pragma Import_Valued_Procedure
4161 pragma Import_Valued_Procedure (
4162 [Internal =>] LOCAL_NAME
4163 [, [External =>] EXTERNAL_SYMBOL]
4164 [, [Parameter_Types =>] PARAMETER_TYPES]
4165 [, [Mechanism =>] MECHANISM]);
4169 | static_string_EXPRESSION
4173 | TYPE_DESIGNATOR @{, TYPE_DESIGNATOR@}
4177 | subtype_Name ' Access
4181 | (MECHANISM_ASSOCIATION @{, MECHANISM_ASSOCIATION@})
4183 MECHANISM_ASSOCIATION ::=
4184 [formal_parameter_NAME =>] MECHANISM_NAME
4186 MECHANISM_NAME ::= Value | Reference
4189 This pragma is identical to @code{Import_Procedure} except that the
4190 first parameter of @code{LOCAL_NAME}, which must be present, must be of
4191 mode @code{out}, and externally the subprogram is treated as a function
4192 with this parameter as the result of the function. The purpose of this
4193 capability is to allow the use of @code{out} and @code{in out}
4194 parameters in interfacing to external functions (which are not permitted
4195 in Ada functions). You may optionally use the @code{Mechanism}
4196 parameters to specify passing mechanisms for the parameters.
4197 If you specify a single mechanism name, it applies to all parameters.
4198 Otherwise you may specify a mechanism on a parameter by parameter
4199 basis using either positional or named notation. If the mechanism is not
4200 specified, the default mechanism is used.
4202 Note that it is important to use this pragma in conjunction with a separate
4203 pragma Import that specifies the desired convention, since otherwise the
4204 default convention is Ada, which is almost certainly not what is required.
4206 @node Pragma Independent,Pragma Independent_Components,Pragma Import_Valued_Procedure,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4207 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-independent}@anchor{7a}
4208 @section Pragma Independent
4214 pragma Independent (Local_NAME);
4217 This pragma is standard in Ada 2012 mode (which also provides an aspect
4218 of the same name). It is also available as an implementation-defined
4219 pragma in all earlier versions. It specifies that the
4220 designated object or all objects of the designated type must be
4221 independently addressable. This means that separate tasks can safely
4222 manipulate such objects. For example, if two components of a record are
4223 independent, then two separate tasks may access these two components.
4225 constraints on the representation of the object (for instance prohibiting
4228 @node Pragma Independent_Components,Pragma Initial_Condition,Pragma Independent,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4229 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-independent-components}@anchor{7b}
4230 @section Pragma Independent_Components
4236 pragma Independent_Components (Local_NAME);
4239 This pragma is standard in Ada 2012 mode (which also provides an aspect
4240 of the same name). It is also available as an implementation-defined
4241 pragma in all earlier versions. It specifies that the components of the
4242 designated object, or the components of each object of the designated
4244 independently addressable. This means that separate tasks can safely
4245 manipulate separate components in the composite object. This may place
4246 constraints on the representation of the object (for instance prohibiting
4249 @node Pragma Initial_Condition,Pragma Initialize_Scalars,Pragma Independent_Components,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4250 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id16}@anchor{7c}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-initial-condition}@anchor{7d}
4251 @section Pragma Initial_Condition
4257 pragma Initial_Condition (boolean_EXPRESSION);
4260 For the semantics of this pragma, see the entry for aspect @code{Initial_Condition}
4261 in the SPARK 2014 Reference Manual, section 7.1.6.
4263 @node Pragma Initialize_Scalars,Pragma Initializes,Pragma Initial_Condition,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4264 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-initialize-scalars}@anchor{7e}
4265 @section Pragma Initialize_Scalars
4268 @geindex debugging with Initialize_Scalars
4273 pragma Initialize_Scalars;
4276 This pragma is similar to @code{Normalize_Scalars} conceptually but has
4277 two important differences. First, there is no requirement for the pragma
4278 to be used uniformly in all units of a partition, in particular, it is fine
4279 to use this just for some or all of the application units of a partition,
4280 without needing to recompile the run-time library.
4282 In the case where some units are compiled with the pragma, and some without,
4283 then a declaration of a variable where the type is defined in package
4284 Standard or is locally declared will always be subject to initialization,
4285 as will any declaration of a scalar variable. For composite variables,
4286 whether the variable is initialized may also depend on whether the package
4287 in which the type of the variable is declared is compiled with the pragma.
4289 The other important difference is that you can control the value used
4290 for initializing scalar objects. At bind time, you can select several
4291 options for initialization. You can
4292 initialize with invalid values (similar to Normalize_Scalars, though for
4293 Initialize_Scalars it is not always possible to determine the invalid
4294 values in complex cases like signed component fields with non-standard
4295 sizes). You can also initialize with high or
4296 low values, or with a specified bit pattern. See the GNAT
4297 User's Guide for binder options for specifying these cases.
4299 This means that you can compile a program, and then without having to
4300 recompile the program, you can run it with different values being used
4301 for initializing otherwise uninitialized values, to test if your program
4302 behavior depends on the choice. Of course the behavior should not change,
4303 and if it does, then most likely you have an incorrect reference to an
4304 uninitialized value.
4306 It is even possible to change the value at execution time eliminating even
4307 the need to rebind with a different switch using an environment variable.
4308 See the GNAT User's Guide for details.
4310 Note that pragma @code{Initialize_Scalars} is particularly useful in
4311 conjunction with the enhanced validity checking that is now provided
4312 in GNAT, which checks for invalid values under more conditions.
4313 Using this feature (see description of the @emph{-gnatV} flag in the
4314 GNAT User's Guide) in conjunction with
4315 pragma @code{Initialize_Scalars}
4316 provides a powerful new tool to assist in the detection of problems
4317 caused by uninitialized variables.
4319 Note: the use of @code{Initialize_Scalars} has a fairly extensive
4320 effect on the generated code. This may cause your code to be
4321 substantially larger. It may also cause an increase in the amount
4322 of stack required, so it is probably a good idea to turn on stack
4323 checking (see description of stack checking in the GNAT
4324 User's Guide) when using this pragma.
4326 @node Pragma Initializes,Pragma Inline_Always,Pragma Initialize_Scalars,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4327 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-initializes}@anchor{7f}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id17}@anchor{80}
4328 @section Pragma Initializes
4334 pragma Initializes (INITIALIZATION_LIST);
4336 INITIALIZATION_LIST ::=
4338 | (INITIALIZATION_ITEM @{, INITIALIZATION_ITEM@})
4340 INITIALIZATION_ITEM ::= name [=> INPUT_LIST]
4345 | (INPUT @{, INPUT@})
4350 For the semantics of this pragma, see the entry for aspect @code{Initializes} in the
4351 SPARK 2014 Reference Manual, section 7.1.5.
4353 @node Pragma Inline_Always,Pragma Inline_Generic,Pragma Initializes,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4354 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id18}@anchor{81}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-inline-always}@anchor{82}
4355 @section Pragma Inline_Always
4361 pragma Inline_Always (NAME [, NAME]);
4364 Similar to pragma @code{Inline} except that inlining is unconditional.
4365 Inline_Always instructs the compiler to inline every direct call to the
4366 subprogram or else to emit a compilation error, independently of any
4367 option, in particular @emph{-gnatn} or @emph{-gnatN} or the optimization level.
4368 It is an error to take the address or access of @code{NAME}. It is also an error to
4369 apply this pragma to a primitive operation of a tagged type. Thanks to such
4370 restrictions, the compiler is allowed to remove the out-of-line body of @code{NAME}.
4372 @node Pragma Inline_Generic,Pragma Interface,Pragma Inline_Always,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4373 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-inline-generic}@anchor{83}
4374 @section Pragma Inline_Generic
4380 pragma Inline_Generic (GNAME @{, GNAME@});
4382 GNAME ::= generic_unit_NAME | generic_instance_NAME
4385 This pragma is provided for compatibility with Dec Ada 83. It has
4386 no effect in GNAT (which always inlines generics), other
4387 than to check that the given names are all names of generic units or
4390 @node Pragma Interface,Pragma Interface_Name,Pragma Inline_Generic,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4391 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-interface}@anchor{84}
4392 @section Pragma Interface
4399 [Convention =>] convention_identifier,
4400 [Entity =>] local_NAME
4401 [, [External_Name =>] static_string_expression]
4402 [, [Link_Name =>] static_string_expression]);
4405 This pragma is identical in syntax and semantics to
4406 the standard Ada pragma @code{Import}. It is provided for compatibility
4407 with Ada 83. The definition is upwards compatible both with pragma
4408 @code{Interface} as defined in the Ada 83 Reference Manual, and also
4409 with some extended implementations of this pragma in certain Ada 83
4410 implementations. The only difference between pragma @code{Interface}
4411 and pragma @code{Import} is that there is special circuitry to allow
4412 both pragmas to appear for the same subprogram entity (normally it
4413 is illegal to have multiple @code{Import} pragmas. This is useful in
4414 maintaining Ada 83/Ada 95 compatibility and is compatible with other
4417 @node Pragma Interface_Name,Pragma Interrupt_Handler,Pragma Interface,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4418 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-interface-name}@anchor{85}
4419 @section Pragma Interface_Name
4425 pragma Interface_Name (
4426 [Entity =>] LOCAL_NAME
4427 [, [External_Name =>] static_string_EXPRESSION]
4428 [, [Link_Name =>] static_string_EXPRESSION]);
4431 This pragma provides an alternative way of specifying the interface name
4432 for an interfaced subprogram, and is provided for compatibility with Ada
4433 83 compilers that use the pragma for this purpose. You must provide at
4434 least one of @code{External_Name} or @code{Link_Name}.
4436 @node Pragma Interrupt_Handler,Pragma Interrupt_State,Pragma Interface_Name,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4437 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-interrupt-handler}@anchor{86}
4438 @section Pragma Interrupt_Handler
4444 pragma Interrupt_Handler (procedure_LOCAL_NAME);
4447 This program unit pragma is supported for parameterless protected procedures
4448 as described in Annex C of the Ada Reference Manual. On the AAMP target
4449 the pragma can also be specified for nonprotected parameterless procedures
4450 that are declared at the library level (which includes procedures
4451 declared at the top level of a library package). In the case of AAMP,
4452 when this pragma is applied to a nonprotected procedure, the instruction
4453 @code{IERET} is generated for returns from the procedure, enabling
4454 maskable interrupts, in place of the normal return instruction.
4456 @node Pragma Interrupt_State,Pragma Invariant,Pragma Interrupt_Handler,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4457 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-interrupt-state}@anchor{87}
4458 @section Pragma Interrupt_State
4464 pragma Interrupt_State
4466 [State =>] SYSTEM | RUNTIME | USER);
4469 Normally certain interrupts are reserved to the implementation. Any attempt
4470 to attach an interrupt causes Program_Error to be raised, as described in
4471 RM C.3.2(22). A typical example is the @code{SIGINT} interrupt used in
4472 many systems for an @code{Ctrl-C} interrupt. Normally this interrupt is
4473 reserved to the implementation, so that @code{Ctrl-C} can be used to
4474 interrupt execution. Additionally, signals such as @code{SIGSEGV},
4475 @code{SIGABRT}, @code{SIGFPE} and @code{SIGILL} are often mapped to specific
4476 Ada exceptions, or used to implement run-time functions such as the
4477 @code{abort} statement and stack overflow checking.
4479 Pragma @code{Interrupt_State} provides a general mechanism for overriding
4480 such uses of interrupts. It subsumes the functionality of pragma
4481 @code{Unreserve_All_Interrupts}. Pragma @code{Interrupt_State} is not
4482 available on Windows or VMS. On all other platforms than VxWorks,
4483 it applies to signals; on VxWorks, it applies to vectored hardware interrupts
4484 and may be used to mark interrupts required by the board support package
4487 Interrupts can be in one of three states:
4495 The interrupt is reserved (no Ada handler can be installed), and the
4496 Ada run-time may not install a handler. As a result you are guaranteed
4497 standard system default action if this interrupt is raised. This also allows
4498 installing a low level handler via C APIs such as sigaction(), outside
4504 The interrupt is reserved (no Ada handler can be installed). The run time
4505 is allowed to install a handler for internal control purposes, but is
4506 not required to do so.
4511 The interrupt is unreserved. The user may install an Ada handler via
4512 Ada.Interrupts and pragma Interrupt_Handler or Attach_Handler to provide
4516 These states are the allowed values of the @code{State} parameter of the
4517 pragma. The @code{Name} parameter is a value of the type
4518 @code{Ada.Interrupts.Interrupt_ID}. Typically, it is a name declared in
4519 @code{Ada.Interrupts.Names}.
4521 This is a configuration pragma, and the binder will check that there
4522 are no inconsistencies between different units in a partition in how a
4523 given interrupt is specified. It may appear anywhere a pragma is legal.
4525 The effect is to move the interrupt to the specified state.
4527 By declaring interrupts to be SYSTEM, you guarantee the standard system
4528 action, such as a core dump.
4530 By declaring interrupts to be USER, you guarantee that you can install
4533 Note that certain signals on many operating systems cannot be caught and
4534 handled by applications. In such cases, the pragma is ignored. See the
4535 operating system documentation, or the value of the array @code{Reserved}
4536 declared in the spec of package @code{System.OS_Interface}.
4538 Overriding the default state of signals used by the Ada runtime may interfere
4539 with an application's runtime behavior in the cases of the synchronous signals,
4540 and in the case of the signal used to implement the @code{abort} statement.
4542 @node Pragma Invariant,Pragma Keep_Names,Pragma Interrupt_State,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4543 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id19}@anchor{88}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-invariant}@anchor{89}
4544 @section Pragma Invariant
4551 ([Entity =>] private_type_LOCAL_NAME,
4552 [Check =>] EXPRESSION
4553 [,[Message =>] String_Expression]);
4556 This pragma provides exactly the same capabilities as the Type_Invariant aspect
4557 defined in AI05-0146-1, and in the Ada 2012 Reference Manual. The
4558 Type_Invariant aspect is fully implemented in Ada 2012 mode, but since it
4559 requires the use of the aspect syntax, which is not available except in 2012
4560 mode, it is not possible to use the Type_Invariant aspect in earlier versions
4561 of Ada. However the Invariant pragma may be used in any version of Ada. Also
4562 note that the aspect Invariant is a synonym in GNAT for the aspect
4563 Type_Invariant, but there is no pragma Type_Invariant.
4565 The pragma must appear within the visible part of the package specification,
4566 after the type to which its Entity argument appears. As with the Invariant
4567 aspect, the Check expression is not analyzed until the end of the visible
4568 part of the package, so it may contain forward references. The Message
4569 argument, if present, provides the exception message used if the invariant
4570 is violated. If no Message parameter is provided, a default message that
4571 identifies the line on which the pragma appears is used.
4573 It is permissible to have multiple Invariants for the same type entity, in
4574 which case they are and'ed together. It is permissible to use this pragma
4575 in Ada 2012 mode, but you cannot have both an invariant aspect and an
4576 invariant pragma for the same entity.
4578 For further details on the use of this pragma, see the Ada 2012 documentation
4579 of the Type_Invariant aspect.
4581 @node Pragma Keep_Names,Pragma License,Pragma Invariant,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4582 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-keep-names}@anchor{8a}
4583 @section Pragma Keep_Names
4589 pragma Keep_Names ([On =>] enumeration_first_subtype_LOCAL_NAME);
4592 The @code{LOCAL_NAME} argument
4593 must refer to an enumeration first subtype
4594 in the current declarative part. The effect is to retain the enumeration
4595 literal names for use by @code{Image} and @code{Value} even if a global
4596 @code{Discard_Names} pragma applies. This is useful when you want to
4597 generally suppress enumeration literal names and for example you therefore
4598 use a @code{Discard_Names} pragma in the @code{gnat.adc} file, but you
4599 want to retain the names for specific enumeration types.
4601 @node Pragma License,Pragma Link_With,Pragma Keep_Names,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4602 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-license}@anchor{8b}
4603 @section Pragma License
4606 @geindex License checking
4611 pragma License (Unrestricted | GPL | Modified_GPL | Restricted);
4614 This pragma is provided to allow automated checking for appropriate license
4615 conditions with respect to the standard and modified GPL. A pragma
4616 @code{License}, which is a configuration pragma that typically appears at
4617 the start of a source file or in a separate @code{gnat.adc} file, specifies
4618 the licensing conditions of a unit as follows:
4625 This is used for a unit that can be freely used with no license restrictions.
4626 Examples of such units are public domain units, and units from the Ada
4631 This is used for a unit that is licensed under the unmodified GPL, and which
4632 therefore cannot be @code{with}ed by a restricted unit.
4636 This is used for a unit licensed under the GNAT modified GPL that includes
4637 a special exception paragraph that specifically permits the inclusion of
4638 the unit in programs without requiring the entire program to be released
4643 This is used for a unit that is restricted in that it is not permitted to
4644 depend on units that are licensed under the GPL. Typical examples are
4645 proprietary code that is to be released under more restrictive license
4646 conditions. Note that restricted units are permitted to @code{with} units
4647 which are licensed under the modified GPL (this is the whole point of the
4651 Normally a unit with no @code{License} pragma is considered to have an
4652 unknown license, and no checking is done. However, standard GNAT headers
4653 are recognized, and license information is derived from them as follows.
4655 A GNAT license header starts with a line containing 78 hyphens. The following
4656 comment text is searched for the appearance of any of the following strings.
4658 If the string 'GNU General Public License' is found, then the unit is assumed
4659 to have GPL license, unless the string 'As a special exception' follows, in
4660 which case the license is assumed to be modified GPL.
4662 If one of the strings
4663 'This specification is adapted from the Ada Semantic Interface' or
4664 'This specification is derived from the Ada Reference Manual' is found
4665 then the unit is assumed to be unrestricted.
4667 These default actions means that a program with a restricted license pragma
4668 will automatically get warnings if a GPL unit is inappropriately
4669 @code{with}ed. For example, the program:
4674 procedure Secret_Stuff is
4679 if compiled with pragma @code{License} (@code{Restricted}) in a
4680 @code{gnat.adc} file will generate the warning:
4685 >>> license of withed unit "Sem_Ch3" is incompatible
4687 2. with GNAT.Sockets;
4688 3. procedure Secret_Stuff is
4691 Here we get a warning on @code{Sem_Ch3} since it is part of the GNAT
4692 compiler and is licensed under the
4693 GPL, but no warning for @code{GNAT.Sockets} which is part of the GNAT
4694 run time, and is therefore licensed under the modified GPL.
4696 @node Pragma Link_With,Pragma Linker_Alias,Pragma License,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4697 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-link-with}@anchor{8c}
4698 @section Pragma Link_With
4704 pragma Link_With (static_string_EXPRESSION @{,static_string_EXPRESSION@});
4707 This pragma is provided for compatibility with certain Ada 83 compilers.
4708 It has exactly the same effect as pragma @code{Linker_Options} except
4709 that spaces occurring within one of the string expressions are treated
4710 as separators. For example, in the following case:
4713 pragma Link_With ("-labc -ldef");
4716 results in passing the strings @code{-labc} and @code{-ldef} as two
4717 separate arguments to the linker. In addition pragma Link_With allows
4718 multiple arguments, with the same effect as successive pragmas.
4720 @node Pragma Linker_Alias,Pragma Linker_Constructor,Pragma Link_With,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4721 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-linker-alias}@anchor{8d}
4722 @section Pragma Linker_Alias
4728 pragma Linker_Alias (
4729 [Entity =>] LOCAL_NAME,
4730 [Target =>] static_string_EXPRESSION);
4733 @code{LOCAL_NAME} must refer to an object that is declared at the library
4734 level. This pragma establishes the given entity as a linker alias for the
4735 given target. It is equivalent to @code{__attribute__((alias))} in GNU C
4736 and causes @code{LOCAL_NAME} to be emitted as an alias for the symbol
4737 @code{static_string_EXPRESSION} in the object file, that is to say no space
4738 is reserved for @code{LOCAL_NAME} by the assembler and it will be resolved
4739 to the same address as @code{static_string_EXPRESSION} by the linker.
4741 The actual linker name for the target must be used (e.g., the fully
4742 encoded name with qualification in Ada, or the mangled name in C++),
4743 or it must be declared using the C convention with @code{pragma Import}
4744 or @code{pragma Export}.
4746 Not all target machines support this pragma. On some of them it is accepted
4747 only if @code{pragma Weak_External} has been applied to @code{LOCAL_NAME}.
4750 -- Example of the use of pragma Linker_Alias
4754 pragma Export (C, i);
4756 new_name_for_i : Integer;
4757 pragma Linker_Alias (new_name_for_i, "i");
4761 @node Pragma Linker_Constructor,Pragma Linker_Destructor,Pragma Linker_Alias,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4762 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-linker-constructor}@anchor{8e}
4763 @section Pragma Linker_Constructor
4769 pragma Linker_Constructor (procedure_LOCAL_NAME);
4772 @code{procedure_LOCAL_NAME} must refer to a parameterless procedure that
4773 is declared at the library level. A procedure to which this pragma is
4774 applied will be treated as an initialization routine by the linker.
4775 It is equivalent to @code{__attribute__((constructor))} in GNU C and
4776 causes @code{procedure_LOCAL_NAME} to be invoked before the entry point
4777 of the executable is called (or immediately after the shared library is
4778 loaded if the procedure is linked in a shared library), in particular
4779 before the Ada run-time environment is set up.
4781 Because of these specific contexts, the set of operations such a procedure
4782 can perform is very limited and the type of objects it can manipulate is
4783 essentially restricted to the elementary types. In particular, it must only
4784 contain code to which pragma Restrictions (No_Elaboration_Code) applies.
4786 This pragma is used by GNAT to implement auto-initialization of shared Stand
4787 Alone Libraries, which provides a related capability without the restrictions
4788 listed above. Where possible, the use of Stand Alone Libraries is preferable
4789 to the use of this pragma.
4791 @node Pragma Linker_Destructor,Pragma Linker_Section,Pragma Linker_Constructor,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4792 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-linker-destructor}@anchor{8f}
4793 @section Pragma Linker_Destructor
4799 pragma Linker_Destructor (procedure_LOCAL_NAME);
4802 @code{procedure_LOCAL_NAME} must refer to a parameterless procedure that
4803 is declared at the library level. A procedure to which this pragma is
4804 applied will be treated as a finalization routine by the linker.
4805 It is equivalent to @code{__attribute__((destructor))} in GNU C and
4806 causes @code{procedure_LOCAL_NAME} to be invoked after the entry point
4807 of the executable has exited (or immediately before the shared library
4808 is unloaded if the procedure is linked in a shared library), in particular
4809 after the Ada run-time environment is shut down.
4811 See @code{pragma Linker_Constructor} for the set of restrictions that apply
4812 because of these specific contexts.
4814 @node Pragma Linker_Section,Pragma Lock_Free,Pragma Linker_Destructor,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4815 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id20}@anchor{90}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-linker-section}@anchor{91}
4816 @section Pragma Linker_Section
4822 pragma Linker_Section (
4823 [Entity =>] LOCAL_NAME,
4824 [Section =>] static_string_EXPRESSION);
4827 @code{LOCAL_NAME} must refer to an object, type, or subprogram that is
4828 declared at the library level. This pragma specifies the name of the
4829 linker section for the given entity. It is equivalent to
4830 @code{__attribute__((section))} in GNU C and causes @code{LOCAL_NAME} to
4831 be placed in the @code{static_string_EXPRESSION} section of the
4832 executable (assuming the linker doesn't rename the section).
4833 GNAT also provides an implementation defined aspect of the same name.
4835 In the case of specifying this aspect for a type, the effect is to
4836 specify the corresponding section for all library-level objects of
4837 the type that do not have an explicit linker section set. Note that
4838 this only applies to whole objects, not to components of composite objects.
4840 In the case of a subprogram, the linker section applies to all previously
4841 declared matching overloaded subprograms in the current declarative part
4842 which do not already have a linker section assigned. The linker section
4843 aspect is useful in this case for specifying different linker sections
4844 for different elements of such an overloaded set.
4846 Note that an empty string specifies that no linker section is specified.
4847 This is not quite the same as omitting the pragma or aspect, since it
4848 can be used to specify that one element of an overloaded set of subprograms
4849 has the default linker section, or that one object of a type for which a
4850 linker section is specified should has the default linker section.
4852 The compiler normally places library-level entities in standard sections
4853 depending on the class: procedures and functions generally go in the
4854 @code{.text} section, initialized variables in the @code{.data} section
4855 and uninitialized variables in the @code{.bss} section.
4857 Other, special sections may exist on given target machines to map special
4858 hardware, for example I/O ports or flash memory. This pragma is a means to
4859 defer the final layout of the executable to the linker, thus fully working
4860 at the symbolic level with the compiler.
4862 Some file formats do not support arbitrary sections so not all target
4863 machines support this pragma. The use of this pragma may cause a program
4864 execution to be erroneous if it is used to place an entity into an
4865 inappropriate section (e.g., a modified variable into the @code{.text}
4866 section). See also @code{pragma Persistent_BSS}.
4869 -- Example of the use of pragma Linker_Section
4873 pragma Volatile (Port_A);
4874 pragma Linker_Section (Port_A, ".bss.port_a");
4877 pragma Volatile (Port_B);
4878 pragma Linker_Section (Port_B, ".bss.port_b");
4880 type Port_Type is new Integer with Linker_Section => ".bss";
4881 PA : Port_Type with Linker_Section => ".bss.PA";
4882 PB : Port_Type; -- ends up in linker section ".bss"
4884 procedure Q with Linker_Section => "Qsection";
4888 @node Pragma Lock_Free,Pragma Loop_Invariant,Pragma Linker_Section,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4889 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id21}@anchor{92}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-lock-free}@anchor{93}
4890 @section Pragma Lock_Free
4894 This pragma may be specified for protected types or objects. It specifies that
4895 the implementation of protected operations must be implemented without locks.
4896 Compilation fails if the compiler cannot generate lock-free code for the
4899 @node Pragma Loop_Invariant,Pragma Loop_Optimize,Pragma Lock_Free,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4900 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-loop-invariant}@anchor{94}
4901 @section Pragma Loop_Invariant
4907 pragma Loop_Invariant ( boolean_EXPRESSION );
4910 The effect of this pragma is similar to that of pragma @code{Assert},
4911 except that in an @code{Assertion_Policy} pragma, the identifier
4912 @code{Loop_Invariant} is used to control whether it is ignored or checked
4915 @code{Loop_Invariant} can only appear as one of the items in the sequence
4916 of statements of a loop body, or nested inside block statements that
4917 appear in the sequence of statements of a loop body.
4918 The intention is that it be used to
4919 represent a "loop invariant" assertion, i.e. something that is true each
4920 time through the loop, and which can be used to show that the loop is
4921 achieving its purpose.
4923 Multiple @code{Loop_Invariant} and @code{Loop_Variant} pragmas that
4924 apply to the same loop should be grouped in the same sequence of
4927 To aid in writing such invariants, the special attribute @code{Loop_Entry}
4928 may be used to refer to the value of an expression on entry to the loop. This
4929 attribute can only be used within the expression of a @code{Loop_Invariant}
4930 pragma. For full details, see documentation of attribute @code{Loop_Entry}.
4932 @node Pragma Loop_Optimize,Pragma Loop_Variant,Pragma Loop_Invariant,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4933 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-loop-optimize}@anchor{95}
4934 @section Pragma Loop_Optimize
4940 pragma Loop_Optimize (OPTIMIZATION_HINT @{, OPTIMIZATION_HINT@});
4942 OPTIMIZATION_HINT ::= Ivdep | No_Unroll | Unroll | No_Vector | Vector
4945 This pragma must appear immediately within a loop statement. It allows the
4946 programmer to specify optimization hints for the enclosing loop. The hints
4947 are not mutually exclusive and can be freely mixed, but not all combinations
4948 will yield a sensible outcome.
4950 There are five supported optimization hints for a loop:
4958 The programmer asserts that there are no loop-carried dependencies
4959 which would prevent consecutive iterations of the loop from being
4960 executed simultaneously.
4965 The loop must not be unrolled. This is a strong hint: the compiler will not
4966 unroll a loop marked with this hint.
4971 The loop should be unrolled. This is a weak hint: the compiler will try to
4972 apply unrolling to this loop preferably to other optimizations, notably
4973 vectorization, but there is no guarantee that the loop will be unrolled.
4978 The loop must not be vectorized. This is a strong hint: the compiler will not
4979 vectorize a loop marked with this hint.
4984 The loop should be vectorized. This is a weak hint: the compiler will try to
4985 apply vectorization to this loop preferably to other optimizations, notably
4986 unrolling, but there is no guarantee that the loop will be vectorized.
4989 These hints do not remove the need to pass the appropriate switches to the
4990 compiler in order to enable the relevant optimizations, that is to say
4991 @emph{-funroll-loops} for unrolling and @emph{-ftree-vectorize} for
4994 @node Pragma Loop_Variant,Pragma Machine_Attribute,Pragma Loop_Optimize,Implementation Defined Pragmas
4995 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-loop-variant}@anchor{96}
4996 @section Pragma Loop_Variant
5002 pragma Loop_Variant ( LOOP_VARIANT_ITEM @{, LOOP_VARIANT_ITEM @} );
5003 LOOP_VARIANT_ITEM ::= CHANGE_DIRECTION => discrete_EXPRESSION
5004 CHANGE_DIRECTION ::= Increases | Decreases
5007 @code{Loop_Variant} can only appear as one of the items in the sequence
5008 of statements of a loop body, or nested inside block statements that
5009 appear in the sequence of statements of a loop body.
5010 It allows the specification of quantities which must always
5011 decrease or increase in successive iterations of the loop. In its simplest
5012 form, just one expression is specified, whose value must increase or decrease
5013 on each iteration of the loop.
5015 In a more complex form, multiple arguments can be given which are intepreted
5016 in a nesting lexicographic manner. For example:
5019 pragma Loop_Variant (Increases => X, Decreases => Y);
5022 specifies that each time through the loop either X increases, or X stays
5023 the same and Y decreases. A @code{Loop_Variant} pragma ensures that the
5024 loop is making progress. It can be useful in helping to show informally
5025 or prove formally that the loop always terminates.
5027 @code{Loop_Variant} is an assertion whose effect can be controlled using
5028 an @code{Assertion_Policy} with a check name of @code{Loop_Variant}. The
5029 policy can be @code{Check} to enable the loop variant check, @code{Ignore}
5030 to ignore the check (in which case the pragma has no effect on the program),
5031 or @code{Disable} in which case the pragma is not even checked for correct
5034 Multiple @code{Loop_Invariant} and @code{Loop_Variant} pragmas that
5035 apply to the same loop should be grouped in the same sequence of
5038 The @code{Loop_Entry} attribute may be used within the expressions of the
5039 @code{Loop_Variant} pragma to refer to values on entry to the loop.
5041 @node Pragma Machine_Attribute,Pragma Main,Pragma Loop_Variant,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5042 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-machine-attribute}@anchor{97}
5043 @section Pragma Machine_Attribute
5049 pragma Machine_Attribute (
5050 [Entity =>] LOCAL_NAME,
5051 [Attribute_Name =>] static_string_EXPRESSION
5052 [, [Info =>] static_EXPRESSION] );
5055 Machine-dependent attributes can be specified for types and/or
5056 declarations. This pragma is semantically equivalent to
5057 @code{__attribute__((@emph{attribute_name}))} (if @code{info} is not
5058 specified) or @code{__attribute__((@emph{attribute_name(info})))}
5059 in GNU C, where @emph{attribute_name} is recognized by the
5060 compiler middle-end or the @code{TARGET_ATTRIBUTE_TABLE} machine
5061 specific macro. A string literal for the optional parameter @code{info}
5062 is transformed into an identifier, which may make this pragma unusable
5063 for some attributes.
5064 For further information see @cite{GNU Compiler Collection (GCC) Internals}.
5066 @node Pragma Main,Pragma Main_Storage,Pragma Machine_Attribute,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5067 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-main}@anchor{98}
5068 @section Pragma Main
5075 (MAIN_OPTION [, MAIN_OPTION]);
5078 [Stack_Size =>] static_integer_EXPRESSION
5079 | [Task_Stack_Size_Default =>] static_integer_EXPRESSION
5080 | [Time_Slicing_Enabled =>] static_boolean_EXPRESSION
5083 This pragma is provided for compatibility with OpenVMS VAX Systems. It has
5084 no effect in GNAT, other than being syntax checked.
5086 @node Pragma Main_Storage,Pragma Max_Queue_Length,Pragma Main,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5087 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-main-storage}@anchor{99}
5088 @section Pragma Main_Storage
5095 (MAIN_STORAGE_OPTION [, MAIN_STORAGE_OPTION]);
5097 MAIN_STORAGE_OPTION ::=
5098 [WORKING_STORAGE =>] static_SIMPLE_EXPRESSION
5099 | [TOP_GUARD =>] static_SIMPLE_EXPRESSION
5102 This pragma is provided for compatibility with OpenVMS VAX Systems. It has
5103 no effect in GNAT, other than being syntax checked.
5105 @node Pragma Max_Queue_Length,Pragma No_Body,Pragma Main_Storage,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5106 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id22}@anchor{9a}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-max-queue-length}@anchor{9b}
5107 @section Pragma Max_Queue_Length
5113 pragma Max_Entry_Queue (static_integer_EXPRESSION);
5116 This pragma is used to specify the maximum callers per entry queue for
5117 individual protected entries and entry families. It accepts a single
5118 positive integer as a parameter and must appear after the declaration
5121 @node Pragma No_Body,Pragma No_Component_Reordering,Pragma Max_Queue_Length,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5122 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-no-body}@anchor{9c}
5123 @section Pragma No_Body
5132 There are a number of cases in which a package spec does not require a body,
5133 and in fact a body is not permitted. GNAT will not permit the spec to be
5134 compiled if there is a body around. The pragma No_Body allows you to provide
5135 a body file, even in a case where no body is allowed. The body file must
5136 contain only comments and a single No_Body pragma. This is recognized by
5137 the compiler as indicating that no body is logically present.
5139 This is particularly useful during maintenance when a package is modified in
5140 such a way that a body needed before is no longer needed. The provision of a
5141 dummy body with a No_Body pragma ensures that there is no interference from
5142 earlier versions of the package body.
5144 @node Pragma No_Component_Reordering,Pragma No_Elaboration_Code_All,Pragma No_Body,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5145 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-no-component-reordering}@anchor{9d}
5146 @section Pragma No_Component_Reordering
5152 pragma No_Component_Reordering [([Entity =>] type_LOCAL_NAME)];
5155 @code{type_LOCAL_NAME} must refer to a record type declaration in the current
5156 declarative part. The effect is to preclude any reordering of components
5157 for the layout of the record, i.e. the record is laid out by the compiler
5158 in the order in which the components are declared textually. The form with
5159 no argument is a configuration pragma which applies to all record types
5160 declared in units to which the pragma applies and there is a requirement
5161 that this pragma be used consistently within a partition.
5163 @node Pragma No_Elaboration_Code_All,Pragma No_Heap_Finalization,Pragma No_Component_Reordering,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5164 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id23}@anchor{9e}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-no-elaboration-code-all}@anchor{9f}
5165 @section Pragma No_Elaboration_Code_All
5171 pragma No_Elaboration_Code_All [(program_unit_NAME)];
5174 This is a program unit pragma (there is also an equivalent aspect of the
5175 same name) that establishes the restriction @code{No_Elaboration_Code} for
5176 the current unit and any extended main source units (body and subunits).
5177 It also has the effect of enforcing a transitive application of this
5178 aspect, so that if any unit is implicitly or explicitly with'ed by the
5179 current unit, it must also have the No_Elaboration_Code_All aspect set.
5180 It may be applied to package or subprogram specs or their generic versions.
5182 @node Pragma No_Heap_Finalization,Pragma No_Inline,Pragma No_Elaboration_Code_All,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5183 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-no-heap-finalization}@anchor{a0}
5184 @section Pragma No_Heap_Finalization
5190 pragma No_Heap_Finalization [ (first_subtype_LOCAL_NAME) ];
5193 Pragma @code{No_Heap_Finalization} may be used as a configuration pragma or as a
5194 type-specific pragma.
5196 In its configuration form, the pragma must appear within a configuration file
5197 such as gnat.adc, without an argument. The pragma suppresses the call to
5198 @code{Finalize} for heap-allocated objects created through library-level named
5199 access-to-object types in cases where the designated type requires finalization
5202 In its type-specific form, the argument of the pragma must denote a
5203 library-level named access-to-object type. The pragma suppresses the call to
5204 @code{Finalize} for heap-allocated objects created through the specific access type
5205 in cases where the designated type requires finalization actions.
5207 It is still possible to finalize such heap-allocated objects by explicitly
5210 A library-level named access-to-object type declared within a generic unit will
5211 lose its @code{No_Heap_Finalization} pragma when the corresponding instance does not
5212 appear at the library level.
5214 @node Pragma No_Inline,Pragma No_Return,Pragma No_Heap_Finalization,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5215 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id24}@anchor{a1}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-no-inline}@anchor{a2}
5216 @section Pragma No_Inline
5222 pragma No_Inline (NAME @{, NAME@});
5225 This pragma suppresses inlining for the callable entity or the instances of
5226 the generic subprogram designated by @code{NAME}, including inlining that
5227 results from the use of pragma @code{Inline}. This pragma is always active,
5228 in particular it is not subject to the use of option @emph{-gnatn} or
5229 @emph{-gnatN}. It is illegal to specify both pragma @code{No_Inline} and
5230 pragma @code{Inline_Always} for the same @code{NAME}.
5232 @node Pragma No_Return,Pragma No_Run_Time,Pragma No_Inline,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5233 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-no-return}@anchor{a3}
5234 @section Pragma No_Return
5240 pragma No_Return (procedure_LOCAL_NAME @{, procedure_LOCAL_NAME@});
5243 Each @code{procedure_LOCAL_NAME} argument must refer to one or more procedure
5244 declarations in the current declarative part. A procedure to which this
5245 pragma is applied may not contain any explicit @code{return} statements.
5246 In addition, if the procedure contains any implicit returns from falling
5247 off the end of a statement sequence, then execution of that implicit
5248 return will cause Program_Error to be raised.
5250 One use of this pragma is to identify procedures whose only purpose is to raise
5251 an exception. Another use of this pragma is to suppress incorrect warnings
5252 about missing returns in functions, where the last statement of a function
5253 statement sequence is a call to such a procedure.
5255 Note that in Ada 2005 mode, this pragma is part of the language. It is
5256 available in all earlier versions of Ada as an implementation-defined
5259 @node Pragma No_Run_Time,Pragma No_Strict_Aliasing,Pragma No_Return,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5260 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-no-run-time}@anchor{a4}
5261 @section Pragma No_Run_Time
5270 This is an obsolete configuration pragma that historically was used to
5271 set up a runtime library with no object code. It is now used only for
5272 internal testing. The pragma has been superseded by the reconfigurable
5273 runtime capability of GNAT.
5275 @node Pragma No_Strict_Aliasing,Pragma No_Tagged_Streams,Pragma No_Run_Time,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5276 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-no-strict-aliasing}@anchor{a5}
5277 @section Pragma No_Strict_Aliasing
5283 pragma No_Strict_Aliasing [([Entity =>] type_LOCAL_NAME)];
5286 @code{type_LOCAL_NAME} must refer to an access type
5287 declaration in the current declarative part. The effect is to inhibit
5288 strict aliasing optimization for the given type. The form with no
5289 arguments is a configuration pragma which applies to all access types
5290 declared in units to which the pragma applies. For a detailed
5291 description of the strict aliasing optimization, and the situations
5292 in which it must be suppressed, see the section on Optimization and Strict Aliasing
5293 in the @cite{GNAT User's Guide}.
5295 This pragma currently has no effects on access to unconstrained array types.
5297 @node Pragma No_Tagged_Streams,Pragma Normalize_Scalars,Pragma No_Strict_Aliasing,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5298 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-no-tagged-streams}@anchor{a6}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id25}@anchor{a7}
5299 @section Pragma No_Tagged_Streams
5305 pragma No_Tagged_Streams [([Entity =>] tagged_type_LOCAL_NAME)];
5308 Normally when a tagged type is introduced using a full type declaration,
5309 part of the processing includes generating stream access routines to be
5310 used by stream attributes referencing the type (or one of its subtypes
5311 or derived types). This can involve the generation of significant amounts
5312 of code which is wasted space if stream routines are not needed for the
5315 The @code{No_Tagged_Streams} pragma causes the generation of these stream
5316 routines to be skipped, and any attempt to use stream operations on
5317 types subject to this pragma will be statically rejected as illegal.
5319 There are two forms of the pragma. The form with no arguments must appear
5320 in a declarative sequence or in the declarations of a package spec. This
5321 pragma affects all subsequent root tagged types declared in the declaration
5322 sequence, and specifies that no stream routines be generated. The form with
5323 an argument (for which there is also a corresponding aspect) specifies a
5324 single root tagged type for which stream routines are not to be generated.
5326 Once the pragma has been given for a particular root tagged type, all subtypes
5327 and derived types of this type inherit the pragma automatically, so the effect
5328 applies to a complete hierarchy (this is necessary to deal with the class-wide
5329 dispatching versions of the stream routines).
5331 When pragmas @code{Discard_Names} and @code{No_Tagged_Streams} are simultaneously
5332 applied to a tagged type its Expanded_Name and External_Tag are initialized
5333 with empty strings. This is useful to avoid exposing entity names at binary
5334 level but has a negative impact on the debuggability of tagged types.
5336 @node Pragma Normalize_Scalars,Pragma Obsolescent,Pragma No_Tagged_Streams,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5337 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-normalize-scalars}@anchor{a8}
5338 @section Pragma Normalize_Scalars
5344 pragma Normalize_Scalars;
5347 This is a language defined pragma which is fully implemented in GNAT. The
5348 effect is to cause all scalar objects that are not otherwise initialized
5349 to be initialized. The initial values are implementation dependent and
5355 @item @emph{Standard.Character}
5357 Objects whose root type is Standard.Character are initialized to
5358 Character'Last unless the subtype range excludes NUL (in which case
5359 NUL is used). This choice will always generate an invalid value if
5362 @item @emph{Standard.Wide_Character}
5364 Objects whose root type is Standard.Wide_Character are initialized to
5365 Wide_Character'Last unless the subtype range excludes NUL (in which case
5366 NUL is used). This choice will always generate an invalid value if
5369 @item @emph{Standard.Wide_Wide_Character}
5371 Objects whose root type is Standard.Wide_Wide_Character are initialized to
5372 the invalid value 16#FFFF_FFFF# unless the subtype range excludes NUL (in
5373 which case NUL is used). This choice will always generate an invalid value if
5376 @item @emph{Integer types}
5378 Objects of an integer type are treated differently depending on whether
5379 negative values are present in the subtype. If no negative values are
5380 present, then all one bits is used as the initial value except in the
5381 special case where zero is excluded from the subtype, in which case
5382 all zero bits are used. This choice will always generate an invalid
5383 value if one exists.
5385 For subtypes with negative values present, the largest negative number
5386 is used, except in the unusual case where this largest negative number
5387 is in the subtype, and the largest positive number is not, in which case
5388 the largest positive value is used. This choice will always generate
5389 an invalid value if one exists.
5391 @item @emph{Floating-Point Types}
5393 Objects of all floating-point types are initialized to all 1-bits. For
5394 standard IEEE format, this corresponds to a NaN (not a number) which is
5395 indeed an invalid value.
5397 @item @emph{Fixed-Point Types}
5399 Objects of all fixed-point types are treated as described above for integers,
5400 with the rules applying to the underlying integer value used to represent
5401 the fixed-point value.
5403 @item @emph{Modular types}
5405 Objects of a modular type are initialized to all one bits, except in
5406 the special case where zero is excluded from the subtype, in which
5407 case all zero bits are used. This choice will always generate an
5408 invalid value if one exists.
5410 @item @emph{Enumeration types}
5412 Objects of an enumeration type are initialized to all one-bits, i.e., to
5413 the value @code{2 ** typ'Size - 1} unless the subtype excludes the literal
5414 whose Pos value is zero, in which case a code of zero is used. This choice
5415 will always generate an invalid value if one exists.
5418 @node Pragma Obsolescent,Pragma Optimize_Alignment,Pragma Normalize_Scalars,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5419 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-obsolescent}@anchor{a9}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id26}@anchor{aa}
5420 @section Pragma Obsolescent
5428 pragma Obsolescent (
5429 [Message =>] static_string_EXPRESSION
5430 [,[Version =>] Ada_05]]);
5432 pragma Obsolescent (
5434 [,[Message =>] static_string_EXPRESSION
5435 [,[Version =>] Ada_05]] );
5438 This pragma can occur immediately following a declaration of an entity,
5439 including the case of a record component. If no Entity argument is present,
5440 then this declaration is the one to which the pragma applies. If an Entity
5441 parameter is present, it must either match the name of the entity in this
5442 declaration, or alternatively, the pragma can immediately follow an enumeration
5443 type declaration, where the Entity argument names one of the enumeration
5446 This pragma is used to indicate that the named entity
5447 is considered obsolescent and should not be used. Typically this is
5448 used when an API must be modified by eventually removing or modifying
5449 existing subprograms or other entities. The pragma can be used at an
5450 intermediate stage when the entity is still present, but will be
5453 The effect of this pragma is to output a warning message on a reference to
5454 an entity thus marked that the subprogram is obsolescent if the appropriate
5455 warning option in the compiler is activated. If the @code{Message} parameter is
5456 present, then a second warning message is given containing this text. In
5457 addition, a reference to the entity is considered to be a violation of pragma
5458 @code{Restrictions (No_Obsolescent_Features)}.
5460 This pragma can also be used as a program unit pragma for a package,
5461 in which case the entity name is the name of the package, and the
5462 pragma indicates that the entire package is considered
5463 obsolescent. In this case a client @code{with}ing such a package
5464 violates the restriction, and the @code{with} clause is
5465 flagged with warnings if the warning option is set.
5467 If the @code{Version} parameter is present (which must be exactly
5468 the identifier @code{Ada_05}, no other argument is allowed), then the
5469 indication of obsolescence applies only when compiling in Ada 2005
5470 mode. This is primarily intended for dealing with the situations
5471 in the predefined library where subprograms or packages
5472 have become defined as obsolescent in Ada 2005
5473 (e.g., in @code{Ada.Characters.Handling}), but may be used anywhere.
5475 The following examples show typical uses of this pragma:
5479 pragma Obsolescent (p, Message => "use pp instead of p");
5484 pragma Obsolescent ("use q2new instead");
5486 type R is new integer;
5489 Message => "use RR in Ada 2005",
5499 type E is (a, bc, 'd', quack);
5500 pragma Obsolescent (Entity => bc)
5501 pragma Obsolescent (Entity => 'd')
5504 (a, b : character) return character;
5505 pragma Obsolescent (Entity => "+");
5509 Note that, as for all pragmas, if you use a pragma argument identifier,
5510 then all subsequent parameters must also use a pragma argument identifier.
5511 So if you specify @code{Entity =>} for the @code{Entity} argument, and a @code{Message}
5512 argument is present, it must be preceded by @code{Message =>}.
5514 @node Pragma Optimize_Alignment,Pragma Ordered,Pragma Obsolescent,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5515 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-optimize-alignment}@anchor{ab}
5516 @section Pragma Optimize_Alignment
5520 @geindex default settings
5525 pragma Optimize_Alignment (TIME | SPACE | OFF);
5528 This is a configuration pragma which affects the choice of default alignments
5529 for types and objects where no alignment is explicitly specified. There is a
5530 time/space trade-off in the selection of these values. Large alignments result
5531 in more efficient code, at the expense of larger data space, since sizes have
5532 to be increased to match these alignments. Smaller alignments save space, but
5533 the access code is slower. The normal choice of default alignments for types
5534 and individual alignment promotions for objects (which is what you get if you
5535 do not use this pragma, or if you use an argument of OFF), tries to balance
5536 these two requirements.
5538 Specifying SPACE causes smaller default alignments to be chosen in two cases.
5539 First any packed record is given an alignment of 1. Second, if a size is given
5540 for the type, then the alignment is chosen to avoid increasing this size. For
5552 In the default mode, this type gets an alignment of 4, so that access to the
5553 Integer field X are efficient. But this means that objects of the type end up
5554 with a size of 8 bytes. This is a valid choice, since sizes of objects are
5555 allowed to be bigger than the size of the type, but it can waste space if for
5556 example fields of type R appear in an enclosing record. If the above type is
5557 compiled in @code{Optimize_Alignment (Space)} mode, the alignment is set to 1.
5559 However, there is one case in which SPACE is ignored. If a variable length
5560 record (that is a discriminated record with a component which is an array
5561 whose length depends on a discriminant), has a pragma Pack, then it is not
5562 in general possible to set the alignment of such a record to one, so the
5563 pragma is ignored in this case (with a warning).
5565 Specifying SPACE also disables alignment promotions for standalone objects,
5566 which occur when the compiler increases the alignment of a specific object
5567 without changing the alignment of its type.
5569 Specifying SPACE also disables component reordering in unpacked record types,
5570 which can result in larger sizes in order to meet alignment requirements.
5572 Specifying TIME causes larger default alignments to be chosen in the case of
5573 small types with sizes that are not a power of 2. For example, consider:
5586 The default alignment for this record is normally 1, but if this type is
5587 compiled in @code{Optimize_Alignment (Time)} mode, then the alignment is set
5588 to 4, which wastes space for objects of the type, since they are now 4 bytes
5589 long, but results in more efficient access when the whole record is referenced.
5591 As noted above, this is a configuration pragma, and there is a requirement
5592 that all units in a partition be compiled with a consistent setting of the
5593 optimization setting. This would normally be achieved by use of a configuration
5594 pragma file containing the appropriate setting. The exception to this rule is
5595 that units with an explicit configuration pragma in the same file as the source
5596 unit are excluded from the consistency check, as are all predefined units. The
5597 latter are compiled by default in pragma Optimize_Alignment (Off) mode if no
5598 pragma appears at the start of the file.
5600 @node Pragma Ordered,Pragma Overflow_Mode,Pragma Optimize_Alignment,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5601 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-ordered}@anchor{ac}
5602 @section Pragma Ordered
5608 pragma Ordered (enumeration_first_subtype_LOCAL_NAME);
5611 Most enumeration types are from a conceptual point of view unordered.
5612 For example, consider:
5615 type Color is (Red, Blue, Green, Yellow);
5618 By Ada semantics @code{Blue > Red} and @code{Green > Blue},
5619 but really these relations make no sense; the enumeration type merely
5620 specifies a set of possible colors, and the order is unimportant.
5622 For unordered enumeration types, it is generally a good idea if
5623 clients avoid comparisons (other than equality or inequality) and
5624 explicit ranges. (A @emph{client} is a unit where the type is referenced,
5625 other than the unit where the type is declared, its body, and its subunits.)
5626 For example, if code buried in some client says:
5629 if Current_Color < Yellow then ...
5630 if Current_Color in Blue .. Green then ...
5633 then the client code is relying on the order, which is undesirable.
5634 It makes the code hard to read and creates maintenance difficulties if
5635 entries have to be added to the enumeration type. Instead,
5636 the code in the client should list the possibilities, or an
5637 appropriate subtype should be declared in the unit that declares
5638 the original enumeration type. E.g., the following subtype could
5639 be declared along with the type @code{Color}:
5642 subtype RBG is Color range Red .. Green;
5645 and then the client could write:
5648 if Current_Color in RBG then ...
5649 if Current_Color = Blue or Current_Color = Green then ...
5652 However, some enumeration types are legitimately ordered from a conceptual
5653 point of view. For example, if you declare:
5656 type Day is (Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri, Sat, Sun);
5659 then the ordering imposed by the language is reasonable, and
5660 clients can depend on it, writing for example:
5663 if D in Mon .. Fri then ...
5667 The pragma @emph{Ordered} is provided to mark enumeration types that
5668 are conceptually ordered, alerting the reader that clients may depend
5669 on the ordering. GNAT provides a pragma to mark enumerations as ordered
5670 rather than one to mark them as unordered, since in our experience,
5671 the great majority of enumeration types are conceptually unordered.
5673 The types @code{Boolean}, @code{Character}, @code{Wide_Character},
5674 and @code{Wide_Wide_Character}
5675 are considered to be ordered types, so each is declared with a
5676 pragma @code{Ordered} in package @code{Standard}.
5678 Normally pragma @code{Ordered} serves only as documentation and a guide for
5679 coding standards, but GNAT provides a warning switch @emph{-gnatw.u} that
5680 requests warnings for inappropriate uses (comparisons and explicit
5681 subranges) for unordered types. If this switch is used, then any
5682 enumeration type not marked with pragma @code{Ordered} will be considered
5683 as unordered, and will generate warnings for inappropriate uses.
5685 Note that generic types are not considered ordered or unordered (since the
5686 template can be instantiated for both cases), so we never generate warnings
5687 for the case of generic enumerated types.
5689 For additional information please refer to the description of the
5690 @emph{-gnatw.u} switch in the GNAT User's Guide.
5692 @node Pragma Overflow_Mode,Pragma Overriding_Renamings,Pragma Ordered,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5693 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-overflow-mode}@anchor{ad}
5694 @section Pragma Overflow_Mode
5700 pragma Overflow_Mode
5702 [,[Assertions =>] MODE]);
5704 MODE ::= STRICT | MINIMIZED | ELIMINATED
5707 This pragma sets the current overflow mode to the given setting. For details
5708 of the meaning of these modes, please refer to the
5709 'Overflow Check Handling in GNAT' appendix in the
5710 GNAT User's Guide. If only the @code{General} parameter is present,
5711 the given mode applies to all expressions. If both parameters are present,
5712 the @code{General} mode applies to expressions outside assertions, and
5713 the @code{Eliminated} mode applies to expressions within assertions.
5715 The case of the @code{MODE} parameter is ignored,
5716 so @code{MINIMIZED}, @code{Minimized} and
5717 @code{minimized} all have the same effect.
5719 The @code{Overflow_Mode} pragma has the same scoping and placement
5720 rules as pragma @code{Suppress}, so it can occur either as a
5721 configuration pragma, specifying a default for the whole
5722 program, or in a declarative scope, where it applies to the
5723 remaining declarations and statements in that scope.
5725 The pragma @code{Suppress (Overflow_Check)} suppresses
5726 overflow checking, but does not affect the overflow mode.
5728 The pragma @code{Unsuppress (Overflow_Check)} unsuppresses (enables)
5729 overflow checking, but does not affect the overflow mode.
5731 @node Pragma Overriding_Renamings,Pragma Partition_Elaboration_Policy,Pragma Overflow_Mode,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5732 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-overriding-renamings}@anchor{ae}
5733 @section Pragma Overriding_Renamings
5736 @geindex Rational profile
5738 @geindex Rational compatibility
5743 pragma Overriding_Renamings;
5746 This is a GNAT configuration pragma to simplify porting
5747 legacy code accepted by the Rational
5748 Ada compiler. In the presence of this pragma, a renaming declaration that
5749 renames an inherited operation declared in the same scope is legal if selected
5750 notation is used as in:
5753 pragma Overriding_Renamings;
5758 function F (..) renames R.F;
5763 RM 8.3 (15) stipulates that an overridden operation is not visible within the
5764 declaration of the overriding operation.
5766 @node Pragma Partition_Elaboration_Policy,Pragma Part_Of,Pragma Overriding_Renamings,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5767 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-partition-elaboration-policy}@anchor{af}
5768 @section Pragma Partition_Elaboration_Policy
5774 pragma Partition_Elaboration_Policy (POLICY_IDENTIFIER);
5776 POLICY_IDENTIFIER ::= Concurrent | Sequential
5779 This pragma is standard in Ada 2005, but is available in all earlier
5780 versions of Ada as an implementation-defined pragma.
5781 See Ada 2012 Reference Manual for details.
5783 @node Pragma Part_Of,Pragma Passive,Pragma Partition_Elaboration_Policy,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5784 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id27}@anchor{b0}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-part-of}@anchor{b1}
5785 @section Pragma Part_Of
5791 pragma Part_Of (ABSTRACT_STATE);
5793 ABSTRACT_STATE ::= NAME
5796 For the semantics of this pragma, see the entry for aspect @code{Part_Of} in the
5797 SPARK 2014 Reference Manual, section 7.2.6.
5799 @node Pragma Passive,Pragma Persistent_BSS,Pragma Part_Of,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5800 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-passive}@anchor{b2}
5801 @section Pragma Passive
5807 pragma Passive [(Semaphore | No)];
5810 Syntax checked, but otherwise ignored by GNAT. This is recognized for
5811 compatibility with DEC Ada 83 implementations, where it is used within a
5812 task definition to request that a task be made passive. If the argument
5813 @code{Semaphore} is present, or the argument is omitted, then DEC Ada 83
5814 treats the pragma as an assertion that the containing task is passive
5815 and that optimization of context switch with this task is permitted and
5816 desired. If the argument @code{No} is present, the task must not be
5817 optimized. GNAT does not attempt to optimize any tasks in this manner
5818 (since protected objects are available in place of passive tasks).
5820 For more information on the subject of passive tasks, see the section
5821 'Passive Task Optimization' in the GNAT Users Guide.
5823 @node Pragma Persistent_BSS,Pragma Polling,Pragma Passive,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5824 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id28}@anchor{b3}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-persistent-bss}@anchor{b4}
5825 @section Pragma Persistent_BSS
5831 pragma Persistent_BSS [(LOCAL_NAME)]
5834 This pragma allows selected objects to be placed in the @code{.persistent_bss}
5835 section. On some targets the linker and loader provide for special
5836 treatment of this section, allowing a program to be reloaded without
5837 affecting the contents of this data (hence the name persistent).
5839 There are two forms of usage. If an argument is given, it must be the
5840 local name of a library-level object, with no explicit initialization
5841 and whose type is potentially persistent. If no argument is given, then
5842 the pragma is a configuration pragma, and applies to all library-level
5843 objects with no explicit initialization of potentially persistent types.
5845 A potentially persistent type is a scalar type, or an untagged,
5846 non-discriminated record, all of whose components have no explicit
5847 initialization and are themselves of a potentially persistent type,
5848 or an array, all of whose constraints are static, and whose component
5849 type is potentially persistent.
5851 If this pragma is used on a target where this feature is not supported,
5852 then the pragma will be ignored. See also @code{pragma Linker_Section}.
5854 @node Pragma Polling,Pragma Post,Pragma Persistent_BSS,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5855 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-polling}@anchor{b5}
5856 @section Pragma Polling
5862 pragma Polling (ON | OFF);
5865 This pragma controls the generation of polling code. This is normally off.
5866 If @code{pragma Polling (ON)} is used then periodic calls are generated to
5867 the routine @code{Ada.Exceptions.Poll}. This routine is a separate unit in the
5868 runtime library, and can be found in file @code{a-excpol.adb}.
5870 Pragma @code{Polling} can appear as a configuration pragma (for example it
5871 can be placed in the @code{gnat.adc} file) to enable polling globally, or it
5872 can be used in the statement or declaration sequence to control polling
5875 A call to the polling routine is generated at the start of every loop and
5876 at the start of every subprogram call. This guarantees that the @code{Poll}
5877 routine is called frequently, and places an upper bound (determined by
5878 the complexity of the code) on the period between two @code{Poll} calls.
5880 The primary purpose of the polling interface is to enable asynchronous
5881 aborts on targets that cannot otherwise support it (for example Windows
5882 NT), but it may be used for any other purpose requiring periodic polling.
5883 The standard version is null, and can be replaced by a user program. This
5884 will require re-compilation of the @code{Ada.Exceptions} package that can
5885 be found in files @code{a-except.ads} and @code{a-except.adb}.
5887 A standard alternative unit (in file @code{4wexcpol.adb} in the standard GNAT
5888 distribution) is used to enable the asynchronous abort capability on
5889 targets that do not normally support the capability. The version of
5890 @code{Poll} in this file makes a call to the appropriate runtime routine
5891 to test for an abort condition.
5893 Note that polling can also be enabled by use of the @emph{-gnatP} switch.
5894 See the section on switches for gcc in the @cite{GNAT User's Guide}.
5896 @node Pragma Post,Pragma Postcondition,Pragma Polling,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5897 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-post}@anchor{b6}
5898 @section Pragma Post
5904 @geindex postconditions
5909 pragma Post (Boolean_Expression);
5912 The @code{Post} pragma is intended to be an exact replacement for
5913 the language-defined
5914 @code{Post} aspect, and shares its restrictions and semantics.
5915 It must appear either immediately following the corresponding
5916 subprogram declaration (only other pragmas may intervene), or
5917 if there is no separate subprogram declaration, then it can
5918 appear at the start of the declarations in a subprogram body
5919 (preceded only by other pragmas).
5921 @node Pragma Postcondition,Pragma Post_Class,Pragma Post,Implementation Defined Pragmas
5922 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-postcondition}@anchor{b7}
5923 @section Pragma Postcondition
5926 @geindex Postcondition
5929 @geindex postconditions
5934 pragma Postcondition (
5935 [Check =>] Boolean_Expression
5936 [,[Message =>] String_Expression]);
5939 The @code{Postcondition} pragma allows specification of automatic
5940 postcondition checks for subprograms. These checks are similar to
5941 assertions, but are automatically inserted just prior to the return
5942 statements of the subprogram with which they are associated (including
5943 implicit returns at the end of procedure bodies and associated
5944 exception handlers).
5946 In addition, the boolean expression which is the condition which
5947 must be true may contain references to function'Result in the case
5948 of a function to refer to the returned value.
5950 @code{Postcondition} pragmas may appear either immediately following the
5951 (separate) declaration of a subprogram, or at the start of the
5952 declarations of a subprogram body. Only other pragmas may intervene
5953 (that is appear between the subprogram declaration and its
5954 postconditions, or appear before the postcondition in the
5955 declaration sequence in a subprogram body). In the case of a
5956 postcondition appearing after a subprogram declaration, the
5957 formal arguments of the subprogram are visible, and can be
5958 referenced in the postcondition expressions.
5960 The postconditions are collected and automatically tested just
5961 before any return (implicit or explicit) in the subprogram body.
5962 A postcondition is only recognized if postconditions are active
5963 at the time the pragma is encountered. The compiler switch @emph{gnata}
5964 turns on all postconditions by default, and pragma @code{Check_Policy}
5965 with an identifier of @code{Postcondition} can also be used to
5966 control whether postconditions are active.
5968 The general approach is that postconditions are placed in the spec
5969 if they represent functional aspects which make sense to the client.
5970 For example we might have:
5973 function Direction return Integer;
5974 pragma Postcondition
5975 (Direction'Result = +1
5977 Direction'Result = -1);
5980 which serves to document that the result must be +1 or -1, and
5981 will test that this is the case at run time if postcondition
5984 Postconditions within the subprogram body can be used to
5985 check that some internal aspect of the implementation,
5986 not visible to the client, is operating as expected.
5987 For instance if a square root routine keeps an internal
5988 counter of the number of times it is called, then we
5989 might have the following postcondition:
5992 Sqrt_Calls : Natural := 0;
5994 function Sqrt (Arg : Float) return Float is
5995 pragma Postcondition
5996 (Sqrt_Calls = Sqrt_Calls'Old + 1);
6001 As this example, shows, the use of the @code{Old} attribute
6002 is often useful in postconditions to refer to the state on
6003 entry to the subprogram.
6005 Note that postconditions are only checked on normal returns
6006 from the subprogram. If an abnormal return results from
6007 raising an exception, then the postconditions are not checked.
6009 If a postcondition fails, then the exception
6010 @code{System.Assertions.Assert_Failure} is raised. If
6011 a message argument was supplied, then the given string
6012 will be used as the exception message. If no message
6013 argument was supplied, then the default message has
6014 the form "Postcondition failed at file_name:line". The
6015 exception is raised in the context of the subprogram
6016 body, so it is possible to catch postcondition failures
6017 within the subprogram body itself.
6019 Within a package spec, normal visibility rules
6020 in Ada would prevent forward references within a
6021 postcondition pragma to functions defined later in
6022 the same package. This would introduce undesirable
6023 ordering constraints. To avoid this problem, all
6024 postcondition pragmas are analyzed at the end of
6025 the package spec, allowing forward references.
6027 The following example shows that this even allows
6028 mutually recursive postconditions as in:
6031 package Parity_Functions is
6032 function Odd (X : Natural) return Boolean;
6033 pragma Postcondition
6037 (x /= 0 and then Even (X - 1))));
6039 function Even (X : Natural) return Boolean;
6040 pragma Postcondition
6044 (x /= 1 and then Odd (X - 1))));
6046 end Parity_Functions;
6049 There are no restrictions on the complexity or form of
6050 conditions used within @code{Postcondition} pragmas.
6051 The following example shows that it is even possible
6052 to verify performance behavior.
6057 Performance : constant Float;
6058 -- Performance constant set by implementation
6059 -- to match target architecture behavior.
6061 procedure Treesort (Arg : String);
6062 -- Sorts characters of argument using N*logN sort
6063 pragma Postcondition
6064 (Float (Clock - Clock'Old) <=
6065 Float (Arg'Length) *
6066 log (Float (Arg'Length)) *
6071 Note: postcondition pragmas associated with subprograms that are
6072 marked as Inline_Always, or those marked as Inline with front-end
6073 inlining (-gnatN option set) are accepted and legality-checked
6074 by the compiler, but are ignored at run-time even if postcondition
6075 checking is enabled.
6077 Note that pragma @code{Postcondition} differs from the language-defined
6078 @code{Post} aspect (and corresponding @code{Post} pragma) in allowing
6079 multiple occurrences, allowing occurences in the body even if there
6080 is a separate spec, and allowing a second string parameter, and the
6081 use of the pragma identifier @code{Check}. Historically, pragma
6082 @code{Postcondition} was implemented prior to the development of
6083 Ada 2012, and has been retained in its original form for
6084 compatibility purposes.
6086 @node Pragma Post_Class,Pragma Rename_Pragma,Pragma Postcondition,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6087 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-post-class}@anchor{b8}
6088 @section Pragma Post_Class
6094 @geindex postconditions
6099 pragma Post_Class (Boolean_Expression);
6102 The @code{Post_Class} pragma is intended to be an exact replacement for
6103 the language-defined
6104 @code{Post'Class} aspect, and shares its restrictions and semantics.
6105 It must appear either immediately following the corresponding
6106 subprogram declaration (only other pragmas may intervene), or
6107 if there is no separate subprogram declaration, then it can
6108 appear at the start of the declarations in a subprogram body
6109 (preceded only by other pragmas).
6111 Note: This pragma is called @code{Post_Class} rather than
6112 @code{Post'Class} because the latter would not be strictly
6113 conforming to the allowed syntax for pragmas. The motivation
6114 for provinding pragmas equivalent to the aspects is to allow a program
6115 to be written using the pragmas, and then compiled if necessary
6116 using an Ada compiler that does not recognize the pragmas or
6117 aspects, but is prepared to ignore the pragmas. The assertion
6118 policy that controls this pragma is @code{Post'Class}, not
6121 @node Pragma Rename_Pragma,Pragma Pre,Pragma Post_Class,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6122 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-rename-pragma}@anchor{b9}
6123 @section Pragma Rename_Pragma
6132 pragma Rename_Pragma (
6133 [New_Name =>] IDENTIFIER,
6134 [Renamed =>] pragma_IDENTIFIER);
6137 This pragma provides a mechanism for supplying new names for existing
6138 pragmas. The @code{New_Name} identifier can subsequently be used as a synonym for
6139 the Renamed pragma. For example, suppose you have code that was originally
6140 developed on a compiler that supports Inline_Only as an implementation defined
6141 pragma. And suppose the semantics of pragma Inline_Only are identical to (or at
6142 least very similar to) the GNAT implementation defined pragma
6143 Inline_Always. You could globally replace Inline_Only with Inline_Always.
6145 However, to avoid that source modification, you could instead add a
6146 configuration pragma:
6149 pragma Rename_Pragma (
6150 New_Name => Inline_Only,
6151 Renamed => Inline_Always);
6154 Then GNAT will treat "pragma Inline_Only ..." as if you had written
6155 "pragma Inline_Always ...".
6157 Pragma Inline_Only will not necessarily mean the same thing as the other Ada
6158 compiler; it's up to you to make sure the semantics are close enough.
6160 @node Pragma Pre,Pragma Precondition,Pragma Rename_Pragma,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6161 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-pre}@anchor{ba}
6168 @geindex preconditions
6173 pragma Pre (Boolean_Expression);
6176 The @code{Pre} pragma is intended to be an exact replacement for
6177 the language-defined
6178 @code{Pre} aspect, and shares its restrictions and semantics.
6179 It must appear either immediately following the corresponding
6180 subprogram declaration (only other pragmas may intervene), or
6181 if there is no separate subprogram declaration, then it can
6182 appear at the start of the declarations in a subprogram body
6183 (preceded only by other pragmas).
6185 @node Pragma Precondition,Pragma Predicate,Pragma Pre,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6186 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-precondition}@anchor{bb}
6187 @section Pragma Precondition
6190 @geindex Preconditions
6193 @geindex preconditions
6198 pragma Precondition (
6199 [Check =>] Boolean_Expression
6200 [,[Message =>] String_Expression]);
6203 The @code{Precondition} pragma is similar to @code{Postcondition}
6204 except that the corresponding checks take place immediately upon
6205 entry to the subprogram, and if a precondition fails, the exception
6206 is raised in the context of the caller, and the attribute 'Result
6207 cannot be used within the precondition expression.
6209 Otherwise, the placement and visibility rules are identical to those
6210 described for postconditions. The following is an example of use
6211 within a package spec:
6214 package Math_Functions is
6216 function Sqrt (Arg : Float) return Float;
6217 pragma Precondition (Arg >= 0.0)
6222 @code{Precondition} pragmas may appear either immediately following the
6223 (separate) declaration of a subprogram, or at the start of the
6224 declarations of a subprogram body. Only other pragmas may intervene
6225 (that is appear between the subprogram declaration and its
6226 postconditions, or appear before the postcondition in the
6227 declaration sequence in a subprogram body).
6229 Note: precondition pragmas associated with subprograms that are
6230 marked as Inline_Always, or those marked as Inline with front-end
6231 inlining (-gnatN option set) are accepted and legality-checked
6232 by the compiler, but are ignored at run-time even if precondition
6233 checking is enabled.
6235 Note that pragma @code{Precondition} differs from the language-defined
6236 @code{Pre} aspect (and corresponding @code{Pre} pragma) in allowing
6237 multiple occurrences, allowing occurences in the body even if there
6238 is a separate spec, and allowing a second string parameter, and the
6239 use of the pragma identifier @code{Check}. Historically, pragma
6240 @code{Precondition} was implemented prior to the development of
6241 Ada 2012, and has been retained in its original form for
6242 compatibility purposes.
6244 @node Pragma Predicate,Pragma Predicate_Failure,Pragma Precondition,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6245 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id29}@anchor{bc}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-predicate}@anchor{bd}
6246 @section Pragma Predicate
6253 ([Entity =>] type_LOCAL_NAME,
6254 [Check =>] EXPRESSION);
6257 This pragma (available in all versions of Ada in GNAT) encompasses both
6258 the @code{Static_Predicate} and @code{Dynamic_Predicate} aspects in
6259 Ada 2012. A predicate is regarded as static if it has an allowed form
6260 for @code{Static_Predicate} and is otherwise treated as a
6261 @code{Dynamic_Predicate}. Otherwise, predicates specified by this
6262 pragma behave exactly as described in the Ada 2012 reference manual.
6263 For example, if we have
6266 type R is range 1 .. 10;
6268 pragma Predicate (Entity => S, Check => S not in 4 .. 6);
6270 pragma Predicate (Entity => Q, Check => F(Q) or G(Q));
6273 the effect is identical to the following Ada 2012 code:
6276 type R is range 1 .. 10;
6278 Static_Predicate => S not in 4 .. 6;
6280 Dynamic_Predicate => F(Q) or G(Q);
6283 Note that there are no pragmas @code{Dynamic_Predicate}
6284 or @code{Static_Predicate}. That is
6285 because these pragmas would affect legality and semantics of
6286 the program and thus do not have a neutral effect if ignored.
6287 The motivation behind providing pragmas equivalent to
6288 corresponding aspects is to allow a program to be written
6289 using the pragmas, and then compiled with a compiler that
6290 will ignore the pragmas. That doesn't work in the case of
6291 static and dynamic predicates, since if the corresponding
6292 pragmas are ignored, then the behavior of the program is
6293 fundamentally changed (for example a membership test
6294 @code{A in B} would not take into account a predicate
6295 defined for subtype B). When following this approach, the
6296 use of predicates should be avoided.
6298 @node Pragma Predicate_Failure,Pragma Preelaborable_Initialization,Pragma Predicate,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6299 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-predicate-failure}@anchor{be}
6300 @section Pragma Predicate_Failure
6306 pragma Predicate_Failure
6307 ([Entity =>] type_LOCAL_NAME,
6308 [Message =>] String_Expression);
6311 The @code{Predicate_Failure} pragma is intended to be an exact replacement for
6312 the language-defined
6313 @code{Predicate_Failure} aspect, and shares its restrictions and semantics.
6315 @node Pragma Preelaborable_Initialization,Pragma Prefix_Exception_Messages,Pragma Predicate_Failure,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6316 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-preelaborable-initialization}@anchor{bf}
6317 @section Pragma Preelaborable_Initialization
6323 pragma Preelaborable_Initialization (DIRECT_NAME);
6326 This pragma is standard in Ada 2005, but is available in all earlier
6327 versions of Ada as an implementation-defined pragma.
6328 See Ada 2012 Reference Manual for details.
6330 @node Pragma Prefix_Exception_Messages,Pragma Pre_Class,Pragma Preelaborable_Initialization,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6331 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-prefix-exception-messages}@anchor{c0}
6332 @section Pragma Prefix_Exception_Messages
6335 @geindex Prefix_Exception_Messages
6339 @geindex Exception_Message
6344 pragma Prefix_Exception_Messages;
6347 This is an implementation-defined configuration pragma that affects the
6348 behavior of raise statements with a message given as a static string
6349 constant (typically a string literal). In such cases, the string will
6350 be automatically prefixed by the name of the enclosing entity (giving
6351 the package and subprogram containing the raise statement). This helps
6352 to identify where messages are coming from, and this mode is automatic
6353 for the run-time library.
6355 The pragma has no effect if the message is computed with an expression other
6356 than a static string constant, since the assumption in this case is that
6357 the program computes exactly the string it wants. If you still want the
6358 prefixing in this case, you can always call
6359 @code{GNAT.Source_Info.Enclosing_Entity} and prepend the string manually.
6361 @node Pragma Pre_Class,Pragma Priority_Specific_Dispatching,Pragma Prefix_Exception_Messages,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6362 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-pre-class}@anchor{c1}
6363 @section Pragma Pre_Class
6369 @geindex preconditions
6374 pragma Pre_Class (Boolean_Expression);
6377 The @code{Pre_Class} pragma is intended to be an exact replacement for
6378 the language-defined
6379 @code{Pre'Class} aspect, and shares its restrictions and semantics.
6380 It must appear either immediately following the corresponding
6381 subprogram declaration (only other pragmas may intervene), or
6382 if there is no separate subprogram declaration, then it can
6383 appear at the start of the declarations in a subprogram body
6384 (preceded only by other pragmas).
6386 Note: This pragma is called @code{Pre_Class} rather than
6387 @code{Pre'Class} because the latter would not be strictly
6388 conforming to the allowed syntax for pragmas. The motivation
6389 for providing pragmas equivalent to the aspects is to allow a program
6390 to be written using the pragmas, and then compiled if necessary
6391 using an Ada compiler that does not recognize the pragmas or
6392 aspects, but is prepared to ignore the pragmas. The assertion
6393 policy that controls this pragma is @code{Pre'Class}, not
6396 @node Pragma Priority_Specific_Dispatching,Pragma Profile,Pragma Pre_Class,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6397 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-priority-specific-dispatching}@anchor{c2}
6398 @section Pragma Priority_Specific_Dispatching
6404 pragma Priority_Specific_Dispatching (
6406 first_priority_EXPRESSION,
6407 last_priority_EXPRESSION)
6409 POLICY_IDENTIFIER ::=
6410 EDF_Across_Priorities |
6411 FIFO_Within_Priorities |
6412 Non_Preemptive_Within_Priorities |
6413 Round_Robin_Within_Priorities
6416 This pragma is standard in Ada 2005, but is available in all earlier
6417 versions of Ada as an implementation-defined pragma.
6418 See Ada 2012 Reference Manual for details.
6420 @node Pragma Profile,Pragma Profile_Warnings,Pragma Priority_Specific_Dispatching,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6421 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-profile}@anchor{c3}
6422 @section Pragma Profile
6428 pragma Profile (Ravenscar | Restricted | Rational |
6429 GNAT_Extended_Ravenscar | GNAT_Ravenscar_EDF );
6432 This pragma is standard in Ada 2005, but is available in all earlier
6433 versions of Ada as an implementation-defined pragma. This is a
6434 configuration pragma that establishes a set of configuration pragmas
6435 that depend on the argument. @code{Ravenscar} is standard in Ada 2005.
6436 The other possibilities (@code{Restricted}, @code{Rational},
6437 @code{GNAT_Extended_Ravenscar}, @code{GNAT_Ravenscar_EDF})
6438 are implementation-defined. The set of configuration pragmas
6439 is defined in the following sections.
6445 Pragma Profile (Ravenscar)
6447 The @code{Ravenscar} profile is standard in Ada 2005,
6448 but is available in all earlier
6449 versions of Ada as an implementation-defined pragma. This profile
6450 establishes the following set of configuration pragmas:
6456 @code{Task_Dispatching_Policy (FIFO_Within_Priorities)}
6458 [RM D.2.2] Tasks are dispatched following a preemptive
6459 priority-ordered scheduling policy.
6462 @code{Locking_Policy (Ceiling_Locking)}
6464 [RM D.3] While tasks and interrupts execute a protected action, they inherit
6465 the ceiling priority of the corresponding protected object.
6468 @code{Detect_Blocking}
6470 This pragma forces the detection of potentially blocking operations within a
6471 protected operation, and to raise Program_Error if that happens.
6474 plus the following set of restrictions:
6480 @code{Max_Entry_Queue_Length => 1}
6482 No task can be queued on a protected entry.
6485 @code{Max_Protected_Entries => 1}
6488 @code{Max_Task_Entries => 0}
6490 No rendezvous statements are allowed.
6493 @code{No_Abort_Statements}
6496 @code{No_Dynamic_Attachment}
6499 @code{No_Dynamic_Priorities}
6502 @code{No_Implicit_Heap_Allocations}
6505 @code{No_Local_Protected_Objects}
6508 @code{No_Local_Timing_Events}
6511 @code{No_Protected_Type_Allocators}
6514 @code{No_Relative_Delay}
6517 @code{No_Requeue_Statements}
6520 @code{No_Select_Statements}
6523 @code{No_Specific_Termination_Handlers}
6526 @code{No_Task_Allocators}
6529 @code{No_Task_Hierarchy}
6532 @code{No_Task_Termination}
6535 @code{Simple_Barriers}
6538 The Ravenscar profile also includes the following restrictions that specify
6539 that there are no semantic dependences on the corresponding predefined
6546 @code{No_Dependence => Ada.Asynchronous_Task_Control}
6549 @code{No_Dependence => Ada.Calendar}
6552 @code{No_Dependence => Ada.Execution_Time.Group_Budget}
6555 @code{No_Dependence => Ada.Execution_Time.Timers}
6558 @code{No_Dependence => Ada.Task_Attributes}
6561 @code{No_Dependence => System.Multiprocessors.Dispatching_Domains}
6564 This set of configuration pragmas and restrictions correspond to the
6565 definition of the 'Ravenscar Profile' for limited tasking, devised and
6566 published by the @cite{International Real-Time Ada Workshop@comma{} 1997}.
6567 A description is also available at
6568 @indicateurl{http://www-users.cs.york.ac.uk/~burns/ravenscar.ps}.
6570 The original definition of the profile was revised at subsequent IRTAW
6571 meetings. It has been included in the ISO
6572 @cite{Guide for the Use of the Ada Programming Language in High Integrity Systems},
6573 and was made part of the Ada 2005 standard.
6574 The formal definition given by
6575 the Ada Rapporteur Group (ARG) can be found in two Ada Issues (AI-249 and
6576 AI-305) available at
6577 @indicateurl{http://www.ada-auth.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb.cgi/ais/ai-00249.txt} and
6578 @indicateurl{http://www.ada-auth.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb.cgi/ais/ai-00305.txt}.
6580 The above set is a superset of the restrictions provided by pragma
6581 @code{Profile (Restricted)}, it includes six additional restrictions
6582 (@code{Simple_Barriers}, @code{No_Select_Statements},
6583 @code{No_Calendar}, @code{No_Implicit_Heap_Allocations},
6584 @code{No_Relative_Delay} and @code{No_Task_Termination}). This means
6585 that pragma @code{Profile (Ravenscar)}, like the pragma
6586 @code{Profile (Restricted)},
6587 automatically causes the use of a simplified,
6588 more efficient version of the tasking run-time library.
6591 Pragma Profile (GNAT_Extended_Ravenscar)
6593 This profile corresponds to a GNAT specific extension of the
6594 Ravenscar profile. The profile may change in the future although
6595 only in a compatible way: some restrictions may be removed or
6596 relaxed. It is defined as a variation of the Ravenscar profile.
6598 The @code{No_Implicit_Heap_Allocations} restriction has been replaced
6599 by @code{No_Implicit_Task_Allocations} and
6600 @code{No_Implicit_Protected_Object_Allocations}.
6602 The @code{Simple_Barriers} restriction has been replaced by
6603 @code{Pure_Barriers}.
6605 The @code{Max_Protected_Entries}, @code{Max_Entry_Queue_Length}, and
6606 @code{No_Relative_Delay} restrictions have been removed.
6609 Pragma Profile (GNAT_Ravenscar_EDF)
6611 This profile corresponds to the Ravenscar profile but using
6612 EDF_Across_Priority as the Task_Scheduling_Policy.
6615 Pragma Profile (Restricted)
6617 This profile corresponds to the GNAT restricted run time. It
6618 establishes the following set of restrictions:
6624 @code{No_Abort_Statements}
6627 @code{No_Entry_Queue}
6630 @code{No_Task_Hierarchy}
6633 @code{No_Task_Allocators}
6636 @code{No_Dynamic_Priorities}
6639 @code{No_Terminate_Alternatives}
6642 @code{No_Dynamic_Attachment}
6645 @code{No_Protected_Type_Allocators}
6648 @code{No_Local_Protected_Objects}
6651 @code{No_Requeue_Statements}
6654 @code{No_Task_Attributes_Package}
6657 @code{Max_Asynchronous_Select_Nesting = 0}
6660 @code{Max_Task_Entries = 0}
6663 @code{Max_Protected_Entries = 1}
6666 @code{Max_Select_Alternatives = 0}
6669 This set of restrictions causes the automatic selection of a simplified
6670 version of the run time that provides improved performance for the
6671 limited set of tasking functionality permitted by this set of restrictions.
6674 Pragma Profile (Rational)
6676 The Rational profile is intended to facilitate porting legacy code that
6677 compiles with the Rational APEX compiler, even when the code includes non-
6678 conforming Ada constructs. The profile enables the following three pragmas:
6684 @code{pragma Implicit_Packing}
6687 @code{pragma Overriding_Renamings}
6690 @code{pragma Use_VADS_Size}
6694 @node Pragma Profile_Warnings,Pragma Propagate_Exceptions,Pragma Profile,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6695 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-profile-warnings}@anchor{c4}
6696 @section Pragma Profile_Warnings
6702 pragma Profile_Warnings (Ravenscar | Restricted | Rational);
6705 This is an implementation-defined pragma that is similar in
6706 effect to @code{pragma Profile} except that instead of
6707 generating @code{Restrictions} pragmas, it generates
6708 @code{Restriction_Warnings} pragmas. The result is that
6709 violations of the profile generate warning messages instead
6712 @node Pragma Propagate_Exceptions,Pragma Provide_Shift_Operators,Pragma Profile_Warnings,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6713 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-propagate-exceptions}@anchor{c5}
6714 @section Pragma Propagate_Exceptions
6717 @geindex Interfacing to C++
6722 pragma Propagate_Exceptions;
6725 This pragma is now obsolete and, other than generating a warning if warnings
6726 on obsolescent features are enabled, is ignored.
6727 It is retained for compatibility
6728 purposes. It used to be used in connection with optimization of
6729 a now-obsolete mechanism for implementation of exceptions.
6731 @node Pragma Provide_Shift_Operators,Pragma Psect_Object,Pragma Propagate_Exceptions,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6732 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-provide-shift-operators}@anchor{c6}
6733 @section Pragma Provide_Shift_Operators
6736 @geindex Shift operators
6741 pragma Provide_Shift_Operators (integer_first_subtype_LOCAL_NAME);
6744 This pragma can be applied to a first subtype local name that specifies
6745 either an unsigned or signed type. It has the effect of providing the
6746 five shift operators (Shift_Left, Shift_Right, Shift_Right_Arithmetic,
6747 Rotate_Left and Rotate_Right) for the given type. It is similar to
6748 including the function declarations for these five operators, together
6749 with the pragma Import (Intrinsic, ...) statements.
6751 @node Pragma Psect_Object,Pragma Pure_Function,Pragma Provide_Shift_Operators,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6752 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-psect-object}@anchor{c7}
6753 @section Pragma Psect_Object
6759 pragma Psect_Object (
6760 [Internal =>] LOCAL_NAME,
6761 [, [External =>] EXTERNAL_SYMBOL]
6762 [, [Size =>] EXTERNAL_SYMBOL]);
6766 | static_string_EXPRESSION
6769 This pragma is identical in effect to pragma @code{Common_Object}.
6771 @node Pragma Pure_Function,Pragma Rational,Pragma Psect_Object,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6772 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-pure-function}@anchor{c8}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id30}@anchor{c9}
6773 @section Pragma Pure_Function
6779 pragma Pure_Function ([Entity =>] function_LOCAL_NAME);
6782 This pragma appears in the same declarative part as a function
6783 declaration (or a set of function declarations if more than one
6784 overloaded declaration exists, in which case the pragma applies
6785 to all entities). It specifies that the function @code{Entity} is
6786 to be considered pure for the purposes of code generation. This means
6787 that the compiler can assume that there are no side effects, and
6788 in particular that two calls with identical arguments produce the
6789 same result. It also means that the function can be used in an
6792 Note that, quite deliberately, there are no static checks to try
6793 to ensure that this promise is met, so @code{Pure_Function} can be used
6794 with functions that are conceptually pure, even if they do modify
6795 global variables. For example, a square root function that is
6796 instrumented to count the number of times it is called is still
6797 conceptually pure, and can still be optimized, even though it
6798 modifies a global variable (the count). Memo functions are another
6799 example (where a table of previous calls is kept and consulted to
6800 avoid re-computation).
6802 Note also that the normal rules excluding optimization of subprograms
6803 in pure units (when parameter types are descended from System.Address,
6804 or when the full view of a parameter type is limited), do not apply
6805 for the Pure_Function case. If you explicitly specify Pure_Function,
6806 the compiler may optimize away calls with identical arguments, and
6807 if that results in unexpected behavior, the proper action is not to
6808 use the pragma for subprograms that are not (conceptually) pure.
6810 Note: Most functions in a @code{Pure} package are automatically pure, and
6811 there is no need to use pragma @code{Pure_Function} for such functions. One
6812 exception is any function that has at least one formal of type
6813 @code{System.Address} or a type derived from it. Such functions are not
6814 considered pure by default, since the compiler assumes that the
6815 @code{Address} parameter may be functioning as a pointer and that the
6816 referenced data may change even if the address value does not.
6817 Similarly, imported functions are not considered to be pure by default,
6818 since there is no way of checking that they are in fact pure. The use
6819 of pragma @code{Pure_Function} for such a function will override these default
6820 assumption, and cause the compiler to treat a designated subprogram as pure
6823 Note: If pragma @code{Pure_Function} is applied to a renamed function, it
6824 applies to the underlying renamed function. This can be used to
6825 disambiguate cases of overloading where some but not all functions
6826 in a set of overloaded functions are to be designated as pure.
6828 If pragma @code{Pure_Function} is applied to a library-level function, the
6829 function is also considered pure from an optimization point of view, but the
6830 unit is not a Pure unit in the categorization sense. So for example, a function
6831 thus marked is free to @code{with} non-pure units.
6833 @node Pragma Rational,Pragma Ravenscar,Pragma Pure_Function,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6834 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-rational}@anchor{ca}
6835 @section Pragma Rational
6844 This pragma is considered obsolescent, but is retained for
6845 compatibility purposes. It is equivalent to:
6848 pragma Profile (Rational);
6851 @node Pragma Ravenscar,Pragma Refined_Depends,Pragma Rational,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6852 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-ravenscar}@anchor{cb}
6853 @section Pragma Ravenscar
6862 This pragma is considered obsolescent, but is retained for
6863 compatibility purposes. It is equivalent to:
6866 pragma Profile (Ravenscar);
6869 which is the preferred method of setting the @code{Ravenscar} profile.
6871 @node Pragma Refined_Depends,Pragma Refined_Global,Pragma Ravenscar,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6872 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-refined-depends}@anchor{cc}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id31}@anchor{cd}
6873 @section Pragma Refined_Depends
6879 pragma Refined_Depends (DEPENDENCY_RELATION);
6881 DEPENDENCY_RELATION ::=
6883 | (DEPENDENCY_CLAUSE @{, DEPENDENCY_CLAUSE@})
6885 DEPENDENCY_CLAUSE ::=
6886 OUTPUT_LIST =>[+] INPUT_LIST
6887 | NULL_DEPENDENCY_CLAUSE
6889 NULL_DEPENDENCY_CLAUSE ::= null => INPUT_LIST
6891 OUTPUT_LIST ::= OUTPUT | (OUTPUT @{, OUTPUT@})
6893 INPUT_LIST ::= null | INPUT | (INPUT @{, INPUT@})
6895 OUTPUT ::= NAME | FUNCTION_RESULT
6898 where FUNCTION_RESULT is a function Result attribute_reference
6901 For the semantics of this pragma, see the entry for aspect @code{Refined_Depends} in
6902 the SPARK 2014 Reference Manual, section 6.1.5.
6904 @node Pragma Refined_Global,Pragma Refined_Post,Pragma Refined_Depends,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6905 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-refined-global}@anchor{ce}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id32}@anchor{cf}
6906 @section Pragma Refined_Global
6912 pragma Refined_Global (GLOBAL_SPECIFICATION);
6914 GLOBAL_SPECIFICATION ::=
6917 | (MODED_GLOBAL_LIST @{, MODED_GLOBAL_LIST@})
6919 MODED_GLOBAL_LIST ::= MODE_SELECTOR => GLOBAL_LIST
6921 MODE_SELECTOR ::= In_Out | Input | Output | Proof_In
6922 GLOBAL_LIST ::= GLOBAL_ITEM | (GLOBAL_ITEM @{, GLOBAL_ITEM@})
6923 GLOBAL_ITEM ::= NAME
6926 For the semantics of this pragma, see the entry for aspect @code{Refined_Global} in
6927 the SPARK 2014 Reference Manual, section 6.1.4.
6929 @node Pragma Refined_Post,Pragma Refined_State,Pragma Refined_Global,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6930 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-refined-post}@anchor{d0}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id33}@anchor{d1}
6931 @section Pragma Refined_Post
6937 pragma Refined_Post (boolean_EXPRESSION);
6940 For the semantics of this pragma, see the entry for aspect @code{Refined_Post} in
6941 the SPARK 2014 Reference Manual, section 7.2.7.
6943 @node Pragma Refined_State,Pragma Relative_Deadline,Pragma Refined_Post,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6944 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-refined-state}@anchor{d2}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id34}@anchor{d3}
6945 @section Pragma Refined_State
6951 pragma Refined_State (REFINEMENT_LIST);
6954 (REFINEMENT_CLAUSE @{, REFINEMENT_CLAUSE@})
6956 REFINEMENT_CLAUSE ::= state_NAME => CONSTITUENT_LIST
6958 CONSTITUENT_LIST ::=
6961 | (CONSTITUENT @{, CONSTITUENT@})
6963 CONSTITUENT ::= object_NAME | state_NAME
6966 For the semantics of this pragma, see the entry for aspect @code{Refined_State} in
6967 the SPARK 2014 Reference Manual, section 7.2.2.
6969 @node Pragma Relative_Deadline,Pragma Remote_Access_Type,Pragma Refined_State,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6970 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-relative-deadline}@anchor{d4}
6971 @section Pragma Relative_Deadline
6977 pragma Relative_Deadline (time_span_EXPRESSION);
6980 This pragma is standard in Ada 2005, but is available in all earlier
6981 versions of Ada as an implementation-defined pragma.
6982 See Ada 2012 Reference Manual for details.
6984 @node Pragma Remote_Access_Type,Pragma Restricted_Run_Time,Pragma Relative_Deadline,Implementation Defined Pragmas
6985 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id35}@anchor{d5}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-remote-access-type}@anchor{d6}
6986 @section Pragma Remote_Access_Type
6992 pragma Remote_Access_Type ([Entity =>] formal_access_type_LOCAL_NAME);
6995 This pragma appears in the formal part of a generic declaration.
6996 It specifies an exception to the RM rule from E.2.2(17/2), which forbids
6997 the use of a remote access to class-wide type as actual for a formal
7000 When this pragma applies to a formal access type @code{Entity}, that
7001 type is treated as a remote access to class-wide type in the generic.
7002 It must be a formal general access type, and its designated type must
7003 be the class-wide type of a formal tagged limited private type from the
7004 same generic declaration.
7006 In the generic unit, the formal type is subject to all restrictions
7007 pertaining to remote access to class-wide types. At instantiation, the
7008 actual type must be a remote access to class-wide type.
7010 @node Pragma Restricted_Run_Time,Pragma Restriction_Warnings,Pragma Remote_Access_Type,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7011 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-restricted-run-time}@anchor{d7}
7012 @section Pragma Restricted_Run_Time
7018 pragma Restricted_Run_Time;
7021 This pragma is considered obsolescent, but is retained for
7022 compatibility purposes. It is equivalent to:
7025 pragma Profile (Restricted);
7028 which is the preferred method of setting the restricted run time
7031 @node Pragma Restriction_Warnings,Pragma Reviewable,Pragma Restricted_Run_Time,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7032 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-restriction-warnings}@anchor{d8}
7033 @section Pragma Restriction_Warnings
7039 pragma Restriction_Warnings
7040 (restriction_IDENTIFIER @{, restriction_IDENTIFIER@});
7043 This pragma allows a series of restriction identifiers to be
7044 specified (the list of allowed identifiers is the same as for
7045 pragma @code{Restrictions}). For each of these identifiers
7046 the compiler checks for violations of the restriction, but
7047 generates a warning message rather than an error message
7048 if the restriction is violated.
7050 One use of this is in situations where you want to know
7051 about violations of a restriction, but you want to ignore some of
7052 these violations. Consider this example, where you want to set
7053 Ada_95 mode and enable style checks, but you want to know about
7054 any other use of implementation pragmas:
7057 pragma Restriction_Warnings (No_Implementation_Pragmas);
7058 pragma Warnings (Off, "violation of No_Implementation_Pragmas");
7060 pragma Style_Checks ("2bfhkM160");
7061 pragma Warnings (On, "violation of No_Implementation_Pragmas");
7064 By including the above lines in a configuration pragmas file,
7065 the Ada_95 and Style_Checks pragmas are accepted without
7066 generating a warning, but any other use of implementation
7067 defined pragmas will cause a warning to be generated.
7069 @node Pragma Reviewable,Pragma Secondary_Stack_Size,Pragma Restriction_Warnings,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7070 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-reviewable}@anchor{d9}
7071 @section Pragma Reviewable
7080 This pragma is an RM-defined standard pragma, but has no effect on the
7081 program being compiled, or on the code generated for the program.
7083 To obtain the required output specified in RM H.3.1, the compiler must be
7084 run with various special switches as follows:
7090 @emph{Where compiler-generated run-time checks remain}
7092 The switch @emph{-gnatGL}
7093 may be used to list the expanded code in pseudo-Ada form.
7094 Runtime checks show up in the listing either as explicit
7095 checks or operators marked with @{@} to indicate a check is present.
7098 @emph{An identification of known exceptions at compile time}
7100 If the program is compiled with @emph{-gnatwa},
7101 the compiler warning messages will indicate all cases where the compiler
7102 detects that an exception is certain to occur at run time.
7105 @emph{Possible reads of uninitialized variables}
7107 The compiler warns of many such cases, but its output is incomplete.
7111 A supplemental static analysis tool
7112 may be used to obtain a comprehensive list of all
7113 possible points at which uninitialized data may be read.
7119 @emph{Where run-time support routines are implicitly invoked}
7121 In the output from @emph{-gnatGL},
7122 run-time calls are explicitly listed as calls to the relevant
7126 @emph{Object code listing}
7128 This may be obtained either by using the @emph{-S} switch,
7129 or the objdump utility.
7132 @emph{Constructs known to be erroneous at compile time}
7134 These are identified by warnings issued by the compiler (use @emph{-gnatwa}).
7137 @emph{Stack usage information}
7139 Static stack usage data (maximum per-subprogram) can be obtained via the
7140 @emph{-fstack-usage} switch to the compiler.
7141 Dynamic stack usage data (per task) can be obtained via the @emph{-u} switch
7150 @emph{Object code listing of entire partition}
7152 This can be obtained by compiling the partition with @emph{-S},
7153 or by applying objdump
7154 to all the object files that are part of the partition.
7157 @emph{A description of the run-time model}
7159 The full sources of the run-time are available, and the documentation of
7160 these routines describes how these run-time routines interface to the
7161 underlying operating system facilities.
7164 @emph{Control and data-flow information}
7168 A supplemental static analysis tool
7169 may be used to obtain complete control and data-flow information, as well as
7170 comprehensive messages identifying possible problems based on this
7173 @node Pragma Secondary_Stack_Size,Pragma Share_Generic,Pragma Reviewable,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7174 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id36}@anchor{da}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-secondary-stack-size}@anchor{db}
7175 @section Pragma Secondary_Stack_Size
7181 pragma Secondary_Stack_Size (integer_EXPRESSION);
7184 This pragma appears within the task definition of a single task declaration
7185 or a task type declaration (like pragma @code{Storage_Size}) and applies to all
7186 task objects of that type. The argument specifies the size of the secondary
7187 stack to be used by these task objects, and must be of an integer type. The
7188 secondary stack is used to handle functions that return a variable-sized
7189 result, for example a function returning an unconstrained String.
7191 Note this pragma only applies to targets using fixed secondary stacks, like
7192 VxWorks 653 and bare board targets, where a fixed block for the
7193 secondary stack is allocated from the primary stack of the task. By default,
7194 these targets assign a percentage of the primary stack for the secondary stack,
7195 as defined by @code{System.Parameter.Sec_Stack_Percentage}. With this pragma,
7196 an @code{integer_EXPRESSION} of bytes is assigned from the primary stack instead.
7198 For most targets, the pragma does not apply as the secondary stack grows on
7199 demand: allocated as a chain of blocks in the heap. The default size of these
7200 blocks can be modified via the @code{-D} binder option as described in
7201 @cite{GNAT User's Guide}.
7203 Note that no check is made to see if the secondary stack can fit inside the
7206 Note the pragma cannot appear when the restriction @code{No_Secondary_Stack}
7209 @node Pragma Share_Generic,Pragma Shared,Pragma Secondary_Stack_Size,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7210 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-share-generic}@anchor{dc}
7211 @section Pragma Share_Generic
7217 pragma Share_Generic (GNAME @{, GNAME@});
7219 GNAME ::= generic_unit_NAME | generic_instance_NAME
7222 This pragma is provided for compatibility with Dec Ada 83. It has
7223 no effect in GNAT (which does not implement shared generics), other
7224 than to check that the given names are all names of generic units or
7227 @node Pragma Shared,Pragma Short_Circuit_And_Or,Pragma Share_Generic,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7228 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id37}@anchor{dd}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-shared}@anchor{de}
7229 @section Pragma Shared
7232 This pragma is provided for compatibility with Ada 83. The syntax and
7233 semantics are identical to pragma Atomic.
7235 @node Pragma Short_Circuit_And_Or,Pragma Short_Descriptors,Pragma Shared,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7236 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-short-circuit-and-or}@anchor{df}
7237 @section Pragma Short_Circuit_And_Or
7243 pragma Short_Circuit_And_Or;
7246 This configuration pragma causes any occurrence of the AND operator applied to
7247 operands of type Standard.Boolean to be short-circuited (i.e. the AND operator
7248 is treated as if it were AND THEN). Or is similarly treated as OR ELSE. This
7249 may be useful in the context of certification protocols requiring the use of
7250 short-circuited logical operators. If this configuration pragma occurs locally
7251 within the file being compiled, it applies only to the file being compiled.
7252 There is no requirement that all units in a partition use this option.
7254 @node Pragma Short_Descriptors,Pragma Simple_Storage_Pool_Type,Pragma Short_Circuit_And_Or,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7255 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-short-descriptors}@anchor{e0}
7256 @section Pragma Short_Descriptors
7262 pragma Short_Descriptors
7265 This pragma is provided for compatibility with other Ada implementations. It
7266 is recognized but ignored by all current versions of GNAT.
7268 @node Pragma Simple_Storage_Pool_Type,Pragma Source_File_Name,Pragma Short_Descriptors,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7269 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-simple-storage-pool-type}@anchor{e1}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id38}@anchor{e2}
7270 @section Pragma Simple_Storage_Pool_Type
7273 @geindex Storage pool
7276 @geindex Simple storage pool
7281 pragma Simple_Storage_Pool_Type (type_LOCAL_NAME);
7284 A type can be established as a 'simple storage pool type' by applying
7285 the representation pragma @code{Simple_Storage_Pool_Type} to the type.
7286 A type named in the pragma must be a library-level immutably limited record
7287 type or limited tagged type declared immediately within a package declaration.
7288 The type can also be a limited private type whose full type is allowed as
7289 a simple storage pool type.
7291 For a simple storage pool type @code{SSP}, nonabstract primitive subprograms
7292 @code{Allocate}, @code{Deallocate}, and @code{Storage_Size} can be declared that
7293 are subtype conformant with the following subprogram declarations:
7298 Storage_Address : out System.Address;
7299 Size_In_Storage_Elements : System.Storage_Elements.Storage_Count;
7300 Alignment : System.Storage_Elements.Storage_Count);
7302 procedure Deallocate
7304 Storage_Address : System.Address;
7305 Size_In_Storage_Elements : System.Storage_Elements.Storage_Count;
7306 Alignment : System.Storage_Elements.Storage_Count);
7308 function Storage_Size (Pool : SSP)
7309 return System.Storage_Elements.Storage_Count;
7312 Procedure @code{Allocate} must be declared, whereas @code{Deallocate} and
7313 @code{Storage_Size} are optional. If @code{Deallocate} is not declared, then
7314 applying an unchecked deallocation has no effect other than to set its actual
7315 parameter to null. If @code{Storage_Size} is not declared, then the
7316 @code{Storage_Size} attribute applied to an access type associated with
7317 a pool object of type SSP returns zero. Additional operations can be declared
7318 for a simple storage pool type (such as for supporting a mark/release
7319 storage-management discipline).
7321 An object of a simple storage pool type can be associated with an access
7322 type by specifying the attribute
7323 @ref{e3,,Simple_Storage_Pool}. For example:
7326 My_Pool : My_Simple_Storage_Pool_Type;
7328 type Acc is access My_Data_Type;
7330 for Acc'Simple_Storage_Pool use My_Pool;
7333 See attribute @ref{e3,,Simple_Storage_Pool}
7334 for further details.
7336 @node Pragma Source_File_Name,Pragma Source_File_Name_Project,Pragma Simple_Storage_Pool_Type,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7337 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-source-file-name}@anchor{e4}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id39}@anchor{e5}
7338 @section Pragma Source_File_Name
7344 pragma Source_File_Name (
7345 [Unit_Name =>] unit_NAME,
7346 Spec_File_Name => STRING_LITERAL,
7347 [Index => INTEGER_LITERAL]);
7349 pragma Source_File_Name (
7350 [Unit_Name =>] unit_NAME,
7351 Body_File_Name => STRING_LITERAL,
7352 [Index => INTEGER_LITERAL]);
7355 Use this to override the normal naming convention. It is a configuration
7356 pragma, and so has the usual applicability of configuration pragmas
7357 (i.e., it applies to either an entire partition, or to all units in a
7358 compilation, or to a single unit, depending on how it is used.
7359 @code{unit_name} is mapped to @code{file_name_literal}. The identifier for
7360 the second argument is required, and indicates whether this is the file
7361 name for the spec or for the body.
7363 The optional Index argument should be used when a file contains multiple
7364 units, and when you do not want to use @code{gnatchop} to separate then
7365 into multiple files (which is the recommended procedure to limit the
7366 number of recompilations that are needed when some sources change).
7367 For instance, if the source file @code{source.ada} contains
7381 you could use the following configuration pragmas:
7384 pragma Source_File_Name
7385 (B, Spec_File_Name => "source.ada", Index => 1);
7386 pragma Source_File_Name
7387 (A, Body_File_Name => "source.ada", Index => 2);
7390 Note that the @code{gnatname} utility can also be used to generate those
7391 configuration pragmas.
7393 Another form of the @code{Source_File_Name} pragma allows
7394 the specification of patterns defining alternative file naming schemes
7395 to apply to all files.
7398 pragma Source_File_Name
7399 ( [Spec_File_Name =>] STRING_LITERAL
7400 [,[Casing =>] CASING_SPEC]
7401 [,[Dot_Replacement =>] STRING_LITERAL]);
7403 pragma Source_File_Name
7404 ( [Body_File_Name =>] STRING_LITERAL
7405 [,[Casing =>] CASING_SPEC]
7406 [,[Dot_Replacement =>] STRING_LITERAL]);
7408 pragma Source_File_Name
7409 ( [Subunit_File_Name =>] STRING_LITERAL
7410 [,[Casing =>] CASING_SPEC]
7411 [,[Dot_Replacement =>] STRING_LITERAL]);
7413 CASING_SPEC ::= Lowercase | Uppercase | Mixedcase
7416 The first argument is a pattern that contains a single asterisk indicating
7417 the point at which the unit name is to be inserted in the pattern string
7418 to form the file name. The second argument is optional. If present it
7419 specifies the casing of the unit name in the resulting file name string.
7420 The default is lower case. Finally the third argument allows for systematic
7421 replacement of any dots in the unit name by the specified string literal.
7423 Note that Source_File_Name pragmas should not be used if you are using
7424 project files. The reason for this rule is that the project manager is not
7425 aware of these pragmas, and so other tools that use the projet file would not
7426 be aware of the intended naming conventions. If you are using project files,
7427 file naming is controlled by Source_File_Name_Project pragmas, which are
7428 usually supplied automatically by the project manager. A pragma
7429 Source_File_Name cannot appear after a @ref{e6,,Pragma Source_File_Name_Project}.
7431 For more details on the use of the @code{Source_File_Name} pragma, see the
7432 sections on @code{Using Other File Names} and @cite{Alternative File Naming Schemes' in the :title:`GNAT User's Guide}.
7434 @node Pragma Source_File_Name_Project,Pragma Source_Reference,Pragma Source_File_Name,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7435 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-source-file-name-project}@anchor{e6}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id40}@anchor{e7}
7436 @section Pragma Source_File_Name_Project
7439 This pragma has the same syntax and semantics as pragma Source_File_Name.
7440 It is only allowed as a stand-alone configuration pragma.
7441 It cannot appear after a @ref{e4,,Pragma Source_File_Name}, and
7442 most importantly, once pragma Source_File_Name_Project appears,
7443 no further Source_File_Name pragmas are allowed.
7445 The intention is that Source_File_Name_Project pragmas are always
7446 generated by the Project Manager in a manner consistent with the naming
7447 specified in a project file, and when naming is controlled in this manner,
7448 it is not permissible to attempt to modify this naming scheme using
7449 Source_File_Name or Source_File_Name_Project pragmas (which would not be
7450 known to the project manager).
7452 @node Pragma Source_Reference,Pragma SPARK_Mode,Pragma Source_File_Name_Project,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7453 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-source-reference}@anchor{e8}
7454 @section Pragma Source_Reference
7460 pragma Source_Reference (INTEGER_LITERAL, STRING_LITERAL);
7463 This pragma must appear as the first line of a source file.
7464 @code{integer_literal} is the logical line number of the line following
7465 the pragma line (for use in error messages and debugging
7466 information). @code{string_literal} is a static string constant that
7467 specifies the file name to be used in error messages and debugging
7468 information. This is most notably used for the output of @code{gnatchop}
7469 with the @emph{-r} switch, to make sure that the original unchopped
7470 source file is the one referred to.
7472 The second argument must be a string literal, it cannot be a static
7473 string expression other than a string literal. This is because its value
7474 is needed for error messages issued by all phases of the compiler.
7476 @node Pragma SPARK_Mode,Pragma Static_Elaboration_Desired,Pragma Source_Reference,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7477 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-spark-mode}@anchor{e9}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id41}@anchor{ea}
7478 @section Pragma SPARK_Mode
7484 pragma SPARK_Mode [(On | Off)] ;
7487 In general a program can have some parts that are in SPARK 2014 (and
7488 follow all the rules in the SPARK Reference Manual), and some parts
7489 that are full Ada 2012.
7491 The SPARK_Mode pragma is used to identify which parts are in SPARK
7492 2014 (by default programs are in full Ada). The SPARK_Mode pragma can
7493 be used in the following places:
7499 As a configuration pragma, in which case it sets the default mode for
7500 all units compiled with this pragma.
7503 Immediately following a library-level subprogram spec
7506 Immediately within a library-level package body
7509 Immediately following the @code{private} keyword of a library-level
7513 Immediately following the @code{begin} keyword of a library-level
7517 Immediately within a library-level subprogram body
7520 Normally a subprogram or package spec/body inherits the current mode
7521 that is active at the point it is declared. But this can be overridden
7522 by pragma within the spec or body as above.
7524 The basic consistency rule is that you can't turn SPARK_Mode back
7525 @code{On}, once you have explicitly (with a pragma) turned if
7526 @code{Off}. So the following rules apply:
7528 If a subprogram spec has SPARK_Mode @code{Off}, then the body must
7529 also have SPARK_Mode @code{Off}.
7531 For a package, we have four parts:
7537 the package public declarations
7540 the package private part
7543 the body of the package
7546 the elaboration code after @code{begin}
7549 For a package, the rule is that if you explicitly turn SPARK_Mode
7550 @code{Off} for any part, then all the following parts must have
7551 SPARK_Mode @code{Off}. Note that this may require repeating a pragma
7552 SPARK_Mode (@code{Off}) in the body. For example, if we have a
7553 configuration pragma SPARK_Mode (@code{On}) that turns the mode on by
7554 default everywhere, and one particular package spec has pragma
7555 SPARK_Mode (@code{Off}), then that pragma will need to be repeated in
7558 @node Pragma Static_Elaboration_Desired,Pragma Stream_Convert,Pragma SPARK_Mode,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7559 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-static-elaboration-desired}@anchor{eb}
7560 @section Pragma Static_Elaboration_Desired
7566 pragma Static_Elaboration_Desired;
7569 This pragma is used to indicate that the compiler should attempt to initialize
7570 statically the objects declared in the library unit to which the pragma applies,
7571 when these objects are initialized (explicitly or implicitly) by an aggregate.
7572 In the absence of this pragma, aggregates in object declarations are expanded
7573 into assignments and loops, even when the aggregate components are static
7574 constants. When the aggregate is present the compiler builds a static expression
7575 that requires no run-time code, so that the initialized object can be placed in
7576 read-only data space. If the components are not static, or the aggregate has
7577 more that 100 components, the compiler emits a warning that the pragma cannot
7578 be obeyed. (See also the restriction No_Implicit_Loops, which supports static
7579 construction of larger aggregates with static components that include an others
7582 @node Pragma Stream_Convert,Pragma Style_Checks,Pragma Static_Elaboration_Desired,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7583 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-stream-convert}@anchor{ec}
7584 @section Pragma Stream_Convert
7590 pragma Stream_Convert (
7591 [Entity =>] type_LOCAL_NAME,
7592 [Read =>] function_NAME,
7593 [Write =>] function_NAME);
7596 This pragma provides an efficient way of providing user-defined stream
7597 attributes. Not only is it simpler to use than specifying the attributes
7598 directly, but more importantly, it allows the specification to be made in such
7599 a way that the predefined unit Ada.Streams is not loaded unless it is actually
7600 needed (i.e. unless the stream attributes are actually used); the use of
7601 the Stream_Convert pragma adds no overhead at all, unless the stream
7602 attributes are actually used on the designated type.
7604 The first argument specifies the type for which stream functions are
7605 provided. The second parameter provides a function used to read values
7606 of this type. It must name a function whose argument type may be any
7607 subtype, and whose returned type must be the type given as the first
7608 argument to the pragma.
7610 The meaning of the @code{Read} parameter is that if a stream attribute directly
7611 or indirectly specifies reading of the type given as the first parameter,
7612 then a value of the type given as the argument to the Read function is
7613 read from the stream, and then the Read function is used to convert this
7614 to the required target type.
7616 Similarly the @code{Write} parameter specifies how to treat write attributes
7617 that directly or indirectly apply to the type given as the first parameter.
7618 It must have an input parameter of the type specified by the first parameter,
7619 and the return type must be the same as the input type of the Read function.
7620 The effect is to first call the Write function to convert to the given stream
7621 type, and then write the result type to the stream.
7623 The Read and Write functions must not be overloaded subprograms. If necessary
7624 renamings can be supplied to meet this requirement.
7625 The usage of this attribute is best illustrated by a simple example, taken
7626 from the GNAT implementation of package Ada.Strings.Unbounded:
7629 function To_Unbounded (S : String) return Unbounded_String
7630 renames To_Unbounded_String;
7632 pragma Stream_Convert
7633 (Unbounded_String, To_Unbounded, To_String);
7636 The specifications of the referenced functions, as given in the Ada
7637 Reference Manual are:
7640 function To_Unbounded_String (Source : String)
7641 return Unbounded_String;
7643 function To_String (Source : Unbounded_String)
7647 The effect is that if the value of an unbounded string is written to a stream,
7648 then the representation of the item in the stream is in the same format that
7649 would be used for @code{Standard.String'Output}, and this same representation
7650 is expected when a value of this type is read from the stream. Note that the
7651 value written always includes the bounds, even for Unbounded_String'Write,
7652 since Unbounded_String is not an array type.
7654 Note that the @code{Stream_Convert} pragma is not effective in the case of
7655 a derived type of a non-limited tagged type. If such a type is specified then
7656 the pragma is silently ignored, and the default implementation of the stream
7657 attributes is used instead.
7659 @node Pragma Style_Checks,Pragma Subtitle,Pragma Stream_Convert,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7660 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-style-checks}@anchor{ed}
7661 @section Pragma Style_Checks
7667 pragma Style_Checks (string_LITERAL | ALL_CHECKS |
7668 On | Off [, LOCAL_NAME]);
7671 This pragma is used in conjunction with compiler switches to control the
7672 built in style checking provided by GNAT. The compiler switches, if set,
7673 provide an initial setting for the switches, and this pragma may be used
7674 to modify these settings, or the settings may be provided entirely by
7675 the use of the pragma. This pragma can be used anywhere that a pragma
7676 is legal, including use as a configuration pragma (including use in
7677 the @code{gnat.adc} file).
7679 The form with a string literal specifies which style options are to be
7680 activated. These are additive, so they apply in addition to any previously
7681 set style check options. The codes for the options are the same as those
7682 used in the @emph{-gnaty} switch to @emph{gcc} or @emph{gnatmake}.
7683 For example the following two methods can be used to enable
7691 pragma Style_Checks ("l");
7700 The form @code{ALL_CHECKS} activates all standard checks (its use is equivalent
7701 to the use of the @code{gnaty} switch with no options.
7702 See the @cite{GNAT User's Guide} for details.)
7704 Note: the behavior is slightly different in GNAT mode (@code{-gnatg} used).
7705 In this case, @code{ALL_CHECKS} implies the standard set of GNAT mode style check
7706 options (i.e. equivalent to @code{-gnatyg}).
7708 The forms with @code{Off} and @code{On}
7709 can be used to temporarily disable style checks
7710 as shown in the following example:
7713 pragma Style_Checks ("k"); -- requires keywords in lower case
7714 pragma Style_Checks (Off); -- turn off style checks
7715 NULL; -- this will not generate an error message
7716 pragma Style_Checks (On); -- turn style checks back on
7717 NULL; -- this will generate an error message
7720 Finally the two argument form is allowed only if the first argument is
7721 @code{On} or @code{Off}. The effect is to turn of semantic style checks
7722 for the specified entity, as shown in the following example:
7725 pragma Style_Checks ("r"); -- require consistency of identifier casing
7727 Rf1 : Integer := ARG; -- incorrect, wrong case
7728 pragma Style_Checks (Off, Arg);
7729 Rf2 : Integer := ARG; -- OK, no error
7732 @node Pragma Subtitle,Pragma Suppress,Pragma Style_Checks,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7733 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-subtitle}@anchor{ee}
7734 @section Pragma Subtitle
7740 pragma Subtitle ([Subtitle =>] STRING_LITERAL);
7743 This pragma is recognized for compatibility with other Ada compilers
7744 but is ignored by GNAT.
7746 @node Pragma Suppress,Pragma Suppress_All,Pragma Subtitle,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7747 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-suppress}@anchor{ef}
7748 @section Pragma Suppress
7754 pragma Suppress (Identifier [, [On =>] Name]);
7757 This is a standard pragma, and supports all the check names required in
7758 the RM. It is included here because GNAT recognizes some additional check
7759 names that are implementation defined (as permitted by the RM):
7765 @code{Alignment_Check} can be used to suppress alignment checks
7766 on addresses used in address clauses. Such checks can also be suppressed
7767 by suppressing range checks, but the specific use of @code{Alignment_Check}
7768 allows suppression of alignment checks without suppressing other range checks.
7769 Note that @code{Alignment_Check} is suppressed by default on machines (such as
7770 the x86) with non-strict alignment.
7773 @code{Atomic_Synchronization} can be used to suppress the special memory
7774 synchronization instructions that are normally generated for access to
7775 @code{Atomic} variables to ensure correct synchronization between tasks
7776 that use such variables for synchronization purposes.
7779 @code{Duplicated_Tag_Check} Can be used to suppress the check that is generated
7780 for a duplicated tag value when a tagged type is declared.
7783 @code{Container_Checks} Can be used to suppress all checks within Ada.Containers
7784 and instances of its children, including Tampering_Check.
7787 @code{Tampering_Check} Can be used to suppress tampering check in the containers.
7790 @code{Predicate_Check} can be used to control whether predicate checks are
7791 active. It is applicable only to predicates for which the policy is
7792 @code{Check}. Unlike @code{Assertion_Policy}, which determines if a given
7793 predicate is ignored or checked for the whole program, the use of
7794 @code{Suppress} and @code{Unsuppress} with this check name allows a given
7795 predicate to be turned on and off at specific points in the program.
7798 @code{Validity_Check} can be used specifically to control validity checks.
7799 If @code{Suppress} is used to suppress validity checks, then no validity
7800 checks are performed, including those specified by the appropriate compiler
7801 switch or the @code{Validity_Checks} pragma.
7804 Additional check names previously introduced by use of the @code{Check_Name}
7805 pragma are also allowed.
7808 Note that pragma Suppress gives the compiler permission to omit
7809 checks, but does not require the compiler to omit checks. The compiler
7810 will generate checks if they are essentially free, even when they are
7811 suppressed. In particular, if the compiler can prove that a certain
7812 check will necessarily fail, it will generate code to do an
7813 unconditional 'raise', even if checks are suppressed. The compiler
7816 Of course, run-time checks are omitted whenever the compiler can prove
7817 that they will not fail, whether or not checks are suppressed.
7819 @node Pragma Suppress_All,Pragma Suppress_Debug_Info,Pragma Suppress,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7820 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-suppress-all}@anchor{f0}
7821 @section Pragma Suppress_All
7827 pragma Suppress_All;
7830 This pragma can appear anywhere within a unit.
7831 The effect is to apply @code{Suppress (All_Checks)} to the unit
7832 in which it appears. This pragma is implemented for compatibility with DEC
7833 Ada 83 usage where it appears at the end of a unit, and for compatibility
7834 with Rational Ada, where it appears as a program unit pragma.
7835 The use of the standard Ada pragma @code{Suppress (All_Checks)}
7836 as a normal configuration pragma is the preferred usage in GNAT.
7838 @node Pragma Suppress_Debug_Info,Pragma Suppress_Exception_Locations,Pragma Suppress_All,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7839 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-suppress-debug-info}@anchor{f1}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id42}@anchor{f2}
7840 @section Pragma Suppress_Debug_Info
7846 pragma Suppress_Debug_Info ([Entity =>] LOCAL_NAME);
7849 This pragma can be used to suppress generation of debug information
7850 for the specified entity. It is intended primarily for use in debugging
7851 the debugger, and navigating around debugger problems.
7853 @node Pragma Suppress_Exception_Locations,Pragma Suppress_Initialization,Pragma Suppress_Debug_Info,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7854 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-suppress-exception-locations}@anchor{f3}
7855 @section Pragma Suppress_Exception_Locations
7861 pragma Suppress_Exception_Locations;
7864 In normal mode, a raise statement for an exception by default generates
7865 an exception message giving the file name and line number for the location
7866 of the raise. This is useful for debugging and logging purposes, but this
7867 entails extra space for the strings for the messages. The configuration
7868 pragma @code{Suppress_Exception_Locations} can be used to suppress the
7869 generation of these strings, with the result that space is saved, but the
7870 exception message for such raises is null. This configuration pragma may
7871 appear in a global configuration pragma file, or in a specific unit as
7872 usual. It is not required that this pragma be used consistently within
7873 a partition, so it is fine to have some units within a partition compiled
7874 with this pragma and others compiled in normal mode without it.
7876 @node Pragma Suppress_Initialization,Pragma Task_Name,Pragma Suppress_Exception_Locations,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7877 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id43}@anchor{f4}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-suppress-initialization}@anchor{f5}
7878 @section Pragma Suppress_Initialization
7881 @geindex Suppressing initialization
7883 @geindex Initialization
7884 @geindex suppression of
7889 pragma Suppress_Initialization ([Entity =>] variable_or_subtype_Name);
7892 Here variable_or_subtype_Name is the name introduced by a type declaration
7893 or subtype declaration or the name of a variable introduced by an
7896 In the case of a type or subtype
7897 this pragma suppresses any implicit or explicit initialization
7898 for all variables of the given type or subtype,
7899 including initialization resulting from the use of pragmas
7900 Normalize_Scalars or Initialize_Scalars.
7902 This is considered a representation item, so it cannot be given after
7903 the type is frozen. It applies to all subsequent object declarations,
7904 and also any allocator that creates objects of the type.
7906 If the pragma is given for the first subtype, then it is considered
7907 to apply to the base type and all its subtypes. If the pragma is given
7908 for other than a first subtype, then it applies only to the given subtype.
7909 The pragma may not be given after the type is frozen.
7911 Note that this includes eliminating initialization of discriminants
7912 for discriminated types, and tags for tagged types. In these cases,
7913 you will have to use some non-portable mechanism (e.g. address
7914 overlays or unchecked conversion) to achieve required initialization
7915 of these fields before accessing any object of the corresponding type.
7917 For the variable case, implicit initialization for the named variable
7918 is suppressed, just as though its subtype had been given in a pragma
7919 Suppress_Initialization, as described above.
7921 @node Pragma Task_Name,Pragma Task_Storage,Pragma Suppress_Initialization,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7922 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-task-name}@anchor{f6}
7923 @section Pragma Task_Name
7929 pragma Task_Name (string_EXPRESSION);
7932 This pragma appears within a task definition (like pragma
7933 @code{Priority}) and applies to the task in which it appears. The
7934 argument must be of type String, and provides a name to be used for
7935 the task instance when the task is created. Note that this expression
7936 is not required to be static, and in particular, it can contain
7937 references to task discriminants. This facility can be used to
7938 provide different names for different tasks as they are created,
7939 as illustrated in the example below.
7941 The task name is recorded internally in the run-time structures
7942 and is accessible to tools like the debugger. In addition the
7943 routine @code{Ada.Task_Identification.Image} will return this
7944 string, with a unique task address appended.
7947 -- Example of the use of pragma Task_Name
7949 with Ada.Task_Identification;
7950 use Ada.Task_Identification;
7951 with Text_IO; use Text_IO;
7954 type Astring is access String;
7956 task type Task_Typ (Name : access String) is
7957 pragma Task_Name (Name.all);
7960 task body Task_Typ is
7961 Nam : constant String := Image (Current_Task);
7963 Put_Line ("-->" & Nam (1 .. 14) & "<--");
7966 type Ptr_Task is access Task_Typ;
7967 Task_Var : Ptr_Task;
7971 new Task_Typ (new String'("This is task 1"));
7973 new Task_Typ (new String'("This is task 2"));
7977 @node Pragma Task_Storage,Pragma Test_Case,Pragma Task_Name,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7978 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-task-storage}@anchor{f7}
7979 @section Pragma Task_Storage
7985 pragma Task_Storage (
7986 [Task_Type =>] LOCAL_NAME,
7987 [Top_Guard =>] static_integer_EXPRESSION);
7990 This pragma specifies the length of the guard area for tasks. The guard
7991 area is an additional storage area allocated to a task. A value of zero
7992 means that either no guard area is created or a minimal guard area is
7993 created, depending on the target. This pragma can appear anywhere a
7994 @code{Storage_Size} attribute definition clause is allowed for a task
7997 @node Pragma Test_Case,Pragma Thread_Local_Storage,Pragma Task_Storage,Implementation Defined Pragmas
7998 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-test-case}@anchor{f8}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id44}@anchor{f9}
7999 @section Pragma Test_Case
8008 [Name =>] static_string_Expression
8009 ,[Mode =>] (Nominal | Robustness)
8010 [, Requires => Boolean_Expression]
8011 [, Ensures => Boolean_Expression]);
8014 The @code{Test_Case} pragma allows defining fine-grain specifications
8015 for use by testing tools.
8016 The compiler checks the validity of the @code{Test_Case} pragma, but its
8017 presence does not lead to any modification of the code generated by the
8020 @code{Test_Case} pragmas may only appear immediately following the
8021 (separate) declaration of a subprogram in a package declaration, inside
8022 a package spec unit. Only other pragmas may intervene (that is appear
8023 between the subprogram declaration and a test case).
8025 The compiler checks that boolean expressions given in @code{Requires} and
8026 @code{Ensures} are valid, where the rules for @code{Requires} are the
8027 same as the rule for an expression in @code{Precondition} and the rules
8028 for @code{Ensures} are the same as the rule for an expression in
8029 @code{Postcondition}. In particular, attributes @code{'Old} and
8030 @code{'Result} can only be used within the @code{Ensures}
8031 expression. The following is an example of use within a package spec:
8034 package Math_Functions is
8036 function Sqrt (Arg : Float) return Float;
8037 pragma Test_Case (Name => "Test 1",
8039 Requires => Arg < 10000,
8040 Ensures => Sqrt'Result < 10);
8045 The meaning of a test case is that there is at least one context where
8046 @code{Requires} holds such that, if the associated subprogram is executed in
8047 that context, then @code{Ensures} holds when the subprogram returns.
8048 Mode @code{Nominal} indicates that the input context should also satisfy the
8049 precondition of the subprogram, and the output context should also satisfy its
8050 postcondition. Mode @code{Robustness} indicates that the precondition and
8051 postcondition of the subprogram should be ignored for this test case.
8053 @node Pragma Thread_Local_Storage,Pragma Time_Slice,Pragma Test_Case,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8054 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-thread-local-storage}@anchor{fa}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id45}@anchor{fb}
8055 @section Pragma Thread_Local_Storage
8058 @geindex Task specific storage
8060 @geindex TLS (Thread Local Storage)
8062 @geindex Task_Attributes
8067 pragma Thread_Local_Storage ([Entity =>] LOCAL_NAME);
8070 This pragma specifies that the specified entity, which must be
8071 a variable declared in a library-level package, is to be marked as
8072 "Thread Local Storage" (@code{TLS}). On systems supporting this (which
8073 include Windows, Solaris, GNU/Linux, and VxWorks 6), this causes each
8074 thread (and hence each Ada task) to see a distinct copy of the variable.
8076 The variable must not have default initialization, and if there is
8077 an explicit initialization, it must be either @code{null} for an
8078 access variable, a static expression for a scalar variable, or a fully
8079 static aggregate for a composite type, that is to say, an aggregate all
8080 of whose components are static, and which does not include packed or
8081 discriminated components.
8083 This provides a low-level mechanism similar to that provided by
8084 the @code{Ada.Task_Attributes} package, but much more efficient
8085 and is also useful in writing interface code that will interact
8086 with foreign threads.
8088 If this pragma is used on a system where @code{TLS} is not supported,
8089 then an error message will be generated and the program will be rejected.
8091 @node Pragma Time_Slice,Pragma Title,Pragma Thread_Local_Storage,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8092 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-time-slice}@anchor{fc}
8093 @section Pragma Time_Slice
8099 pragma Time_Slice (static_duration_EXPRESSION);
8102 For implementations of GNAT on operating systems where it is possible
8103 to supply a time slice value, this pragma may be used for this purpose.
8104 It is ignored if it is used in a system that does not allow this control,
8105 or if it appears in other than the main program unit.
8107 @node Pragma Title,Pragma Type_Invariant,Pragma Time_Slice,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8108 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-title}@anchor{fd}
8109 @section Pragma Title
8115 pragma Title (TITLING_OPTION [, TITLING OPTION]);
8118 [Title =>] STRING_LITERAL,
8119 | [Subtitle =>] STRING_LITERAL
8122 Syntax checked but otherwise ignored by GNAT. This is a listing control
8123 pragma used in DEC Ada 83 implementations to provide a title and/or
8124 subtitle for the program listing. The program listing generated by GNAT
8125 does not have titles or subtitles.
8127 Unlike other pragmas, the full flexibility of named notation is allowed
8128 for this pragma, i.e., the parameters may be given in any order if named
8129 notation is used, and named and positional notation can be mixed
8130 following the normal rules for procedure calls in Ada.
8132 @node Pragma Type_Invariant,Pragma Type_Invariant_Class,Pragma Title,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8133 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-type-invariant}@anchor{fe}
8134 @section Pragma Type_Invariant
8140 pragma Type_Invariant
8141 ([Entity =>] type_LOCAL_NAME,
8142 [Check =>] EXPRESSION);
8145 The @code{Type_Invariant} pragma is intended to be an exact
8146 replacement for the language-defined @code{Type_Invariant}
8147 aspect, and shares its restrictions and semantics. It differs
8148 from the language defined @code{Invariant} pragma in that it
8149 does not permit a string parameter, and it is
8150 controlled by the assertion identifier @code{Type_Invariant}
8151 rather than @code{Invariant}.
8153 @node Pragma Type_Invariant_Class,Pragma Unchecked_Union,Pragma Type_Invariant,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8154 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id46}@anchor{ff}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-type-invariant-class}@anchor{100}
8155 @section Pragma Type_Invariant_Class
8161 pragma Type_Invariant_Class
8162 ([Entity =>] type_LOCAL_NAME,
8163 [Check =>] EXPRESSION);
8166 The @code{Type_Invariant_Class} pragma is intended to be an exact
8167 replacement for the language-defined @code{Type_Invariant'Class}
8168 aspect, and shares its restrictions and semantics.
8170 Note: This pragma is called @code{Type_Invariant_Class} rather than
8171 @code{Type_Invariant'Class} because the latter would not be strictly
8172 conforming to the allowed syntax for pragmas. The motivation
8173 for providing pragmas equivalent to the aspects is to allow a program
8174 to be written using the pragmas, and then compiled if necessary
8175 using an Ada compiler that does not recognize the pragmas or
8176 aspects, but is prepared to ignore the pragmas. The assertion
8177 policy that controls this pragma is @code{Type_Invariant'Class},
8178 not @code{Type_Invariant_Class}.
8180 @node Pragma Unchecked_Union,Pragma Unevaluated_Use_Of_Old,Pragma Type_Invariant_Class,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8181 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-unchecked-union}@anchor{101}
8182 @section Pragma Unchecked_Union
8185 @geindex Unions in C
8190 pragma Unchecked_Union (first_subtype_LOCAL_NAME);
8193 This pragma is used to specify a representation of a record type that is
8194 equivalent to a C union. It was introduced as a GNAT implementation defined
8195 pragma in the GNAT Ada 95 mode. Ada 2005 includes an extended version of this
8196 pragma, making it language defined, and GNAT fully implements this extended
8197 version in all language modes (Ada 83, Ada 95, and Ada 2005). For full
8198 details, consult the Ada 2012 Reference Manual, section B.3.3.
8200 @node Pragma Unevaluated_Use_Of_Old,Pragma Unimplemented_Unit,Pragma Unchecked_Union,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8201 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-unevaluated-use-of-old}@anchor{102}
8202 @section Pragma Unevaluated_Use_Of_Old
8205 @geindex Attribute Old
8207 @geindex Attribute Loop_Entry
8209 @geindex Unevaluated_Use_Of_Old
8214 pragma Unevaluated_Use_Of_Old (Error | Warn | Allow);
8217 This pragma controls the processing of attributes Old and Loop_Entry.
8218 If either of these attributes is used in a potentially unevaluated
8219 expression (e.g. the then or else parts of an if expression), then
8220 normally this usage is considered illegal if the prefix of the attribute
8221 is other than an entity name. The language requires this
8222 behavior for Old, and GNAT copies the same rule for Loop_Entry.
8224 The reason for this rule is that otherwise, we can have a situation
8225 where we save the Old value, and this results in an exception, even
8226 though we might not evaluate the attribute. Consider this example:
8229 package UnevalOld is
8231 procedure U (A : String; C : Boolean) -- ERROR
8232 with Post => (if C then A(1)'Old = K else True);
8236 If procedure U is called with a string with a lower bound of 2, and
8237 C false, then an exception would be raised trying to evaluate A(1)
8238 on entry even though the value would not be actually used.
8240 Although the rule guarantees against this possibility, it is sometimes
8241 too restrictive. For example if we know that the string has a lower
8242 bound of 1, then we will never raise an exception.
8243 The pragma @code{Unevaluated_Use_Of_Old} can be
8244 used to modify this behavior. If the argument is @code{Error} then an
8245 error is given (this is the default RM behavior). If the argument is
8246 @code{Warn} then the usage is allowed as legal but with a warning
8247 that an exception might be raised. If the argument is @code{Allow}
8248 then the usage is allowed as legal without generating a warning.
8250 This pragma may appear as a configuration pragma, or in a declarative
8251 part or package specification. In the latter case it applies to
8252 uses up to the end of the corresponding statement sequence or
8253 sequence of package declarations.
8255 @node Pragma Unimplemented_Unit,Pragma Universal_Aliasing,Pragma Unevaluated_Use_Of_Old,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8256 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-unimplemented-unit}@anchor{103}
8257 @section Pragma Unimplemented_Unit
8263 pragma Unimplemented_Unit;
8266 If this pragma occurs in a unit that is processed by the compiler, GNAT
8267 aborts with the message @code{xxx not implemented}, where
8268 @code{xxx} is the name of the current compilation unit. This pragma is
8269 intended to allow the compiler to handle unimplemented library units in
8272 The abort only happens if code is being generated. Thus you can use
8273 specs of unimplemented packages in syntax or semantic checking mode.
8275 @node Pragma Universal_Aliasing,Pragma Universal_Data,Pragma Unimplemented_Unit,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8276 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id47}@anchor{104}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-universal-aliasing}@anchor{105}
8277 @section Pragma Universal_Aliasing
8283 pragma Universal_Aliasing [([Entity =>] type_LOCAL_NAME)];
8286 @code{type_LOCAL_NAME} must refer to a type declaration in the current
8287 declarative part. The effect is to inhibit strict type-based aliasing
8288 optimization for the given type. In other words, the effect is as though
8289 access types designating this type were subject to pragma No_Strict_Aliasing.
8290 For a detailed description of the strict aliasing optimization, and the
8291 situations in which it must be suppressed, see the section on
8292 @code{Optimization and Strict Aliasing} in the @cite{GNAT User's Guide}.
8294 @node Pragma Universal_Data,Pragma Unmodified,Pragma Universal_Aliasing,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8295 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-universal-data}@anchor{106}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id48}@anchor{107}
8296 @section Pragma Universal_Data
8302 pragma Universal_Data [(library_unit_Name)];
8305 This pragma is supported only for the AAMP target and is ignored for
8306 other targets. The pragma specifies that all library-level objects
8307 (Counter 0 data) associated with the library unit are to be accessed
8308 and updated using universal addressing (24-bit addresses for AAMP5)
8309 rather than the default of 16-bit Data Environment (DENV) addressing.
8310 Use of this pragma will generally result in less efficient code for
8311 references to global data associated with the library unit, but
8312 allows such data to be located anywhere in memory. This pragma is
8313 a library unit pragma, but can also be used as a configuration pragma
8314 (including use in the @code{gnat.adc} file). The functionality
8315 of this pragma is also available by applying the -univ switch on the
8316 compilations of units where universal addressing of the data is desired.
8318 @node Pragma Unmodified,Pragma Unreferenced,Pragma Universal_Data,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8319 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-unmodified}@anchor{108}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id49}@anchor{109}
8320 @section Pragma Unmodified
8329 pragma Unmodified (LOCAL_NAME @{, LOCAL_NAME@});
8332 This pragma signals that the assignable entities (variables,
8333 @code{out} parameters, @code{in out} parameters) whose names are listed are
8334 deliberately not assigned in the current source unit. This
8335 suppresses warnings about the
8336 entities being referenced but not assigned, and in addition a warning will be
8337 generated if one of these entities is in fact assigned in the
8338 same unit as the pragma (or in the corresponding body, or one
8341 This is particularly useful for clearly signaling that a particular
8342 parameter is not modified, even though the spec suggests that it might
8345 For the variable case, warnings are never given for unreferenced variables
8346 whose name contains one of the substrings
8347 @code{DISCARD, DUMMY, IGNORE, JUNK, UNUSED} in any casing. Such names
8348 are typically to be used in cases where such warnings are expected.
8349 Thus it is never necessary to use @code{pragma Unmodified} for such
8350 variables, though it is harmless to do so.
8352 @node Pragma Unreferenced,Pragma Unreferenced_Objects,Pragma Unmodified,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8353 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-unreferenced}@anchor{10a}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id50}@anchor{10b}
8354 @section Pragma Unreferenced
8358 @geindex unreferenced
8363 pragma Unreferenced (LOCAL_NAME @{, LOCAL_NAME@});
8364 pragma Unreferenced (library_unit_NAME @{, library_unit_NAME@});
8367 This pragma signals that the entities whose names are listed are
8368 deliberately not referenced in the current source unit after the
8369 occurrence of the pragma. This
8370 suppresses warnings about the
8371 entities being unreferenced, and in addition a warning will be
8372 generated if one of these entities is in fact subsequently referenced in the
8373 same unit as the pragma (or in the corresponding body, or one
8376 This is particularly useful for clearly signaling that a particular
8377 parameter is not referenced in some particular subprogram implementation
8378 and that this is deliberate. It can also be useful in the case of
8379 objects declared only for their initialization or finalization side
8382 If @code{LOCAL_NAME} identifies more than one matching homonym in the
8383 current scope, then the entity most recently declared is the one to which
8384 the pragma applies. Note that in the case of accept formals, the pragma
8385 Unreferenced may appear immediately after the keyword @code{do} which
8386 allows the indication of whether or not accept formals are referenced
8387 or not to be given individually for each accept statement.
8389 The left hand side of an assignment does not count as a reference for the
8390 purpose of this pragma. Thus it is fine to assign to an entity for which
8391 pragma Unreferenced is given.
8393 Note that if a warning is desired for all calls to a given subprogram,
8394 regardless of whether they occur in the same unit as the subprogram
8395 declaration, then this pragma should not be used (calls from another
8396 unit would not be flagged); pragma Obsolescent can be used instead
8397 for this purpose, see @ref{a9,,Pragma Obsolescent}.
8399 The second form of pragma @code{Unreferenced} is used within a context
8400 clause. In this case the arguments must be unit names of units previously
8401 mentioned in @code{with} clauses (similar to the usage of pragma
8402 @code{Elaborate_All}. The effect is to suppress warnings about unreferenced
8403 units and unreferenced entities within these units.
8405 For the variable case, warnings are never given for unreferenced variables
8406 whose name contains one of the substrings
8407 @code{DISCARD, DUMMY, IGNORE, JUNK, UNUSED} in any casing. Such names
8408 are typically to be used in cases where such warnings are expected.
8409 Thus it is never necessary to use @code{pragma Unreferenced} for such
8410 variables, though it is harmless to do so.
8412 @node Pragma Unreferenced_Objects,Pragma Unreserve_All_Interrupts,Pragma Unreferenced,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8413 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-unreferenced-objects}@anchor{10c}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id51}@anchor{10d}
8414 @section Pragma Unreferenced_Objects
8418 @geindex unreferenced
8423 pragma Unreferenced_Objects (local_subtype_NAME @{, local_subtype_NAME@});
8426 This pragma signals that for the types or subtypes whose names are
8427 listed, objects which are declared with one of these types or subtypes may
8428 not be referenced, and if no references appear, no warnings are given.
8430 This is particularly useful for objects which are declared solely for their
8431 initialization and finalization effect. Such variables are sometimes referred
8432 to as RAII variables (Resource Acquisition Is Initialization). Using this
8433 pragma on the relevant type (most typically a limited controlled type), the
8434 compiler will automatically suppress unwanted warnings about these variables
8435 not being referenced.
8437 @node Pragma Unreserve_All_Interrupts,Pragma Unsuppress,Pragma Unreferenced_Objects,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8438 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-unreserve-all-interrupts}@anchor{10e}
8439 @section Pragma Unreserve_All_Interrupts
8445 pragma Unreserve_All_Interrupts;
8448 Normally certain interrupts are reserved to the implementation. Any attempt
8449 to attach an interrupt causes Program_Error to be raised, as described in
8450 RM C.3.2(22). A typical example is the @code{SIGINT} interrupt used in
8451 many systems for a @code{Ctrl-C} interrupt. Normally this interrupt is
8452 reserved to the implementation, so that @code{Ctrl-C} can be used to
8453 interrupt execution.
8455 If the pragma @code{Unreserve_All_Interrupts} appears anywhere in any unit in
8456 a program, then all such interrupts are unreserved. This allows the
8457 program to handle these interrupts, but disables their standard
8458 functions. For example, if this pragma is used, then pressing
8459 @code{Ctrl-C} will not automatically interrupt execution. However,
8460 a program can then handle the @code{SIGINT} interrupt as it chooses.
8462 For a full list of the interrupts handled in a specific implementation,
8463 see the source code for the spec of @code{Ada.Interrupts.Names} in
8464 file @code{a-intnam.ads}. This is a target dependent file that contains the
8465 list of interrupts recognized for a given target. The documentation in
8466 this file also specifies what interrupts are affected by the use of
8467 the @code{Unreserve_All_Interrupts} pragma.
8469 For a more general facility for controlling what interrupts can be
8470 handled, see pragma @code{Interrupt_State}, which subsumes the functionality
8471 of the @code{Unreserve_All_Interrupts} pragma.
8473 @node Pragma Unsuppress,Pragma Use_VADS_Size,Pragma Unreserve_All_Interrupts,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8474 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-unsuppress}@anchor{10f}
8475 @section Pragma Unsuppress
8481 pragma Unsuppress (IDENTIFIER [, [On =>] NAME]);
8484 This pragma undoes the effect of a previous pragma @code{Suppress}. If
8485 there is no corresponding pragma @code{Suppress} in effect, it has no
8486 effect. The range of the effect is the same as for pragma
8487 @code{Suppress}. The meaning of the arguments is identical to that used
8488 in pragma @code{Suppress}.
8490 One important application is to ensure that checks are on in cases where
8491 code depends on the checks for its correct functioning, so that the code
8492 will compile correctly even if the compiler switches are set to suppress
8493 checks. For example, in a program that depends on external names of tagged
8494 types and wants to ensure that the duplicated tag check occurs even if all
8495 run-time checks are suppressed by a compiler switch, the following
8496 configuration pragma will ensure this test is not suppressed:
8499 pragma Unsuppress (Duplicated_Tag_Check);
8502 This pragma is standard in Ada 2005. It is available in all earlier versions
8503 of Ada as an implementation-defined pragma.
8505 Note that in addition to the checks defined in the Ada RM, GNAT recogizes a
8506 number of implementation-defined check names. See the description of pragma
8507 @code{Suppress} for full details.
8509 @node Pragma Use_VADS_Size,Pragma Unused,Pragma Unsuppress,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8510 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-use-vads-size}@anchor{110}
8511 @section Pragma Use_VADS_Size
8515 @geindex VADS compatibility
8517 @geindex Rational profile
8522 pragma Use_VADS_Size;
8525 This is a configuration pragma. In a unit to which it applies, any use
8526 of the 'Size attribute is automatically interpreted as a use of the
8527 'VADS_Size attribute. Note that this may result in incorrect semantic
8528 processing of valid Ada 95 or Ada 2005 programs. This is intended to aid in
8529 the handling of existing code which depends on the interpretation of Size
8530 as implemented in the VADS compiler. See description of the VADS_Size
8531 attribute for further details.
8533 @node Pragma Unused,Pragma Validity_Checks,Pragma Use_VADS_Size,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8534 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-unused}@anchor{111}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id52}@anchor{112}
8535 @section Pragma Unused
8544 pragma Unused (LOCAL_NAME @{, LOCAL_NAME@});
8547 This pragma signals that the assignable entities (variables,
8548 @code{out} parameters, and @code{in out} parameters) whose names are listed
8549 deliberately do not get assigned or referenced in the current source unit
8550 after the occurrence of the pragma in the current source unit. This
8551 suppresses warnings about the entities that are unreferenced and/or not
8552 assigned, and, in addition, a warning will be generated if one of these
8553 entities gets assigned or subsequently referenced in the same unit as the
8554 pragma (in the corresponding body or one of its subunits).
8556 This is particularly useful for clearly signaling that a particular
8557 parameter is not modified or referenced, even though the spec suggests
8560 For the variable case, warnings are never given for unreferenced
8561 variables whose name contains one of the substrings
8562 @code{DISCARD, DUMMY, IGNORE, JUNK, UNUSED} in any casing. Such names
8563 are typically to be used in cases where such warnings are expected.
8564 Thus it is never necessary to use @code{pragma Unmodified} for such
8565 variables, though it is harmless to do so.
8567 @node Pragma Validity_Checks,Pragma Volatile,Pragma Unused,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8568 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-validity-checks}@anchor{113}
8569 @section Pragma Validity_Checks
8575 pragma Validity_Checks (string_LITERAL | ALL_CHECKS | On | Off);
8578 This pragma is used in conjunction with compiler switches to control the
8579 built-in validity checking provided by GNAT. The compiler switches, if set
8580 provide an initial setting for the switches, and this pragma may be used
8581 to modify these settings, or the settings may be provided entirely by
8582 the use of the pragma. This pragma can be used anywhere that a pragma
8583 is legal, including use as a configuration pragma (including use in
8584 the @code{gnat.adc} file).
8586 The form with a string literal specifies which validity options are to be
8587 activated. The validity checks are first set to include only the default
8588 reference manual settings, and then a string of letters in the string
8589 specifies the exact set of options required. The form of this string
8590 is exactly as described for the @emph{-gnatVx} compiler switch (see the
8591 GNAT User's Guide for details). For example the following two
8592 methods can be used to enable validity checking for mode @code{in} and
8593 @code{in out} subprogram parameters:
8600 pragma Validity_Checks ("im");
8605 $ gcc -c -gnatVim ...
8609 The form ALL_CHECKS activates all standard checks (its use is equivalent
8610 to the use of the @code{gnatva} switch.
8612 The forms with @code{Off} and @code{On}
8613 can be used to temporarily disable validity checks
8614 as shown in the following example:
8617 pragma Validity_Checks ("c"); -- validity checks for copies
8618 pragma Validity_Checks (Off); -- turn off validity checks
8619 A := B; -- B will not be validity checked
8620 pragma Validity_Checks (On); -- turn validity checks back on
8621 A := C; -- C will be validity checked
8624 @node Pragma Volatile,Pragma Volatile_Full_Access,Pragma Validity_Checks,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8625 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-volatile}@anchor{114}
8626 @section Pragma Volatile
8632 pragma Volatile (LOCAL_NAME);
8635 This pragma is defined by the Ada Reference Manual, and the GNAT
8636 implementation is fully conformant with this definition. The reason it
8637 is mentioned in this section is that a pragma of the same name was supplied
8638 in some Ada 83 compilers, including DEC Ada 83. The Ada 95 / Ada 2005
8639 implementation of pragma Volatile is upwards compatible with the
8640 implementation in DEC Ada 83.
8642 @node Pragma Volatile_Full_Access,Pragma Volatile_Function,Pragma Volatile,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8643 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-volatile-full-access}@anchor{115}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id53}@anchor{116}
8644 @section Pragma Volatile_Full_Access
8650 pragma Volatile_Full_Access (LOCAL_NAME);
8653 This is similar in effect to pragma Volatile, except that any reference to the
8654 object is guaranteed to be done only with instructions that read or write all
8655 the bits of the object. Furthermore, if the object is of a composite type,
8656 then any reference to a component of the object is guaranteed to read and/or
8657 write all the bits of the object.
8659 The intention is that this be suitable for use with memory-mapped I/O devices
8660 on some machines. Note that there are two important respects in which this is
8661 different from @code{pragma Atomic}. First a reference to a @code{Volatile_Full_Access}
8662 object is not a sequential action in the RM 9.10 sense and, therefore, does
8663 not create a synchronization point. Second, in the case of @code{pragma Atomic},
8664 there is no guarantee that all the bits will be accessed if the reference
8665 is not to the whole object; the compiler is allowed (and generally will)
8666 access only part of the object in this case.
8668 It is not permissible to specify @code{Atomic} and @code{Volatile_Full_Access} for
8671 It is not permissible to specify @code{Volatile_Full_Access} for a composite
8672 (record or array) type or object that has at least one @code{Aliased} component.
8674 @node Pragma Volatile_Function,Pragma Warning_As_Error,Pragma Volatile_Full_Access,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8675 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id54}@anchor{117}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-volatile-function}@anchor{118}
8676 @section Pragma Volatile_Function
8682 pragma Volatile_Function [ (boolean_EXPRESSION) ];
8685 For the semantics of this pragma, see the entry for aspect @code{Volatile_Function}
8686 in the SPARK 2014 Reference Manual, section 7.1.2.
8688 @node Pragma Warning_As_Error,Pragma Warnings,Pragma Volatile_Function,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8689 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-warning-as-error}@anchor{119}
8690 @section Pragma Warning_As_Error
8696 pragma Warning_As_Error (static_string_EXPRESSION);
8699 This configuration pragma allows the programmer to specify a set
8700 of warnings that will be treated as errors. Any warning which
8701 matches the pattern given by the pragma argument will be treated
8702 as an error. This gives much more precise control that -gnatwe
8703 which treats all warnings as errors.
8705 The pattern may contain asterisks, which match zero or more characters in
8706 the message. For example, you can use
8707 @code{pragma Warning_As_Error ("bits of*unused")} to treat the warning
8708 message @code{warning: 960 bits of "a" unused} as an error. No other regular
8709 expression notations are permitted. All characters other than asterisk in
8710 these three specific cases are treated as literal characters in the match.
8711 The match is case insensitive, for example XYZ matches xyz.
8713 Note that the pattern matches if it occurs anywhere within the warning
8714 message string (it is not necessary to put an asterisk at the start and
8715 the end of the message, since this is implied).
8717 Another possibility for the static_string_EXPRESSION which works whether
8718 or not error tags are enabled (@emph{-gnatw.d}) is to use the
8719 @emph{-gnatw} tag string, enclosed in brackets,
8720 as shown in the example below, to treat a class of warnings as errors.
8722 The above use of patterns to match the message applies only to warning
8723 messages generated by the front end. This pragma can also be applied to
8724 warnings provided by the back end and mentioned in @ref{11a,,Pragma Warnings}.
8725 By using a single full @emph{-Wxxx} switch in the pragma, such warnings
8726 can also be treated as errors.
8728 The pragma can appear either in a global configuration pragma file
8729 (e.g. @code{gnat.adc}), or at the start of a file. Given a global
8730 configuration pragma file containing:
8733 pragma Warning_As_Error ("[-gnatwj]");
8736 which will treat all obsolescent feature warnings as errors, the
8737 following program compiles as shown (compile options here are
8738 @emph{-gnatwa.d -gnatl -gnatj55}).
8741 1. pragma Warning_As_Error ("*never assigned*");
8742 2. function Warnerr return String is
8745 >>> error: variable "X" is never read and
8746 never assigned [-gnatwv] [warning-as-error]
8750 >>> warning: variable "Y" is assigned but
8751 never read [-gnatwu]
8757 >>> error: use of "%" is an obsolescent
8758 feature (RM J.2(4)), use """ instead
8759 [-gnatwj] [warning-as-error]
8763 8 lines: No errors, 3 warnings (2 treated as errors)
8766 Note that this pragma does not affect the set of warnings issued in
8767 any way, it merely changes the effect of a matching warning if one
8768 is produced as a result of other warnings options. As shown in this
8769 example, if the pragma results in a warning being treated as an error,
8770 the tag is changed from "warning:" to "error:" and the string
8771 "[warning-as-error]" is appended to the end of the message.
8773 @node Pragma Warnings,Pragma Weak_External,Pragma Warning_As_Error,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8774 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas id55}@anchor{11b}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-warnings}@anchor{11a}
8775 @section Pragma Warnings
8781 pragma Warnings ([TOOL_NAME,] DETAILS [, REASON]);
8783 DETAILS ::= On | Off
8784 DETAILS ::= On | Off, local_NAME
8785 DETAILS ::= static_string_EXPRESSION
8786 DETAILS ::= On | Off, static_string_EXPRESSION
8788 TOOL_NAME ::= GNAT | GNATProve
8790 REASON ::= Reason => STRING_LITERAL @{& STRING_LITERAL@}
8793 Note: in Ada 83 mode, a string literal may be used in place of a static string
8794 expression (which does not exist in Ada 83).
8796 Note if the second argument of @code{DETAILS} is a @code{local_NAME} then the
8797 second form is always understood. If the intention is to use
8798 the fourth form, then you can write @code{NAME & ""} to force the
8799 intepretation as a @emph{static_string_EXPRESSION}.
8801 Note: if the first argument is a valid @code{TOOL_NAME}, it will be interpreted
8802 that way. The use of the @code{TOOL_NAME} argument is relevant only to users
8803 of SPARK and GNATprove, see last part of this section for details.
8805 Normally warnings are enabled, with the output being controlled by
8806 the command line switch. Warnings (@code{Off}) turns off generation of
8807 warnings until a Warnings (@code{On}) is encountered or the end of the
8808 current unit. If generation of warnings is turned off using this
8809 pragma, then some or all of the warning messages are suppressed,
8810 regardless of the setting of the command line switches.
8812 The @code{Reason} parameter may optionally appear as the last argument
8813 in any of the forms of this pragma. It is intended purely for the
8814 purposes of documenting the reason for the @code{Warnings} pragma.
8815 The compiler will check that the argument is a static string but
8816 otherwise ignore this argument. Other tools may provide specialized
8817 processing for this string.
8819 The form with a single argument (or two arguments if Reason present),
8820 where the first argument is @code{ON} or @code{OFF}
8821 may be used as a configuration pragma.
8823 If the @code{LOCAL_NAME} parameter is present, warnings are suppressed for
8824 the specified entity. This suppression is effective from the point where
8825 it occurs till the end of the extended scope of the variable (similar to
8826 the scope of @code{Suppress}). This form cannot be used as a configuration
8829 In the case where the first argument is other than @code{ON} or
8831 the third form with a single static_string_EXPRESSION argument (and possible
8832 reason) provides more precise
8833 control over which warnings are active. The string is a list of letters
8834 specifying which warnings are to be activated and which deactivated. The
8835 code for these letters is the same as the string used in the command
8836 line switch controlling warnings. For a brief summary, use the gnatmake
8837 command with no arguments, which will generate usage information containing
8838 the list of warnings switches supported. For
8839 full details see the section on @code{Warning Message Control} in the
8840 @cite{GNAT User's Guide}.
8841 This form can also be used as a configuration pragma.
8843 The warnings controlled by the @code{-gnatw} switch are generated by the
8844 front end of the compiler. The GCC back end can provide additional warnings
8845 and they are controlled by the @code{-W} switch. Such warnings can be
8846 identified by the appearance of a string of the form @code{[-W@{xxx@}]} in the
8847 message which designates the @code{-W@emph{xxx}} switch that controls the message.
8848 The form with a single @emph{static_string_EXPRESSION} argument also works for these
8849 warnings, but the string must be a single full @code{-W@emph{xxx}} switch in this
8850 case. The above reference lists a few examples of these additional warnings.
8852 The specified warnings will be in effect until the end of the program
8853 or another pragma @code{Warnings} is encountered. The effect of the pragma is
8854 cumulative. Initially the set of warnings is the standard default set
8855 as possibly modified by compiler switches. Then each pragma Warning
8856 modifies this set of warnings as specified. This form of the pragma may
8857 also be used as a configuration pragma.
8859 The fourth form, with an @code{On|Off} parameter and a string, is used to
8860 control individual messages, based on their text. The string argument
8861 is a pattern that is used to match against the text of individual
8862 warning messages (not including the initial "warning: " tag).
8864 The pattern may contain asterisks, which match zero or more characters in
8865 the message. For example, you can use
8866 @code{pragma Warnings (Off, "bits of*unused")} to suppress the warning
8867 message @code{warning: 960 bits of "a" unused}. No other regular
8868 expression notations are permitted. All characters other than asterisk in
8869 these three specific cases are treated as literal characters in the match.
8870 The match is case insensitive, for example XYZ matches xyz.
8872 Note that the pattern matches if it occurs anywhere within the warning
8873 message string (it is not necessary to put an asterisk at the start and
8874 the end of the message, since this is implied).
8876 The above use of patterns to match the message applies only to warning
8877 messages generated by the front end. This form of the pragma with a string
8878 argument can also be used to control warnings provided by the back end and
8879 mentioned above. By using a single full @code{-W@emph{xxx}} switch in the pragma,
8880 such warnings can be turned on and off.
8882 There are two ways to use the pragma in this form. The OFF form can be used
8883 as a configuration pragma. The effect is to suppress all warnings (if any)
8884 that match the pattern string throughout the compilation (or match the
8885 -W switch in the back end case).
8887 The second usage is to suppress a warning locally, and in this case, two
8888 pragmas must appear in sequence:
8891 pragma Warnings (Off, Pattern);
8892 ... code where given warning is to be suppressed
8893 pragma Warnings (On, Pattern);
8896 In this usage, the pattern string must match in the Off and On
8897 pragmas, and (if @emph{-gnatw.w} is given) at least one matching
8898 warning must be suppressed.
8900 Note: if the ON form is not found, then the effect of the OFF form extends
8901 until the end of the file (pragma Warnings is purely textual, so its effect
8902 does not stop at the end of the enclosing scope).
8904 Note: to write a string that will match any warning, use the string
8905 @code{"***"}. It will not work to use a single asterisk or two
8906 asterisks since this looks like an operator name. This form with three
8907 asterisks is similar in effect to specifying @code{pragma Warnings (Off)} except (if @code{-gnatw.w} is given) that a matching
8908 @code{pragma Warnings (On, "***")} will be required. This can be
8909 helpful in avoiding forgetting to turn warnings back on.
8911 Note: the debug flag @code{-gnatd.i} (@code{/NOWARNINGS_PRAGMAS} in VMS) can be
8912 used to cause the compiler to entirely ignore all WARNINGS pragmas. This can
8913 be useful in checking whether obsolete pragmas in existing programs are hiding
8916 Note: pragma Warnings does not affect the processing of style messages. See
8917 separate entry for pragma Style_Checks for control of style messages.
8919 Users of the formal verification tool GNATprove for the SPARK subset of Ada may
8920 use the version of the pragma with a @code{TOOL_NAME} parameter.
8922 If present, @code{TOOL_NAME} is the name of a tool, currently either @code{GNAT} for the
8923 compiler or @code{GNATprove} for the formal verification tool. A given tool only
8924 takes into account pragma Warnings that do not specify a tool name, or that
8925 specify the matching tool name. This makes it possible to disable warnings
8926 selectively for each tool, and as a consequence to detect useless pragma
8927 Warnings with switch @code{-gnatw.w}.
8929 @node Pragma Weak_External,Pragma Wide_Character_Encoding,Pragma Warnings,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8930 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-weak-external}@anchor{11c}
8931 @section Pragma Weak_External
8937 pragma Weak_External ([Entity =>] LOCAL_NAME);
8940 @code{LOCAL_NAME} must refer to an object that is declared at the library
8941 level. This pragma specifies that the given entity should be marked as a
8942 weak symbol for the linker. It is equivalent to @code{__attribute__((weak))}
8943 in GNU C and causes @code{LOCAL_NAME} to be emitted as a weak symbol instead
8944 of a regular symbol, that is to say a symbol that does not have to be
8945 resolved by the linker if used in conjunction with a pragma Import.
8947 When a weak symbol is not resolved by the linker, its address is set to
8948 zero. This is useful in writing interfaces to external modules that may
8949 or may not be linked in the final executable, for example depending on
8950 configuration settings.
8952 If a program references at run time an entity to which this pragma has been
8953 applied, and the corresponding symbol was not resolved at link time, then
8954 the execution of the program is erroneous. It is not erroneous to take the
8955 Address of such an entity, for example to guard potential references,
8956 as shown in the example below.
8958 Some file formats do not support weak symbols so not all target machines
8959 support this pragma.
8962 -- Example of the use of pragma Weak_External
8964 package External_Module is
8966 pragma Import (C, key);
8967 pragma Weak_External (key);
8968 function Present return boolean;
8969 end External_Module;
8971 with System; use System;
8972 package body External_Module is
8973 function Present return boolean is
8975 return key'Address /= System.Null_Address;
8977 end External_Module;
8980 @node Pragma Wide_Character_Encoding,,Pragma Weak_External,Implementation Defined Pragmas
8981 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_pragmas pragma-wide-character-encoding}@anchor{11d}
8982 @section Pragma Wide_Character_Encoding
8988 pragma Wide_Character_Encoding (IDENTIFIER | CHARACTER_LITERAL);
8991 This pragma specifies the wide character encoding to be used in program
8992 source text appearing subsequently. It is a configuration pragma, but may
8993 also be used at any point that a pragma is allowed, and it is permissible
8994 to have more than one such pragma in a file, allowing multiple encodings
8995 to appear within the same file.
8997 However, note that the pragma cannot immediately precede the relevant
8998 wide character, because then the previous encoding will still be in
8999 effect, causing "illegal character" errors.
9001 The argument can be an identifier or a character literal. In the identifier
9002 case, it is one of @code{HEX}, @code{UPPER}, @code{SHIFT_JIS},
9003 @code{EUC}, @code{UTF8}, or @code{BRACKETS}. In the character literal
9004 case it is correspondingly one of the characters @code{h}, @code{u},
9005 @code{s}, @code{e}, @code{8}, or @code{b}.
9007 Note that when the pragma is used within a file, it affects only the
9008 encoding within that file, and does not affect withed units, specs,
9011 @node Implementation Defined Aspects,Implementation Defined Attributes,Implementation Defined Pragmas,Top
9012 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects implementation-defined-aspects}@anchor{11e}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects doc}@anchor{11f}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects id1}@anchor{120}
9013 @chapter Implementation Defined Aspects
9016 Ada defines (throughout the Ada 2012 reference manual, summarized
9017 in Annex K) a set of aspects that can be specified for certain entities.
9018 These language defined aspects are implemented in GNAT in Ada 2012 mode
9019 and work as described in the Ada 2012 Reference Manual.
9021 In addition, Ada 2012 allows implementations to define additional aspects
9022 whose meaning is defined by the implementation. GNAT provides
9023 a number of these implementation-defined aspects which can be used
9024 to extend and enhance the functionality of the compiler. This section of
9025 the GNAT reference manual describes these additional aspects.
9027 Note that any program using these aspects may not be portable to
9028 other compilers (although GNAT implements this set of aspects on all
9029 platforms). Therefore if portability to other compilers is an important
9030 consideration, you should minimize the use of these aspects.
9032 Note that for many of these aspects, the effect is essentially similar
9033 to the use of a pragma or attribute specification with the same name
9034 applied to the entity. For example, if we write:
9037 type R is range 1 .. 100
9038 with Value_Size => 10;
9041 then the effect is the same as:
9044 type R is range 1 .. 100;
9045 for R'Value_Size use 10;
9051 type R is new Integer
9052 with Shared => True;
9055 then the effect is the same as:
9058 type R is new Integer;
9062 In the documentation below, such cases are simply marked
9063 as being boolean aspects equivalent to the corresponding pragma
9064 or attribute definition clause.
9067 * Aspect Abstract_State::
9069 * Aspect Async_Readers::
9070 * Aspect Async_Writers::
9071 * Aspect Constant_After_Elaboration::
9072 * Aspect Contract_Cases::
9074 * Aspect Default_Initial_Condition::
9075 * Aspect Dimension::
9076 * Aspect Dimension_System::
9077 * Aspect Disable_Controlled::
9078 * Aspect Effective_Reads::
9079 * Aspect Effective_Writes::
9080 * Aspect Extensions_Visible::
9081 * Aspect Favor_Top_Level::
9084 * Aspect Initial_Condition::
9085 * Aspect Initializes::
9086 * Aspect Inline_Always::
9087 * Aspect Invariant::
9088 * Aspect Invariant'Class::
9090 * Aspect Linker_Section::
9091 * Aspect Lock_Free::
9092 * Aspect Max_Queue_Length::
9093 * Aspect No_Elaboration_Code_All::
9094 * Aspect No_Inline::
9095 * Aspect No_Tagged_Streams::
9096 * Aspect Object_Size::
9097 * Aspect Obsolescent::
9099 * Aspect Persistent_BSS::
9100 * Aspect Predicate::
9101 * Aspect Pure_Function::
9102 * Aspect Refined_Depends::
9103 * Aspect Refined_Global::
9104 * Aspect Refined_Post::
9105 * Aspect Refined_State::
9106 * Aspect Remote_Access_Type::
9107 * Aspect Secondary_Stack_Size::
9108 * Aspect Scalar_Storage_Order::
9110 * Aspect Simple_Storage_Pool::
9111 * Aspect Simple_Storage_Pool_Type::
9112 * Aspect SPARK_Mode::
9113 * Aspect Suppress_Debug_Info::
9114 * Aspect Suppress_Initialization::
9115 * Aspect Test_Case::
9116 * Aspect Thread_Local_Storage::
9117 * Aspect Universal_Aliasing::
9118 * Aspect Universal_Data::
9119 * Aspect Unmodified::
9120 * Aspect Unreferenced::
9121 * Aspect Unreferenced_Objects::
9122 * Aspect Value_Size::
9123 * Aspect Volatile_Full_Access::
9124 * Aspect Volatile_Function::
9129 @node Aspect Abstract_State,Aspect Annotate,,Implementation Defined Aspects
9130 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-abstract-state}@anchor{121}
9131 @section Aspect Abstract_State
9134 @geindex Abstract_State
9136 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{1c,,pragma Abstract_State}.
9138 @node Aspect Annotate,Aspect Async_Readers,Aspect Abstract_State,Implementation Defined Aspects
9139 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-annotate}@anchor{122}
9140 @section Aspect Annotate
9145 There are three forms of this aspect (where ID is an identifier,
9146 and ARG is a general expression),
9147 corresponding to @ref{25,,pragma Annotate}.
9152 @item @emph{Annotate => ID}
9154 Equivalent to @code{pragma Annotate (ID, Entity => Name);}
9156 @item @emph{Annotate => (ID)}
9158 Equivalent to @code{pragma Annotate (ID, Entity => Name);}
9160 @item @emph{Annotate => (ID ,ID @{, ARG@})}
9162 Equivalent to @code{pragma Annotate (ID, ID @{, ARG@}, Entity => Name);}
9165 @node Aspect Async_Readers,Aspect Async_Writers,Aspect Annotate,Implementation Defined Aspects
9166 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-async-readers}@anchor{123}
9167 @section Aspect Async_Readers
9170 @geindex Async_Readers
9172 This boolean aspect is equivalent to @ref{2c,,pragma Async_Readers}.
9174 @node Aspect Async_Writers,Aspect Constant_After_Elaboration,Aspect Async_Readers,Implementation Defined Aspects
9175 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-async-writers}@anchor{124}
9176 @section Aspect Async_Writers
9179 @geindex Async_Writers
9181 This boolean aspect is equivalent to @ref{2f,,pragma Async_Writers}.
9183 @node Aspect Constant_After_Elaboration,Aspect Contract_Cases,Aspect Async_Writers,Implementation Defined Aspects
9184 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-constant-after-elaboration}@anchor{125}
9185 @section Aspect Constant_After_Elaboration
9188 @geindex Constant_After_Elaboration
9190 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{40,,pragma Constant_After_Elaboration}.
9192 @node Aspect Contract_Cases,Aspect Depends,Aspect Constant_After_Elaboration,Implementation Defined Aspects
9193 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-contract-cases}@anchor{126}
9194 @section Aspect Contract_Cases
9197 @geindex Contract_Cases
9199 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{42,,pragma Contract_Cases}, the sequence
9200 of clauses being enclosed in parentheses so that syntactically it is an
9203 @node Aspect Depends,Aspect Default_Initial_Condition,Aspect Contract_Cases,Implementation Defined Aspects
9204 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-depends}@anchor{127}
9205 @section Aspect Depends
9210 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{51,,pragma Depends}.
9212 @node Aspect Default_Initial_Condition,Aspect Dimension,Aspect Depends,Implementation Defined Aspects
9213 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-default-initial-condition}@anchor{128}
9214 @section Aspect Default_Initial_Condition
9217 @geindex Default_Initial_Condition
9219 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{4c,,pragma Default_Initial_Condition}.
9221 @node Aspect Dimension,Aspect Dimension_System,Aspect Default_Initial_Condition,Implementation Defined Aspects
9222 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-dimension}@anchor{129}
9223 @section Aspect Dimension
9228 The @code{Dimension} aspect is used to specify the dimensions of a given
9229 subtype of a dimensioned numeric type. The aspect also specifies a symbol
9230 used when doing formatted output of dimensioned quantities. The syntax is:
9234 ([Symbol =>] SYMBOL, DIMENSION_VALUE @{, DIMENSION_Value@})
9236 SYMBOL ::= STRING_LITERAL | CHARACTER_LITERAL
9240 | others => RATIONAL
9241 | DISCRETE_CHOICE_LIST => RATIONAL
9243 RATIONAL ::= [-] NUMERIC_LITERAL [/ NUMERIC_LITERAL]
9246 This aspect can only be applied to a subtype whose parent type has
9247 a @code{Dimension_System} aspect. The aspect must specify values for
9248 all dimensions of the system. The rational values are the powers of the
9249 corresponding dimensions that are used by the compiler to verify that
9250 physical (numeric) computations are dimensionally consistent. For example,
9251 the computation of a force must result in dimensions (L => 1, M => 1, T => -2).
9252 For further examples of the usage
9253 of this aspect, see package @code{System.Dim.Mks}.
9254 Note that when the dimensioned type is an integer type, then any
9255 dimension value must be an integer literal.
9257 @node Aspect Dimension_System,Aspect Disable_Controlled,Aspect Dimension,Implementation Defined Aspects
9258 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-dimension-system}@anchor{12a}
9259 @section Aspect Dimension_System
9262 @geindex Dimension_System
9264 The @code{Dimension_System} aspect is used to define a system of
9265 dimensions that will be used in subsequent subtype declarations with
9266 @code{Dimension} aspects that reference this system. The syntax is:
9269 with Dimension_System => (DIMENSION @{, DIMENSION@});
9271 DIMENSION ::= ([Unit_Name =>] IDENTIFIER,
9272 [Unit_Symbol =>] SYMBOL,
9273 [Dim_Symbol =>] SYMBOL)
9275 SYMBOL ::= CHARACTER_LITERAL | STRING_LITERAL
9278 This aspect is applied to a type, which must be a numeric derived type
9279 (typically a floating-point type), that
9280 will represent values within the dimension system. Each @code{DIMENSION}
9281 corresponds to one particular dimension. A maximum of 7 dimensions may
9282 be specified. @code{Unit_Name} is the name of the dimension (for example
9283 @code{Meter}). @code{Unit_Symbol} is the shorthand used for quantities
9284 of this dimension (for example @code{m} for @code{Meter}).
9285 @code{Dim_Symbol} gives
9286 the identification within the dimension system (typically this is a
9287 single letter, e.g. @code{L} standing for length for unit name @code{Meter}).
9288 The @code{Unit_Symbol} is used in formatted output of dimensioned quantities.
9289 The @code{Dim_Symbol} is used in error messages when numeric operations have
9290 inconsistent dimensions.
9292 GNAT provides the standard definition of the International MKS system in
9293 the run-time package @code{System.Dim.Mks}. You can easily define
9294 similar packages for cgs units or British units, and define conversion factors
9295 between values in different systems. The MKS system is characterized by the
9299 type Mks_Type is new Long_Long_Float with
9300 Dimension_System => (
9301 (Unit_Name => Meter, Unit_Symbol => 'm', Dim_Symbol => 'L'),
9302 (Unit_Name => Kilogram, Unit_Symbol => "kg", Dim_Symbol => 'M'),
9303 (Unit_Name => Second, Unit_Symbol => 's', Dim_Symbol => 'T'),
9304 (Unit_Name => Ampere, Unit_Symbol => 'A', Dim_Symbol => 'I'),
9305 (Unit_Name => Kelvin, Unit_Symbol => 'K', Dim_Symbol => '@@'),
9306 (Unit_Name => Mole, Unit_Symbol => "mol", Dim_Symbol => 'N'),
9307 (Unit_Name => Candela, Unit_Symbol => "cd", Dim_Symbol => 'J'));
9310 Note that in the above type definition, we use the @code{at} symbol (@code{@@}) to
9311 represent a theta character (avoiding the use of extended Latin-1
9312 characters in this context).
9314 See section 'Performing Dimensionality Analysis in GNAT' in the GNAT Users
9315 Guide for detailed examples of use of the dimension system.
9317 @node Aspect Disable_Controlled,Aspect Effective_Reads,Aspect Dimension_System,Implementation Defined Aspects
9318 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-disable-controlled}@anchor{12b}
9319 @section Aspect Disable_Controlled
9322 @geindex Disable_Controlled
9324 The aspect @code{Disable_Controlled} is defined for controlled record types. If
9325 active, this aspect causes suppression of all related calls to @code{Initialize},
9326 @code{Adjust}, and @code{Finalize}. The intended use is for conditional compilation,
9327 where for example you might want a record to be controlled or not depending on
9328 whether some run-time check is enabled or suppressed.
9330 @node Aspect Effective_Reads,Aspect Effective_Writes,Aspect Disable_Controlled,Implementation Defined Aspects
9331 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-effective-reads}@anchor{12c}
9332 @section Aspect Effective_Reads
9335 @geindex Effective_Reads
9337 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{57,,pragma Effective_Reads}.
9339 @node Aspect Effective_Writes,Aspect Extensions_Visible,Aspect Effective_Reads,Implementation Defined Aspects
9340 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-effective-writes}@anchor{12d}
9341 @section Aspect Effective_Writes
9344 @geindex Effective_Writes
9346 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{59,,pragma Effective_Writes}.
9348 @node Aspect Extensions_Visible,Aspect Favor_Top_Level,Aspect Effective_Writes,Implementation Defined Aspects
9349 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-extensions-visible}@anchor{12e}
9350 @section Aspect Extensions_Visible
9353 @geindex Extensions_Visible
9355 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{65,,pragma Extensions_Visible}.
9357 @node Aspect Favor_Top_Level,Aspect Ghost,Aspect Extensions_Visible,Implementation Defined Aspects
9358 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-favor-top-level}@anchor{12f}
9359 @section Aspect Favor_Top_Level
9362 @geindex Favor_Top_Level
9364 This boolean aspect is equivalent to @ref{6a,,pragma Favor_Top_Level}.
9366 @node Aspect Ghost,Aspect Global,Aspect Favor_Top_Level,Implementation Defined Aspects
9367 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-ghost}@anchor{130}
9368 @section Aspect Ghost
9373 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{6d,,pragma Ghost}.
9375 @node Aspect Global,Aspect Initial_Condition,Aspect Ghost,Implementation Defined Aspects
9376 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-global}@anchor{131}
9377 @section Aspect Global
9382 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{6f,,pragma Global}.
9384 @node Aspect Initial_Condition,Aspect Initializes,Aspect Global,Implementation Defined Aspects
9385 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-initial-condition}@anchor{132}
9386 @section Aspect Initial_Condition
9389 @geindex Initial_Condition
9391 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{7d,,pragma Initial_Condition}.
9393 @node Aspect Initializes,Aspect Inline_Always,Aspect Initial_Condition,Implementation Defined Aspects
9394 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-initializes}@anchor{133}
9395 @section Aspect Initializes
9398 @geindex Initializes
9400 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{7f,,pragma Initializes}.
9402 @node Aspect Inline_Always,Aspect Invariant,Aspect Initializes,Implementation Defined Aspects
9403 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-inline-always}@anchor{134}
9404 @section Aspect Inline_Always
9407 @geindex Inline_Always
9409 This boolean aspect is equivalent to @ref{82,,pragma Inline_Always}.
9411 @node Aspect Invariant,Aspect Invariant'Class,Aspect Inline_Always,Implementation Defined Aspects
9412 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-invariant}@anchor{135}
9413 @section Aspect Invariant
9418 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{89,,pragma Invariant}. It is a
9419 synonym for the language defined aspect @code{Type_Invariant} except
9420 that it is separately controllable using pragma @code{Assertion_Policy}.
9422 @node Aspect Invariant'Class,Aspect Iterable,Aspect Invariant,Implementation Defined Aspects
9423 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-invariant-class}@anchor{136}
9424 @section Aspect Invariant'Class
9427 @geindex Invariant'Class
9429 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{100,,pragma Type_Invariant_Class}. It is a
9430 synonym for the language defined aspect @code{Type_Invariant'Class} except
9431 that it is separately controllable using pragma @code{Assertion_Policy}.
9433 @node Aspect Iterable,Aspect Linker_Section,Aspect Invariant'Class,Implementation Defined Aspects
9434 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-iterable}@anchor{137}
9435 @section Aspect Iterable
9440 This aspect provides a light-weight mechanism for loops and quantified
9441 expressions over container types, without the overhead imposed by the tampering
9442 checks of standard Ada 2012 iterators. The value of the aspect is an aggregate
9443 with six named components, of which the last three are optional: @code{First},
9444 @code{Next}, @code{Has_Element}, @code{Element}, @code{Last}, and @code{Previous}.
9445 When only the first three components are specified, only the
9446 @code{for .. in} form of iteration over cursors is available. When @code{Element}
9447 is specified, both this form and the @code{for .. of} form of iteration over
9448 elements are available. If the last two components are specified, reverse
9449 iterations over the container can be specified (analogous to what can be done
9450 over predefined containers that support the @code{Reverse_Iterator} interface).
9451 The following is a typical example of use:
9454 type List is private with
9455 Iterable => (First => First_Cursor,
9457 Has_Element => Cursor_Has_Element,
9458 [Element => Get_Element]);
9465 The value denoted by @code{First} must denote a primitive operation of the
9466 container type that returns a @code{Cursor}, which must a be a type declared in
9467 the container package or visible from it. For example:
9471 function First_Cursor (Cont : Container) return Cursor;
9478 The value of @code{Next} is a primitive operation of the container type that takes
9479 both a container and a cursor and yields a cursor. For example:
9483 function Advance (Cont : Container; Position : Cursor) return Cursor;
9490 The value of @code{Has_Element} is a primitive operation of the container type
9491 that takes both a container and a cursor and yields a boolean. For example:
9495 function Cursor_Has_Element (Cont : Container; Position : Cursor) return Boolean;
9502 The value of @code{Element} is a primitive operation of the container type that
9503 takes both a container and a cursor and yields an @code{Element_Type}, which must
9504 be a type declared in the container package or visible from it. For example:
9508 function Get_Element (Cont : Container; Position : Cursor) return Element_Type;
9511 This aspect is used in the GNAT-defined formal container packages.
9513 @node Aspect Linker_Section,Aspect Lock_Free,Aspect Iterable,Implementation Defined Aspects
9514 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-linker-section}@anchor{138}
9515 @section Aspect Linker_Section
9518 @geindex Linker_Section
9520 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{91,,pragma Linker_Section}.
9522 @node Aspect Lock_Free,Aspect Max_Queue_Length,Aspect Linker_Section,Implementation Defined Aspects
9523 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-lock-free}@anchor{139}
9524 @section Aspect Lock_Free
9529 This boolean aspect is equivalent to @ref{93,,pragma Lock_Free}.
9531 @node Aspect Max_Queue_Length,Aspect No_Elaboration_Code_All,Aspect Lock_Free,Implementation Defined Aspects
9532 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-max-queue-length}@anchor{13a}
9533 @section Aspect Max_Queue_Length
9536 @geindex Max_Queue_Length
9538 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{9b,,pragma Max_Queue_Length}.
9540 @node Aspect No_Elaboration_Code_All,Aspect No_Inline,Aspect Max_Queue_Length,Implementation Defined Aspects
9541 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-no-elaboration-code-all}@anchor{13b}
9542 @section Aspect No_Elaboration_Code_All
9545 @geindex No_Elaboration_Code_All
9547 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{9f,,pragma No_Elaboration_Code_All}
9550 @node Aspect No_Inline,Aspect No_Tagged_Streams,Aspect No_Elaboration_Code_All,Implementation Defined Aspects
9551 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-no-inline}@anchor{13c}
9552 @section Aspect No_Inline
9557 This boolean aspect is equivalent to @ref{a2,,pragma No_Inline}.
9559 @node Aspect No_Tagged_Streams,Aspect Object_Size,Aspect No_Inline,Implementation Defined Aspects
9560 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-no-tagged-streams}@anchor{13d}
9561 @section Aspect No_Tagged_Streams
9564 @geindex No_Tagged_Streams
9566 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{a6,,pragma No_Tagged_Streams} with an
9567 argument specifying a root tagged type (thus this aspect can only be
9568 applied to such a type).
9570 @node Aspect Object_Size,Aspect Obsolescent,Aspect No_Tagged_Streams,Implementation Defined Aspects
9571 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-object-size}@anchor{13e}
9572 @section Aspect Object_Size
9575 @geindex Object_Size
9577 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{13f,,attribute Object_Size}.
9579 @node Aspect Obsolescent,Aspect Part_Of,Aspect Object_Size,Implementation Defined Aspects
9580 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-obsolescent}@anchor{140}
9581 @section Aspect Obsolescent
9584 @geindex Obsolsecent
9586 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{a9,,pragma Obsolescent}. Note that the
9587 evaluation of this aspect happens at the point of occurrence, it is not
9588 delayed until the freeze point.
9590 @node Aspect Part_Of,Aspect Persistent_BSS,Aspect Obsolescent,Implementation Defined Aspects
9591 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-part-of}@anchor{141}
9592 @section Aspect Part_Of
9597 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{b1,,pragma Part_Of}.
9599 @node Aspect Persistent_BSS,Aspect Predicate,Aspect Part_Of,Implementation Defined Aspects
9600 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-persistent-bss}@anchor{142}
9601 @section Aspect Persistent_BSS
9604 @geindex Persistent_BSS
9606 This boolean aspect is equivalent to @ref{b4,,pragma Persistent_BSS}.
9608 @node Aspect Predicate,Aspect Pure_Function,Aspect Persistent_BSS,Implementation Defined Aspects
9609 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-predicate}@anchor{143}
9610 @section Aspect Predicate
9615 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{bd,,pragma Predicate}. It is thus
9616 similar to the language defined aspects @code{Dynamic_Predicate}
9617 and @code{Static_Predicate} except that whether the resulting
9618 predicate is static or dynamic is controlled by the form of the
9619 expression. It is also separately controllable using pragma
9620 @code{Assertion_Policy}.
9622 @node Aspect Pure_Function,Aspect Refined_Depends,Aspect Predicate,Implementation Defined Aspects
9623 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-pure-function}@anchor{144}
9624 @section Aspect Pure_Function
9627 @geindex Pure_Function
9629 This boolean aspect is equivalent to @ref{c8,,pragma Pure_Function}.
9631 @node Aspect Refined_Depends,Aspect Refined_Global,Aspect Pure_Function,Implementation Defined Aspects
9632 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-refined-depends}@anchor{145}
9633 @section Aspect Refined_Depends
9636 @geindex Refined_Depends
9638 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{cc,,pragma Refined_Depends}.
9640 @node Aspect Refined_Global,Aspect Refined_Post,Aspect Refined_Depends,Implementation Defined Aspects
9641 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-refined-global}@anchor{146}
9642 @section Aspect Refined_Global
9645 @geindex Refined_Global
9647 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{ce,,pragma Refined_Global}.
9649 @node Aspect Refined_Post,Aspect Refined_State,Aspect Refined_Global,Implementation Defined Aspects
9650 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-refined-post}@anchor{147}
9651 @section Aspect Refined_Post
9654 @geindex Refined_Post
9656 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{d0,,pragma Refined_Post}.
9658 @node Aspect Refined_State,Aspect Remote_Access_Type,Aspect Refined_Post,Implementation Defined Aspects
9659 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-refined-state}@anchor{148}
9660 @section Aspect Refined_State
9663 @geindex Refined_State
9665 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{d2,,pragma Refined_State}.
9667 @node Aspect Remote_Access_Type,Aspect Secondary_Stack_Size,Aspect Refined_State,Implementation Defined Aspects
9668 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-remote-access-type}@anchor{149}
9669 @section Aspect Remote_Access_Type
9672 @geindex Remote_Access_Type
9674 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{d6,,pragma Remote_Access_Type}.
9676 @node Aspect Secondary_Stack_Size,Aspect Scalar_Storage_Order,Aspect Remote_Access_Type,Implementation Defined Aspects
9677 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-secondary-stack-size}@anchor{14a}
9678 @section Aspect Secondary_Stack_Size
9681 @geindex Secondary_Stack_Size
9683 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{db,,pragma Secondary_Stack_Size}.
9685 @node Aspect Scalar_Storage_Order,Aspect Shared,Aspect Secondary_Stack_Size,Implementation Defined Aspects
9686 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-scalar-storage-order}@anchor{14b}
9687 @section Aspect Scalar_Storage_Order
9690 @geindex Scalar_Storage_Order
9692 This aspect is equivalent to a @ref{14c,,attribute Scalar_Storage_Order}.
9694 @node Aspect Shared,Aspect Simple_Storage_Pool,Aspect Scalar_Storage_Order,Implementation Defined Aspects
9695 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-shared}@anchor{14d}
9696 @section Aspect Shared
9701 This boolean aspect is equivalent to @ref{de,,pragma Shared}
9702 and is thus a synonym for aspect @code{Atomic}.
9704 @node Aspect Simple_Storage_Pool,Aspect Simple_Storage_Pool_Type,Aspect Shared,Implementation Defined Aspects
9705 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-simple-storage-pool}@anchor{14e}
9706 @section Aspect Simple_Storage_Pool
9709 @geindex Simple_Storage_Pool
9711 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{e3,,attribute Simple_Storage_Pool}.
9713 @node Aspect Simple_Storage_Pool_Type,Aspect SPARK_Mode,Aspect Simple_Storage_Pool,Implementation Defined Aspects
9714 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-simple-storage-pool-type}@anchor{14f}
9715 @section Aspect Simple_Storage_Pool_Type
9718 @geindex Simple_Storage_Pool_Type
9720 This boolean aspect is equivalent to @ref{e1,,pragma Simple_Storage_Pool_Type}.
9722 @node Aspect SPARK_Mode,Aspect Suppress_Debug_Info,Aspect Simple_Storage_Pool_Type,Implementation Defined Aspects
9723 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-spark-mode}@anchor{150}
9724 @section Aspect SPARK_Mode
9729 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{e9,,pragma SPARK_Mode} and
9730 may be specified for either or both of the specification and body
9731 of a subprogram or package.
9733 @node Aspect Suppress_Debug_Info,Aspect Suppress_Initialization,Aspect SPARK_Mode,Implementation Defined Aspects
9734 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-suppress-debug-info}@anchor{151}
9735 @section Aspect Suppress_Debug_Info
9738 @geindex Suppress_Debug_Info
9740 This boolean aspect is equivalent to @ref{f1,,pragma Suppress_Debug_Info}.
9742 @node Aspect Suppress_Initialization,Aspect Test_Case,Aspect Suppress_Debug_Info,Implementation Defined Aspects
9743 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-suppress-initialization}@anchor{152}
9744 @section Aspect Suppress_Initialization
9747 @geindex Suppress_Initialization
9749 This boolean aspect is equivalent to @ref{f5,,pragma Suppress_Initialization}.
9751 @node Aspect Test_Case,Aspect Thread_Local_Storage,Aspect Suppress_Initialization,Implementation Defined Aspects
9752 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-test-case}@anchor{153}
9753 @section Aspect Test_Case
9758 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{f8,,pragma Test_Case}.
9760 @node Aspect Thread_Local_Storage,Aspect Universal_Aliasing,Aspect Test_Case,Implementation Defined Aspects
9761 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-thread-local-storage}@anchor{154}
9762 @section Aspect Thread_Local_Storage
9765 @geindex Thread_Local_Storage
9767 This boolean aspect is equivalent to @ref{fa,,pragma Thread_Local_Storage}.
9769 @node Aspect Universal_Aliasing,Aspect Universal_Data,Aspect Thread_Local_Storage,Implementation Defined Aspects
9770 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-universal-aliasing}@anchor{155}
9771 @section Aspect Universal_Aliasing
9774 @geindex Universal_Aliasing
9776 This boolean aspect is equivalent to @ref{105,,pragma Universal_Aliasing}.
9778 @node Aspect Universal_Data,Aspect Unmodified,Aspect Universal_Aliasing,Implementation Defined Aspects
9779 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-universal-data}@anchor{156}
9780 @section Aspect Universal_Data
9783 @geindex Universal_Data
9785 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{106,,pragma Universal_Data}.
9787 @node Aspect Unmodified,Aspect Unreferenced,Aspect Universal_Data,Implementation Defined Aspects
9788 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-unmodified}@anchor{157}
9789 @section Aspect Unmodified
9794 This boolean aspect is equivalent to @ref{108,,pragma Unmodified}.
9796 @node Aspect Unreferenced,Aspect Unreferenced_Objects,Aspect Unmodified,Implementation Defined Aspects
9797 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-unreferenced}@anchor{158}
9798 @section Aspect Unreferenced
9801 @geindex Unreferenced
9803 This boolean aspect is equivalent to @ref{10a,,pragma Unreferenced}. Note that
9804 in the case of formal parameters, it is not permitted to have aspects for
9805 a formal parameter, so in this case the pragma form must be used.
9807 @node Aspect Unreferenced_Objects,Aspect Value_Size,Aspect Unreferenced,Implementation Defined Aspects
9808 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-unreferenced-objects}@anchor{159}
9809 @section Aspect Unreferenced_Objects
9812 @geindex Unreferenced_Objects
9814 This boolean aspect is equivalent to @ref{10c,,pragma Unreferenced_Objects}.
9816 @node Aspect Value_Size,Aspect Volatile_Full_Access,Aspect Unreferenced_Objects,Implementation Defined Aspects
9817 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-value-size}@anchor{15a}
9818 @section Aspect Value_Size
9823 This aspect is equivalent to @ref{15b,,attribute Value_Size}.
9825 @node Aspect Volatile_Full_Access,Aspect Volatile_Function,Aspect Value_Size,Implementation Defined Aspects
9826 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-volatile-full-access}@anchor{15c}
9827 @section Aspect Volatile_Full_Access
9830 @geindex Volatile_Full_Access
9832 This boolean aspect is equivalent to @ref{115,,pragma Volatile_Full_Access}.
9834 @node Aspect Volatile_Function,Aspect Warnings,Aspect Volatile_Full_Access,Implementation Defined Aspects
9835 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-volatile-function}@anchor{15d}
9836 @section Aspect Volatile_Function
9839 @geindex Volatile_Function
9841 This boolean aspect is equivalent to @ref{118,,pragma Volatile_Function}.
9843 @node Aspect Warnings,,Aspect Volatile_Function,Implementation Defined Aspects
9844 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_aspects aspect-warnings}@anchor{15e}
9845 @section Aspect Warnings
9850 This aspect is equivalent to the two argument form of @ref{11a,,pragma Warnings},
9851 where the first argument is @code{ON} or @code{OFF} and the second argument
9854 @node Implementation Defined Attributes,Standard and Implementation Defined Restrictions,Implementation Defined Aspects,Top
9855 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes doc}@anchor{15f}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes implementation-defined-attributes}@anchor{8}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes id1}@anchor{160}
9856 @chapter Implementation Defined Attributes
9859 Ada defines (throughout the Ada reference manual,
9860 summarized in Annex K),
9861 a set of attributes that provide useful additional functionality in all
9862 areas of the language. These language defined attributes are implemented
9863 in GNAT and work as described in the Ada Reference Manual.
9865 In addition, Ada allows implementations to define additional
9866 attributes whose meaning is defined by the implementation. GNAT provides
9867 a number of these implementation-dependent attributes which can be used
9868 to extend and enhance the functionality of the compiler. This section of
9869 the GNAT reference manual describes these additional attributes. It also
9870 describes additional implementation-dependent features of standard
9871 language-defined attributes.
9873 Note that any program using these attributes may not be portable to
9874 other compilers (although GNAT implements this set of attributes on all
9875 platforms). Therefore if portability to other compilers is an important
9876 consideration, you should minimize the use of these attributes.
9879 * Attribute Abort_Signal::
9880 * Attribute Address_Size::
9881 * Attribute Asm_Input::
9882 * Attribute Asm_Output::
9883 * Attribute Atomic_Always_Lock_Free::
9885 * Attribute Bit_Position::
9886 * Attribute Code_Address::
9887 * Attribute Compiler_Version::
9888 * Attribute Constrained::
9889 * Attribute Default_Bit_Order::
9890 * Attribute Default_Scalar_Storage_Order::
9892 * Attribute Descriptor_Size::
9893 * Attribute Elaborated::
9894 * Attribute Elab_Body::
9895 * Attribute Elab_Spec::
9896 * Attribute Elab_Subp_Body::
9898 * Attribute Enabled::
9899 * Attribute Enum_Rep::
9900 * Attribute Enum_Val::
9901 * Attribute Epsilon::
9902 * Attribute Fast_Math::
9903 * Attribute Finalization_Size::
9904 * Attribute Fixed_Value::
9905 * Attribute From_Any::
9906 * Attribute Has_Access_Values::
9907 * Attribute Has_Discriminants::
9909 * Attribute Integer_Value::
9910 * Attribute Invalid_Value::
9911 * Attribute Iterable::
9913 * Attribute Library_Level::
9914 * Attribute Lock_Free::
9915 * Attribute Loop_Entry::
9916 * Attribute Machine_Size::
9917 * Attribute Mantissa::
9918 * Attribute Maximum_Alignment::
9919 * Attribute Mechanism_Code::
9920 * Attribute Null_Parameter::
9921 * Attribute Object_Size::
9923 * Attribute Passed_By_Reference::
9924 * Attribute Pool_Address::
9925 * Attribute Range_Length::
9926 * Attribute Restriction_Set::
9927 * Attribute Result::
9928 * Attribute Safe_Emax::
9929 * Attribute Safe_Large::
9930 * Attribute Safe_Small::
9931 * Attribute Scalar_Storage_Order::
9932 * Attribute Simple_Storage_Pool::
9934 * Attribute Storage_Unit::
9935 * Attribute Stub_Type::
9936 * Attribute System_Allocator_Alignment::
9937 * Attribute Target_Name::
9938 * Attribute To_Address::
9939 * Attribute To_Any::
9940 * Attribute Type_Class::
9941 * Attribute Type_Key::
9942 * Attribute TypeCode::
9943 * Attribute Unconstrained_Array::
9944 * Attribute Universal_Literal_String::
9945 * Attribute Unrestricted_Access::
9946 * Attribute Update::
9947 * Attribute Valid_Scalars::
9948 * Attribute VADS_Size::
9949 * Attribute Value_Size::
9950 * Attribute Wchar_T_Size::
9951 * Attribute Word_Size::
9955 @node Attribute Abort_Signal,Attribute Address_Size,,Implementation Defined Attributes
9956 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-abort-signal}@anchor{161}
9957 @section Attribute Abort_Signal
9960 @geindex Abort_Signal
9962 @code{Standard'Abort_Signal} (@code{Standard} is the only allowed
9963 prefix) provides the entity for the special exception used to signal
9964 task abort or asynchronous transfer of control. Normally this attribute
9965 should only be used in the tasking runtime (it is highly peculiar, and
9966 completely outside the normal semantics of Ada, for a user program to
9967 intercept the abort exception).
9969 @node Attribute Address_Size,Attribute Asm_Input,Attribute Abort_Signal,Implementation Defined Attributes
9970 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-address-size}@anchor{162}
9971 @section Attribute Address_Size
9974 @geindex Size of `@w{`}Address`@w{`}
9976 @geindex Address_Size
9978 @code{Standard'Address_Size} (@code{Standard} is the only allowed
9979 prefix) is a static constant giving the number of bits in an
9980 @code{Address}. It is the same value as System.Address'Size,
9981 but has the advantage of being static, while a direct
9982 reference to System.Address'Size is nonstatic because Address
9985 @node Attribute Asm_Input,Attribute Asm_Output,Attribute Address_Size,Implementation Defined Attributes
9986 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-asm-input}@anchor{163}
9987 @section Attribute Asm_Input
9992 The @code{Asm_Input} attribute denotes a function that takes two
9993 parameters. The first is a string, the second is an expression of the
9994 type designated by the prefix. The first (string) argument is required
9995 to be a static expression, and is the constraint for the parameter,
9996 (e.g., what kind of register is required). The second argument is the
9997 value to be used as the input argument. The possible values for the
9998 constant are the same as those used in the RTL, and are dependent on
9999 the configuration file used to built the GCC back end.
10000 @ref{164,,Machine Code Insertions}
10002 @node Attribute Asm_Output,Attribute Atomic_Always_Lock_Free,Attribute Asm_Input,Implementation Defined Attributes
10003 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-asm-output}@anchor{165}
10004 @section Attribute Asm_Output
10007 @geindex Asm_Output
10009 The @code{Asm_Output} attribute denotes a function that takes two
10010 parameters. The first is a string, the second is the name of a variable
10011 of the type designated by the attribute prefix. The first (string)
10012 argument is required to be a static expression and designates the
10013 constraint for the parameter (e.g., what kind of register is
10014 required). The second argument is the variable to be updated with the
10015 result. The possible values for constraint are the same as those used in
10016 the RTL, and are dependent on the configuration file used to build the
10017 GCC back end. If there are no output operands, then this argument may
10018 either be omitted, or explicitly given as @code{No_Output_Operands}.
10019 @ref{164,,Machine Code Insertions}
10021 @node Attribute Atomic_Always_Lock_Free,Attribute Bit,Attribute Asm_Output,Implementation Defined Attributes
10022 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-atomic-always-lock-free}@anchor{166}
10023 @section Attribute Atomic_Always_Lock_Free
10026 @geindex Atomic_Always_Lock_Free
10028 The prefix of the @code{Atomic_Always_Lock_Free} attribute is a type.
10029 The result is a Boolean value which is True if the type has discriminants,
10030 and False otherwise. The result indicate whether atomic operations are
10031 supported by the target for the given type.
10033 @node Attribute Bit,Attribute Bit_Position,Attribute Atomic_Always_Lock_Free,Implementation Defined Attributes
10034 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-bit}@anchor{167}
10035 @section Attribute Bit
10040 @code{obj'Bit}, where @code{obj} is any object, yields the bit
10041 offset within the storage unit (byte) that contains the first bit of
10042 storage allocated for the object. The value of this attribute is of the
10043 type @emph{universal_integer}, and is always a non-negative number not
10044 exceeding the value of @code{System.Storage_Unit}.
10046 For an object that is a variable or a constant allocated in a register,
10047 the value is zero. (The use of this attribute does not force the
10048 allocation of a variable to memory).
10050 For an object that is a formal parameter, this attribute applies
10051 to either the matching actual parameter or to a copy of the
10052 matching actual parameter.
10054 For an access object the value is zero. Note that
10055 @code{obj.all'Bit} is subject to an @code{Access_Check} for the
10056 designated object. Similarly for a record component
10057 @code{X.C'Bit} is subject to a discriminant check and
10058 @code{X(I).Bit} and @code{X(I1..I2)'Bit}
10059 are subject to index checks.
10061 This attribute is designed to be compatible with the DEC Ada 83 definition
10062 and implementation of the @code{Bit} attribute.
10064 @node Attribute Bit_Position,Attribute Code_Address,Attribute Bit,Implementation Defined Attributes
10065 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-bit-position}@anchor{168}
10066 @section Attribute Bit_Position
10069 @geindex Bit_Position
10071 @code{R.C'Bit_Position}, where @code{R} is a record object and @code{C} is one
10072 of the fields of the record type, yields the bit
10073 offset within the record contains the first bit of
10074 storage allocated for the object. The value of this attribute is of the
10075 type @emph{universal_integer}. The value depends only on the field
10076 @code{C} and is independent of the alignment of
10077 the containing record @code{R}.
10079 @node Attribute Code_Address,Attribute Compiler_Version,Attribute Bit_Position,Implementation Defined Attributes
10080 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-code-address}@anchor{169}
10081 @section Attribute Code_Address
10084 @geindex Code_Address
10086 @geindex Subprogram address
10088 @geindex Address of subprogram code
10090 The @code{'Address}
10091 attribute may be applied to subprograms in Ada 95 and Ada 2005, but the
10092 intended effect seems to be to provide
10093 an address value which can be used to call the subprogram by means of
10094 an address clause as in the following example:
10100 for L'Address use K'Address;
10101 pragma Import (Ada, L);
10104 A call to @code{L} is then expected to result in a call to @code{K}.
10105 In Ada 83, where there were no access-to-subprogram values, this was
10106 a common work-around for getting the effect of an indirect call.
10107 GNAT implements the above use of @code{Address} and the technique
10108 illustrated by the example code works correctly.
10110 However, for some purposes, it is useful to have the address of the start
10111 of the generated code for the subprogram. On some architectures, this is
10112 not necessarily the same as the @code{Address} value described above.
10113 For example, the @code{Address} value may reference a subprogram
10114 descriptor rather than the subprogram itself.
10116 The @code{'Code_Address} attribute, which can only be applied to
10117 subprogram entities, always returns the address of the start of the
10118 generated code of the specified subprogram, which may or may not be
10119 the same value as is returned by the corresponding @code{'Address}
10122 @node Attribute Compiler_Version,Attribute Constrained,Attribute Code_Address,Implementation Defined Attributes
10123 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-compiler-version}@anchor{16a}
10124 @section Attribute Compiler_Version
10127 @geindex Compiler_Version
10129 @code{Standard'Compiler_Version} (@code{Standard} is the only allowed
10130 prefix) yields a static string identifying the version of the compiler
10131 being used to compile the unit containing the attribute reference.
10133 @node Attribute Constrained,Attribute Default_Bit_Order,Attribute Compiler_Version,Implementation Defined Attributes
10134 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-constrained}@anchor{16b}
10135 @section Attribute Constrained
10138 @geindex Constrained
10140 In addition to the usage of this attribute in the Ada RM, GNAT
10141 also permits the use of the @code{'Constrained} attribute
10142 in a generic template
10143 for any type, including types without discriminants. The value of this
10144 attribute in the generic instance when applied to a scalar type or a
10145 record type without discriminants is always @code{True}. This usage is
10146 compatible with older Ada compilers, including notably DEC Ada.
10148 @node Attribute Default_Bit_Order,Attribute Default_Scalar_Storage_Order,Attribute Constrained,Implementation Defined Attributes
10149 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-default-bit-order}@anchor{16c}
10150 @section Attribute Default_Bit_Order
10153 @geindex Big endian
10155 @geindex Little endian
10157 @geindex Default_Bit_Order
10159 @code{Standard'Default_Bit_Order} (@code{Standard} is the only
10160 permissible prefix), provides the value @code{System.Default_Bit_Order}
10161 as a @code{Pos} value (0 for @code{High_Order_First}, 1 for
10162 @code{Low_Order_First}). This is used to construct the definition of
10163 @code{Default_Bit_Order} in package @code{System}.
10165 @node Attribute Default_Scalar_Storage_Order,Attribute Deref,Attribute Default_Bit_Order,Implementation Defined Attributes
10166 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-default-scalar-storage-order}@anchor{16d}
10167 @section Attribute Default_Scalar_Storage_Order
10170 @geindex Big endian
10172 @geindex Little endian
10174 @geindex Default_Scalar_Storage_Order
10176 @code{Standard'Default_Scalar_Storage_Order} (@code{Standard} is the only
10177 permissible prefix), provides the current value of the default scalar storage
10178 order (as specified using pragma @code{Default_Scalar_Storage_Order}, or
10179 equal to @code{Default_Bit_Order} if unspecified) as a
10180 @code{System.Bit_Order} value. This is a static attribute.
10182 @node Attribute Deref,Attribute Descriptor_Size,Attribute Default_Scalar_Storage_Order,Implementation Defined Attributes
10183 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-deref}@anchor{16e}
10184 @section Attribute Deref
10189 The attribute @code{typ'Deref(expr)} where @code{expr} is of type @code{System.Address} yields
10190 the variable of type @code{typ} that is located at the given address. It is similar
10191 to @code{(totyp (expr).all)}, where @code{totyp} is an unchecked conversion from address to
10192 a named access-to-@cite{typ} type, except that it yields a variable, so it can be
10193 used on the left side of an assignment.
10195 @node Attribute Descriptor_Size,Attribute Elaborated,Attribute Deref,Implementation Defined Attributes
10196 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-descriptor-size}@anchor{16f}
10197 @section Attribute Descriptor_Size
10200 @geindex Descriptor
10202 @geindex Dope vector
10204 @geindex Descriptor_Size
10206 Nonstatic attribute @code{Descriptor_Size} returns the size in bits of the
10207 descriptor allocated for a type. The result is non-zero only for unconstrained
10208 array types and the returned value is of type universal integer. In GNAT, an
10209 array descriptor contains bounds information and is located immediately before
10210 the first element of the array.
10213 type Unconstr_Array is array (Positive range <>) of Boolean;
10214 Put_Line ("Descriptor size = " & Unconstr_Array'Descriptor_Size'Img);
10217 The attribute takes into account any additional padding due to type alignment.
10218 In the example above, the descriptor contains two values of type
10219 @code{Positive} representing the low and high bound. Since @code{Positive} has
10220 a size of 31 bits and an alignment of 4, the descriptor size is @code{2 * Positive'Size + 2} or 64 bits.
10222 @node Attribute Elaborated,Attribute Elab_Body,Attribute Descriptor_Size,Implementation Defined Attributes
10223 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-elaborated}@anchor{170}
10224 @section Attribute Elaborated
10227 @geindex Elaborated
10229 The prefix of the @code{'Elaborated} attribute must be a unit name. The
10230 value is a Boolean which indicates whether or not the given unit has been
10231 elaborated. This attribute is primarily intended for internal use by the
10232 generated code for dynamic elaboration checking, but it can also be used
10233 in user programs. The value will always be True once elaboration of all
10234 units has been completed. An exception is for units which need no
10235 elaboration, the value is always False for such units.
10237 @node Attribute Elab_Body,Attribute Elab_Spec,Attribute Elaborated,Implementation Defined Attributes
10238 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-elab-body}@anchor{171}
10239 @section Attribute Elab_Body
10244 This attribute can only be applied to a program unit name. It returns
10245 the entity for the corresponding elaboration procedure for elaborating
10246 the body of the referenced unit. This is used in the main generated
10247 elaboration procedure by the binder and is not normally used in any
10248 other context. However, there may be specialized situations in which it
10249 is useful to be able to call this elaboration procedure from Ada code,
10250 e.g., if it is necessary to do selective re-elaboration to fix some
10253 @node Attribute Elab_Spec,Attribute Elab_Subp_Body,Attribute Elab_Body,Implementation Defined Attributes
10254 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-elab-spec}@anchor{172}
10255 @section Attribute Elab_Spec
10260 This attribute can only be applied to a program unit name. It returns
10261 the entity for the corresponding elaboration procedure for elaborating
10262 the spec of the referenced unit. This is used in the main
10263 generated elaboration procedure by the binder and is not normally used
10264 in any other context. However, there may be specialized situations in
10265 which it is useful to be able to call this elaboration procedure from
10266 Ada code, e.g., if it is necessary to do selective re-elaboration to fix
10269 @node Attribute Elab_Subp_Body,Attribute Emax,Attribute Elab_Spec,Implementation Defined Attributes
10270 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-elab-subp-body}@anchor{173}
10271 @section Attribute Elab_Subp_Body
10274 @geindex Elab_Subp_Body
10276 This attribute can only be applied to a library level subprogram
10277 name and is only allowed in CodePeer mode. It returns the entity
10278 for the corresponding elaboration procedure for elaborating the body
10279 of the referenced subprogram unit. This is used in the main generated
10280 elaboration procedure by the binder in CodePeer mode only and is unrecognized
10283 @node Attribute Emax,Attribute Enabled,Attribute Elab_Subp_Body,Implementation Defined Attributes
10284 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-emax}@anchor{174}
10285 @section Attribute Emax
10288 @geindex Ada 83 attributes
10292 The @code{Emax} attribute is provided for compatibility with Ada 83. See
10293 the Ada 83 reference manual for an exact description of the semantics of
10296 @node Attribute Enabled,Attribute Enum_Rep,Attribute Emax,Implementation Defined Attributes
10297 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-enabled}@anchor{175}
10298 @section Attribute Enabled
10303 The @code{Enabled} attribute allows an application program to check at compile
10304 time to see if the designated check is currently enabled. The prefix is a
10305 simple identifier, referencing any predefined check name (other than
10306 @code{All_Checks}) or a check name introduced by pragma Check_Name. If
10307 no argument is given for the attribute, the check is for the general state
10308 of the check, if an argument is given, then it is an entity name, and the
10309 check indicates whether an @code{Suppress} or @code{Unsuppress} has been
10310 given naming the entity (if not, then the argument is ignored).
10312 Note that instantiations inherit the check status at the point of the
10313 instantiation, so a useful idiom is to have a library package that
10314 introduces a check name with @code{pragma Check_Name}, and then contains
10315 generic packages or subprograms which use the @code{Enabled} attribute
10316 to see if the check is enabled. A user of this package can then issue
10317 a @code{pragma Suppress} or @code{pragma Unsuppress} before instantiating
10318 the package or subprogram, controlling whether the check will be present.
10320 @node Attribute Enum_Rep,Attribute Enum_Val,Attribute Enabled,Implementation Defined Attributes
10321 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-enum-rep}@anchor{176}
10322 @section Attribute Enum_Rep
10325 @geindex Representation of enums
10329 For every enumeration subtype @code{S}, @code{S'Enum_Rep} denotes a
10330 function with the following spec:
10333 function S'Enum_Rep (Arg : S'Base) return <Universal_Integer>;
10336 It is also allowable to apply @code{Enum_Rep} directly to an object of an
10337 enumeration type or to a non-overloaded enumeration
10338 literal. In this case @code{S'Enum_Rep} is equivalent to
10339 @code{typ'Enum_Rep(S)} where @code{typ} is the type of the
10340 enumeration literal or object.
10342 The function returns the representation value for the given enumeration
10343 value. This will be equal to value of the @code{Pos} attribute in the
10344 absence of an enumeration representation clause. This is a static
10345 attribute (i.e.,:the result is static if the argument is static).
10347 @code{S'Enum_Rep} can also be used with integer types and objects,
10348 in which case it simply returns the integer value. The reason for this
10349 is to allow it to be used for @code{(<>)} discrete formal arguments in
10350 a generic unit that can be instantiated with either enumeration types
10351 or integer types. Note that if @code{Enum_Rep} is used on a modular
10352 type whose upper bound exceeds the upper bound of the largest signed
10353 integer type, and the argument is a variable, so that the universal
10354 integer calculation is done at run time, then the call to @code{Enum_Rep}
10355 may raise @code{Constraint_Error}.
10357 @node Attribute Enum_Val,Attribute Epsilon,Attribute Enum_Rep,Implementation Defined Attributes
10358 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-enum-val}@anchor{177}
10359 @section Attribute Enum_Val
10362 @geindex Representation of enums
10366 For every enumeration subtype @code{S}, @code{S'Enum_Val} denotes a
10367 function with the following spec:
10370 function S'Enum_Val (Arg : <Universal_Integer>) return S'Base;
10373 The function returns the enumeration value whose representation matches the
10374 argument, or raises Constraint_Error if no enumeration literal of the type
10375 has the matching value.
10376 This will be equal to value of the @code{Val} attribute in the
10377 absence of an enumeration representation clause. This is a static
10378 attribute (i.e., the result is static if the argument is static).
10380 @node Attribute Epsilon,Attribute Fast_Math,Attribute Enum_Val,Implementation Defined Attributes
10381 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-epsilon}@anchor{178}
10382 @section Attribute Epsilon
10385 @geindex Ada 83 attributes
10389 The @code{Epsilon} attribute is provided for compatibility with Ada 83. See
10390 the Ada 83 reference manual for an exact description of the semantics of
10393 @node Attribute Fast_Math,Attribute Finalization_Size,Attribute Epsilon,Implementation Defined Attributes
10394 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-fast-math}@anchor{179}
10395 @section Attribute Fast_Math
10400 @code{Standard'Fast_Math} (@code{Standard} is the only allowed
10401 prefix) yields a static Boolean value that is True if pragma
10402 @code{Fast_Math} is active, and False otherwise.
10404 @node Attribute Finalization_Size,Attribute Fixed_Value,Attribute Fast_Math,Implementation Defined Attributes
10405 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-finalization-size}@anchor{17a}
10406 @section Attribute Finalization_Size
10409 @geindex Finalization_Size
10411 The prefix of attribute @code{Finalization_Size} must be an object or
10412 a non-class-wide type. This attribute returns the size of any hidden data
10413 reserved by the compiler to handle finalization-related actions. The type of
10414 the attribute is @emph{universal_integer}.
10416 @code{Finalization_Size} yields a value of zero for a type with no controlled
10417 parts, an object whose type has no controlled parts, or an object of a
10418 class-wide type whose tag denotes a type with no controlled parts.
10420 Note that only heap-allocated objects contain finalization data.
10422 @node Attribute Fixed_Value,Attribute From_Any,Attribute Finalization_Size,Implementation Defined Attributes
10423 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-fixed-value}@anchor{17b}
10424 @section Attribute Fixed_Value
10427 @geindex Fixed_Value
10429 For every fixed-point type @code{S}, @code{S'Fixed_Value} denotes a
10430 function with the following specification:
10433 function S'Fixed_Value (Arg : <Universal_Integer>) return S;
10436 The value returned is the fixed-point value @code{V} such that:
10442 The effect is thus similar to first converting the argument to the
10443 integer type used to represent @code{S}, and then doing an unchecked
10444 conversion to the fixed-point type. The difference is
10445 that there are full range checks, to ensure that the result is in range.
10446 This attribute is primarily intended for use in implementation of the
10447 input-output functions for fixed-point values.
10449 @node Attribute From_Any,Attribute Has_Access_Values,Attribute Fixed_Value,Implementation Defined Attributes
10450 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-from-any}@anchor{17c}
10451 @section Attribute From_Any
10456 This internal attribute is used for the generation of remote subprogram
10457 stubs in the context of the Distributed Systems Annex.
10459 @node Attribute Has_Access_Values,Attribute Has_Discriminants,Attribute From_Any,Implementation Defined Attributes
10460 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-has-access-values}@anchor{17d}
10461 @section Attribute Has_Access_Values
10464 @geindex Access values
10465 @geindex testing for
10467 @geindex Has_Access_Values
10469 The prefix of the @code{Has_Access_Values} attribute is a type. The result
10470 is a Boolean value which is True if the is an access type, or is a composite
10471 type with a component (at any nesting depth) that is an access type, and is
10473 The intended use of this attribute is in conjunction with generic
10474 definitions. If the attribute is applied to a generic private type, it
10475 indicates whether or not the corresponding actual type has access values.
10477 @node Attribute Has_Discriminants,Attribute Img,Attribute Has_Access_Values,Implementation Defined Attributes
10478 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-has-discriminants}@anchor{17e}
10479 @section Attribute Has_Discriminants
10482 @geindex Discriminants
10483 @geindex testing for
10485 @geindex Has_Discriminants
10487 The prefix of the @code{Has_Discriminants} attribute is a type. The result
10488 is a Boolean value which is True if the type has discriminants, and False
10489 otherwise. The intended use of this attribute is in conjunction with generic
10490 definitions. If the attribute is applied to a generic private type, it
10491 indicates whether or not the corresponding actual type has discriminants.
10493 @node Attribute Img,Attribute Integer_Value,Attribute Has_Discriminants,Implementation Defined Attributes
10494 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-img}@anchor{17f}
10495 @section Attribute Img
10500 The @code{Img} attribute differs from @code{Image} in that it is applied
10501 directly to an object, and yields the same result as
10502 @code{Image} for the subtype of the object. This is convenient for
10506 Put_Line ("X = " & X'Img);
10509 has the same meaning as the more verbose:
10512 Put_Line ("X = " & T'Image (X));
10515 where @code{T} is the (sub)type of the object @code{X}.
10517 Note that technically, in analogy to @code{Image},
10518 @code{X'Img} returns a parameterless function
10519 that returns the appropriate string when called. This means that
10520 @code{X'Img} can be renamed as a function-returning-string, or used
10521 in an instantiation as a function parameter.
10523 @node Attribute Integer_Value,Attribute Invalid_Value,Attribute Img,Implementation Defined Attributes
10524 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-integer-value}@anchor{180}
10525 @section Attribute Integer_Value
10528 @geindex Integer_Value
10530 For every integer type @code{S}, @code{S'Integer_Value} denotes a
10531 function with the following spec:
10534 function S'Integer_Value (Arg : <Universal_Fixed>) return S;
10537 The value returned is the integer value @code{V}, such that:
10543 where @code{T} is the type of @code{Arg}.
10544 The effect is thus similar to first doing an unchecked conversion from
10545 the fixed-point type to its corresponding implementation type, and then
10546 converting the result to the target integer type. The difference is
10547 that there are full range checks, to ensure that the result is in range.
10548 This attribute is primarily intended for use in implementation of the
10549 standard input-output functions for fixed-point values.
10551 @node Attribute Invalid_Value,Attribute Iterable,Attribute Integer_Value,Implementation Defined Attributes
10552 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-invalid-value}@anchor{181}
10553 @section Attribute Invalid_Value
10556 @geindex Invalid_Value
10558 For every scalar type S, S'Invalid_Value returns an undefined value of the
10559 type. If possible this value is an invalid representation for the type. The
10560 value returned is identical to the value used to initialize an otherwise
10561 uninitialized value of the type if pragma Initialize_Scalars is used,
10562 including the ability to modify the value with the binder -Sxx flag and
10563 relevant environment variables at run time.
10565 @node Attribute Iterable,Attribute Large,Attribute Invalid_Value,Implementation Defined Attributes
10566 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-iterable}@anchor{182}
10567 @section Attribute Iterable
10572 Equivalent to Aspect Iterable.
10574 @node Attribute Large,Attribute Library_Level,Attribute Iterable,Implementation Defined Attributes
10575 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-large}@anchor{183}
10576 @section Attribute Large
10579 @geindex Ada 83 attributes
10583 The @code{Large} attribute is provided for compatibility with Ada 83. See
10584 the Ada 83 reference manual for an exact description of the semantics of
10587 @node Attribute Library_Level,Attribute Lock_Free,Attribute Large,Implementation Defined Attributes
10588 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-library-level}@anchor{184}
10589 @section Attribute Library_Level
10592 @geindex Library_Level
10594 @code{P'Library_Level}, where P is an entity name,
10595 returns a Boolean value which is True if the entity is declared
10596 at the library level, and False otherwise. Note that within a
10597 generic instantition, the name of the generic unit denotes the
10598 instance, which means that this attribute can be used to test
10599 if a generic is instantiated at the library level, as shown
10606 pragma Compile_Time_Error
10607 (not Gen'Library_Level,
10608 "Gen can only be instantiated at library level");
10613 @node Attribute Lock_Free,Attribute Loop_Entry,Attribute Library_Level,Implementation Defined Attributes
10614 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-lock-free}@anchor{185}
10615 @section Attribute Lock_Free
10620 @code{P'Lock_Free}, where P is a protected object, returns True if a
10621 pragma @code{Lock_Free} applies to P.
10623 @node Attribute Loop_Entry,Attribute Machine_Size,Attribute Lock_Free,Implementation Defined Attributes
10624 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-loop-entry}@anchor{186}
10625 @section Attribute Loop_Entry
10628 @geindex Loop_Entry
10633 X'Loop_Entry [(loop_name)]
10636 The @code{Loop_Entry} attribute is used to refer to the value that an
10637 expression had upon entry to a given loop in much the same way that the
10638 @code{Old} attribute in a subprogram postcondition can be used to refer
10639 to the value an expression had upon entry to the subprogram. The
10640 relevant loop is either identified by the given loop name, or it is the
10641 innermost enclosing loop when no loop name is given.
10643 A @code{Loop_Entry} attribute can only occur within a
10644 @code{Loop_Variant} or @code{Loop_Invariant} pragma. A common use of
10645 @code{Loop_Entry} is to compare the current value of objects with their
10646 initial value at loop entry, in a @code{Loop_Invariant} pragma.
10648 The effect of using @code{X'Loop_Entry} is the same as declaring
10649 a constant initialized with the initial value of @code{X} at loop
10650 entry. This copy is not performed if the loop is not entered, or if the
10651 corresponding pragmas are ignored or disabled.
10653 @node Attribute Machine_Size,Attribute Mantissa,Attribute Loop_Entry,Implementation Defined Attributes
10654 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-machine-size}@anchor{187}
10655 @section Attribute Machine_Size
10658 @geindex Machine_Size
10660 This attribute is identical to the @code{Object_Size} attribute. It is
10661 provided for compatibility with the DEC Ada 83 attribute of this name.
10663 @node Attribute Mantissa,Attribute Maximum_Alignment,Attribute Machine_Size,Implementation Defined Attributes
10664 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-mantissa}@anchor{188}
10665 @section Attribute Mantissa
10668 @geindex Ada 83 attributes
10672 The @code{Mantissa} attribute is provided for compatibility with Ada 83. See
10673 the Ada 83 reference manual for an exact description of the semantics of
10676 @node Attribute Maximum_Alignment,Attribute Mechanism_Code,Attribute Mantissa,Implementation Defined Attributes
10677 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-maximum-alignment}@anchor{189}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes id2}@anchor{18a}
10678 @section Attribute Maximum_Alignment
10684 @geindex Maximum_Alignment
10686 @code{Standard'Maximum_Alignment} (@code{Standard} is the only
10687 permissible prefix) provides the maximum useful alignment value for the
10688 target. This is a static value that can be used to specify the alignment
10689 for an object, guaranteeing that it is properly aligned in all
10692 @node Attribute Mechanism_Code,Attribute Null_Parameter,Attribute Maximum_Alignment,Implementation Defined Attributes
10693 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-mechanism-code}@anchor{18b}
10694 @section Attribute Mechanism_Code
10697 @geindex Return values
10698 @geindex passing mechanism
10700 @geindex Parameters
10701 @geindex passing mechanism
10703 @geindex Mechanism_Code
10705 @code{func'Mechanism_Code} yields an integer code for the
10706 mechanism used for the result of function @code{func}, and
10707 @code{subprog'Mechanism_Code (n)} yields the mechanism
10708 used for formal parameter number @emph{n} (a static integer value, with 1
10709 meaning the first parameter) of subprogram @code{subprog}. The code returned is:
10723 @node Attribute Null_Parameter,Attribute Object_Size,Attribute Mechanism_Code,Implementation Defined Attributes
10724 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-null-parameter}@anchor{18c}
10725 @section Attribute Null_Parameter
10728 @geindex Zero address
10731 @geindex Null_Parameter
10733 A reference @code{T'Null_Parameter} denotes an imaginary object of
10734 type or subtype @code{T} allocated at machine address zero. The attribute
10735 is allowed only as the default expression of a formal parameter, or as
10736 an actual expression of a subprogram call. In either case, the
10737 subprogram must be imported.
10739 The identity of the object is represented by the address zero in the
10740 argument list, independent of the passing mechanism (explicit or
10743 This capability is needed to specify that a zero address should be
10744 passed for a record or other composite object passed by reference.
10745 There is no way of indicating this without the @code{Null_Parameter}
10748 @node Attribute Object_Size,Attribute Old,Attribute Null_Parameter,Implementation Defined Attributes
10749 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-object-size}@anchor{13f}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes id3}@anchor{18d}
10750 @section Attribute Object_Size
10754 @geindex used for objects
10756 @geindex Object_Size
10758 The size of an object is not necessarily the same as the size of the type
10759 of an object. This is because by default object sizes are increased to be
10760 a multiple of the alignment of the object. For example,
10761 @code{Natural'Size} is
10762 31, but by default objects of type @code{Natural} will have a size of 32 bits.
10763 Similarly, a record containing an integer and a character:
10772 will have a size of 40 (that is @code{Rec'Size} will be 40). The
10773 alignment will be 4, because of the
10774 integer field, and so the default size of record objects for this type
10775 will be 64 (8 bytes).
10777 If the alignment of the above record is specified to be 1, then the
10778 object size will be 40 (5 bytes). This is true by default, and also
10779 an object size of 40 can be explicitly specified in this case.
10781 A consequence of this capability is that different object sizes can be
10782 given to subtypes that would otherwise be considered in Ada to be
10783 statically matching. But it makes no sense to consider such subtypes
10784 as statically matching. Consequently, GNAT adds a rule
10785 to the static matching rules that requires object sizes to match.
10786 Consider this example:
10789 1. procedure BadAVConvert is
10790 2. type R is new Integer;
10791 3. subtype R1 is R range 1 .. 10;
10792 4. subtype R2 is R range 1 .. 10;
10793 5. for R1'Object_Size use 8;
10794 6. for R2'Object_Size use 16;
10795 7. type R1P is access all R1;
10796 8. type R2P is access all R2;
10797 9. R1PV : R1P := new R1'(4);
10800 12. R2PV := R2P (R1PV);
10802 >>> target designated subtype not compatible with
10803 type "R1" defined at line 3
10808 In the absence of lines 5 and 6,
10809 types @code{R1} and @code{R2} statically match and
10810 hence the conversion on line 12 is legal. But since lines 5 and 6
10811 cause the object sizes to differ, GNAT considers that types
10812 @code{R1} and @code{R2} are not statically matching, and line 12
10813 generates the diagnostic shown above.
10815 Similar additional checks are performed in other contexts requiring
10816 statically matching subtypes.
10818 @node Attribute Old,Attribute Passed_By_Reference,Attribute Object_Size,Implementation Defined Attributes
10819 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-old}@anchor{18e}
10820 @section Attribute Old
10825 In addition to the usage of @code{Old} defined in the Ada 2012 RM (usage
10826 within @code{Post} aspect), GNAT also permits the use of this attribute
10827 in implementation defined pragmas @code{Postcondition},
10828 @code{Contract_Cases} and @code{Test_Case}. Also usages of
10829 @code{Old} which would be illegal according to the Ada 2012 RM
10830 definition are allowed under control of
10831 implementation defined pragma @code{Unevaluated_Use_Of_Old}.
10833 @node Attribute Passed_By_Reference,Attribute Pool_Address,Attribute Old,Implementation Defined Attributes
10834 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-passed-by-reference}@anchor{18f}
10835 @section Attribute Passed_By_Reference
10838 @geindex Parameters
10839 @geindex when passed by reference
10841 @geindex Passed_By_Reference
10843 @code{typ'Passed_By_Reference} for any subtype @cite{typ} returns
10844 a value of type @code{Boolean} value that is @code{True} if the type is
10845 normally passed by reference and @code{False} if the type is normally
10846 passed by copy in calls. For scalar types, the result is always @code{False}
10847 and is static. For non-scalar types, the result is nonstatic.
10849 @node Attribute Pool_Address,Attribute Range_Length,Attribute Passed_By_Reference,Implementation Defined Attributes
10850 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-pool-address}@anchor{190}
10851 @section Attribute Pool_Address
10854 @geindex Parameters
10855 @geindex when passed by reference
10857 @geindex Pool_Address
10859 @code{X'Pool_Address} for any object @code{X} returns the address
10860 of X within its storage pool. This is the same as
10861 @code{X'Address}, except that for an unconstrained array whose
10862 bounds are allocated just before the first component,
10863 @code{X'Pool_Address} returns the address of those bounds,
10864 whereas @code{X'Address} returns the address of the first
10867 Here, we are interpreting 'storage pool' broadly to mean
10868 @code{wherever the object is allocated}, which could be a
10869 user-defined storage pool,
10870 the global heap, on the stack, or in a static memory area.
10871 For an object created by @code{new}, @code{Ptr.all'Pool_Address} is
10872 what is passed to @code{Allocate} and returned from @code{Deallocate}.
10874 @node Attribute Range_Length,Attribute Restriction_Set,Attribute Pool_Address,Implementation Defined Attributes
10875 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-range-length}@anchor{191}
10876 @section Attribute Range_Length
10879 @geindex Range_Length
10881 @code{typ'Range_Length} for any discrete type @cite{typ} yields
10882 the number of values represented by the subtype (zero for a null
10883 range). The result is static for static subtypes. @code{Range_Length}
10884 applied to the index subtype of a one dimensional array always gives the
10885 same result as @code{Length} applied to the array itself.
10887 @node Attribute Restriction_Set,Attribute Result,Attribute Range_Length,Implementation Defined Attributes
10888 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-restriction-set}@anchor{192}
10889 @section Attribute Restriction_Set
10892 @geindex Restriction_Set
10894 @geindex Restrictions
10896 This attribute allows compile time testing of restrictions that
10897 are currently in effect. It is primarily intended for specializing
10898 code in the run-time based on restrictions that are active (e.g.
10899 don't need to save fpt registers if restriction No_Floating_Point
10900 is known to be in effect), but can be used anywhere.
10902 There are two forms:
10905 System'Restriction_Set (partition_boolean_restriction_NAME)
10906 System'Restriction_Set (No_Dependence => library_unit_NAME);
10909 In the case of the first form, the only restriction names
10910 allowed are parameterless restrictions that are checked
10911 for consistency at bind time. For a complete list see the
10912 subtype @code{System.Rident.Partition_Boolean_Restrictions}.
10914 The result returned is True if the restriction is known to
10915 be in effect, and False if the restriction is known not to
10916 be in effect. An important guarantee is that the value of
10917 a Restriction_Set attribute is known to be consistent throughout
10918 all the code of a partition.
10920 This is trivially achieved if the entire partition is compiled
10921 with a consistent set of restriction pragmas. However, the
10922 compilation model does not require this. It is possible to
10923 compile one set of units with one set of pragmas, and another
10924 set of units with another set of pragmas. It is even possible
10925 to compile a spec with one set of pragmas, and then WITH the
10926 same spec with a different set of pragmas. Inconsistencies
10927 in the actual use of the restriction are checked at bind time.
10929 In order to achieve the guarantee of consistency for the
10930 Restriction_Set pragma, we consider that a use of the pragma
10931 that yields False is equivalent to a violation of the
10934 So for example if you write
10937 if System'Restriction_Set (No_Floating_Point) then
10944 And the result is False, so that the else branch is executed,
10945 you can assume that this restriction is not set for any unit
10946 in the partition. This is checked by considering this use of
10947 the restriction pragma to be a violation of the restriction
10948 No_Floating_Point. This means that no other unit can attempt
10949 to set this restriction (if some unit does attempt to set it,
10950 the binder will refuse to bind the partition).
10952 Technical note: The restriction name and the unit name are
10953 intepreted entirely syntactically, as in the corresponding
10954 Restrictions pragma, they are not analyzed semantically,
10955 so they do not have a type.
10957 @node Attribute Result,Attribute Safe_Emax,Attribute Restriction_Set,Implementation Defined Attributes
10958 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-result}@anchor{193}
10959 @section Attribute Result
10964 @code{function'Result} can only be used with in a Postcondition pragma
10965 for a function. The prefix must be the name of the corresponding function. This
10966 is used to refer to the result of the function in the postcondition expression.
10967 For a further discussion of the use of this attribute and examples of its use,
10968 see the description of pragma Postcondition.
10970 @node Attribute Safe_Emax,Attribute Safe_Large,Attribute Result,Implementation Defined Attributes
10971 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-safe-emax}@anchor{194}
10972 @section Attribute Safe_Emax
10975 @geindex Ada 83 attributes
10979 The @code{Safe_Emax} attribute is provided for compatibility with Ada 83. See
10980 the Ada 83 reference manual for an exact description of the semantics of
10983 @node Attribute Safe_Large,Attribute Safe_Small,Attribute Safe_Emax,Implementation Defined Attributes
10984 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-safe-large}@anchor{195}
10985 @section Attribute Safe_Large
10988 @geindex Ada 83 attributes
10990 @geindex Safe_Large
10992 The @code{Safe_Large} attribute is provided for compatibility with Ada 83. See
10993 the Ada 83 reference manual for an exact description of the semantics of
10996 @node Attribute Safe_Small,Attribute Scalar_Storage_Order,Attribute Safe_Large,Implementation Defined Attributes
10997 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-safe-small}@anchor{196}
10998 @section Attribute Safe_Small
11001 @geindex Ada 83 attributes
11003 @geindex Safe_Small
11005 The @code{Safe_Small} attribute is provided for compatibility with Ada 83. See
11006 the Ada 83 reference manual for an exact description of the semantics of
11009 @node Attribute Scalar_Storage_Order,Attribute Simple_Storage_Pool,Attribute Safe_Small,Implementation Defined Attributes
11010 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes id4}@anchor{197}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-scalar-storage-order}@anchor{14c}
11011 @section Attribute Scalar_Storage_Order
11014 @geindex Endianness
11016 @geindex Scalar storage order
11018 @geindex Scalar_Storage_Order
11020 For every array or record type @code{S}, the representation attribute
11021 @code{Scalar_Storage_Order} denotes the order in which storage elements
11022 that make up scalar components are ordered within S. The value given must
11023 be a static expression of type System.Bit_Order. The following is an example
11024 of the use of this feature:
11027 -- Component type definitions
11029 subtype Yr_Type is Natural range 0 .. 127;
11030 subtype Mo_Type is Natural range 1 .. 12;
11031 subtype Da_Type is Natural range 1 .. 31;
11033 -- Record declaration
11035 type Date is record
11036 Years_Since_1980 : Yr_Type;
11038 Day_Of_Month : Da_Type;
11041 -- Record representation clause
11043 for Date use record
11044 Years_Since_1980 at 0 range 0 .. 6;
11045 Month at 0 range 7 .. 10;
11046 Day_Of_Month at 0 range 11 .. 15;
11049 -- Attribute definition clauses
11051 for Date'Bit_Order use System.High_Order_First;
11052 for Date'Scalar_Storage_Order use System.High_Order_First;
11053 -- If Scalar_Storage_Order is specified, it must be consistent with
11054 -- Bit_Order, so it's best to always define the latter explicitly if
11055 -- the former is used.
11058 Other properties are as for standard representation attribute @code{Bit_Order},
11059 as defined by Ada RM 13.5.3(4). The default is @code{System.Default_Bit_Order}.
11061 For a record type @code{T}, if @code{T'Scalar_Storage_Order} is
11062 specified explicitly, it shall be equal to @code{T'Bit_Order}. Note:
11063 this means that if a @code{Scalar_Storage_Order} attribute definition
11064 clause is not confirming, then the type's @code{Bit_Order} shall be
11065 specified explicitly and set to the same value.
11067 Derived types inherit an explicitly set scalar storage order from their parent
11068 types. This may be overridden for the derived type by giving an explicit scalar
11069 storage order for the derived type. For a record extension, the derived type
11070 must have the same scalar storage order as the parent type.
11072 A component of a record type that is itself a record or an array and that does
11073 not start and end on a byte boundary must have have the same scalar storage
11074 order as the record type. A component of a bit-packed array type that is itself
11075 a record or an array must have the same scalar storage order as the array type.
11077 No component of a type that has an explicit @code{Scalar_Storage_Order}
11078 attribute definition may be aliased.
11080 A confirming @code{Scalar_Storage_Order} attribute definition clause (i.e.
11081 with a value equal to @code{System.Default_Bit_Order}) has no effect.
11083 If the opposite storage order is specified, then whenever the value of
11084 a scalar component of an object of type @code{S} is read, the storage
11085 elements of the enclosing machine scalar are first reversed (before
11086 retrieving the component value, possibly applying some shift and mask
11087 operatings on the enclosing machine scalar), and the opposite operation
11088 is done for writes.
11090 In that case, the restrictions set forth in 13.5.1(10.3/2) for scalar components
11091 are relaxed. Instead, the following rules apply:
11097 the underlying storage elements are those at positions
11098 @code{(position + first_bit / storage_element_size) .. (position + (last_bit + storage_element_size - 1) / storage_element_size)}
11101 the sequence of underlying storage elements shall have
11102 a size no greater than the largest machine scalar
11105 the enclosing machine scalar is defined as the smallest machine
11106 scalar starting at a position no greater than
11107 @code{position + first_bit / storage_element_size} and covering
11108 storage elements at least up to @code{position + (last_bit + storage_element_size - 1) / storage_element_size`}
11111 the position of the component is interpreted relative to that machine
11115 If no scalar storage order is specified for a type (either directly, or by
11116 inheritance in the case of a derived type), then the default is normally
11117 the native ordering of the target, but this default can be overridden using
11118 pragma @code{Default_Scalar_Storage_Order}.
11120 Note that if a component of @code{T} is itself of a record or array type,
11121 the specfied @code{Scalar_Storage_Order} does @emph{not} apply to that nested type:
11122 an explicit attribute definition clause must be provided for the component
11123 type as well if desired.
11125 Note that the scalar storage order only affects the in-memory data
11126 representation. It has no effect on the representation used by stream
11129 @node Attribute Simple_Storage_Pool,Attribute Small,Attribute Scalar_Storage_Order,Implementation Defined Attributes
11130 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-simple-storage-pool}@anchor{e3}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes id5}@anchor{198}
11131 @section Attribute Simple_Storage_Pool
11134 @geindex Storage pool
11137 @geindex Simple storage pool
11139 @geindex Simple_Storage_Pool
11141 For every nonformal, nonderived access-to-object type @code{Acc}, the
11142 representation attribute @code{Simple_Storage_Pool} may be specified
11143 via an attribute_definition_clause (or by specifying the equivalent aspect):
11146 My_Pool : My_Simple_Storage_Pool_Type;
11148 type Acc is access My_Data_Type;
11150 for Acc'Simple_Storage_Pool use My_Pool;
11153 The name given in an attribute_definition_clause for the
11154 @code{Simple_Storage_Pool} attribute shall denote a variable of
11155 a 'simple storage pool type' (see pragma @cite{Simple_Storage_Pool_Type}).
11157 The use of this attribute is only allowed for a prefix denoting a type
11158 for which it has been specified. The type of the attribute is the type
11159 of the variable specified as the simple storage pool of the access type,
11160 and the attribute denotes that variable.
11162 It is illegal to specify both @code{Storage_Pool} and @code{Simple_Storage_Pool}
11163 for the same access type.
11165 If the @code{Simple_Storage_Pool} attribute has been specified for an access
11166 type, then applying the @code{Storage_Pool} attribute to the type is flagged
11167 with a warning and its evaluation raises the exception @code{Program_Error}.
11169 If the Simple_Storage_Pool attribute has been specified for an access
11170 type @code{S}, then the evaluation of the attribute @code{S'Storage_Size}
11171 returns the result of calling @code{Storage_Size (S'Simple_Storage_Pool)},
11172 which is intended to indicate the number of storage elements reserved for
11173 the simple storage pool. If the Storage_Size function has not been defined
11174 for the simple storage pool type, then this attribute returns zero.
11176 If an access type @code{S} has a specified simple storage pool of type
11177 @code{SSP}, then the evaluation of an allocator for that access type calls
11178 the primitive @code{Allocate} procedure for type @code{SSP}, passing
11179 @code{S'Simple_Storage_Pool} as the pool parameter. The detailed
11180 semantics of such allocators is the same as those defined for allocators
11181 in section 13.11 of the @cite{Ada Reference Manual}, with the term
11182 @emph{simple storage pool} substituted for @emph{storage pool}.
11184 If an access type @code{S} has a specified simple storage pool of type
11185 @code{SSP}, then a call to an instance of the @code{Ada.Unchecked_Deallocation}
11186 for that access type invokes the primitive @code{Deallocate} procedure
11187 for type @code{SSP}, passing @code{S'Simple_Storage_Pool} as the pool
11188 parameter. The detailed semantics of such unchecked deallocations is the same
11189 as defined in section 13.11.2 of the Ada Reference Manual, except that the
11190 term @emph{simple storage pool} is substituted for @emph{storage pool}.
11192 @node Attribute Small,Attribute Storage_Unit,Attribute Simple_Storage_Pool,Implementation Defined Attributes
11193 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-small}@anchor{199}
11194 @section Attribute Small
11197 @geindex Ada 83 attributes
11201 The @code{Small} attribute is defined in Ada 95 (and Ada 2005) only for
11203 GNAT also allows this attribute to be applied to floating-point types
11204 for compatibility with Ada 83. See
11205 the Ada 83 reference manual for an exact description of the semantics of
11206 this attribute when applied to floating-point types.
11208 @node Attribute Storage_Unit,Attribute Stub_Type,Attribute Small,Implementation Defined Attributes
11209 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-storage-unit}@anchor{19a}
11210 @section Attribute Storage_Unit
11213 @geindex Storage_Unit
11215 @code{Standard'Storage_Unit} (@code{Standard} is the only permissible
11216 prefix) provides the same value as @code{System.Storage_Unit}.
11218 @node Attribute Stub_Type,Attribute System_Allocator_Alignment,Attribute Storage_Unit,Implementation Defined Attributes
11219 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-stub-type}@anchor{19b}
11220 @section Attribute Stub_Type
11225 The GNAT implementation of remote access-to-classwide types is
11226 organized as described in AARM section E.4 (20.t): a value of an RACW type
11227 (designating a remote object) is represented as a normal access
11228 value, pointing to a "stub" object which in turn contains the
11229 necessary information to contact the designated remote object. A
11230 call on any dispatching operation of such a stub object does the
11231 remote call, if necessary, using the information in the stub object
11232 to locate the target partition, etc.
11234 For a prefix @code{T} that denotes a remote access-to-classwide type,
11235 @code{T'Stub_Type} denotes the type of the corresponding stub objects.
11237 By construction, the layout of @code{T'Stub_Type} is identical to that of
11238 type @code{RACW_Stub_Type} declared in the internal implementation-defined
11239 unit @code{System.Partition_Interface}. Use of this attribute will create
11240 an implicit dependency on this unit.
11242 @node Attribute System_Allocator_Alignment,Attribute Target_Name,Attribute Stub_Type,Implementation Defined Attributes
11243 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-system-allocator-alignment}@anchor{19c}
11244 @section Attribute System_Allocator_Alignment
11250 @geindex System_Allocator_Alignment
11252 @code{Standard'System_Allocator_Alignment} (@code{Standard} is the only
11253 permissible prefix) provides the observable guaranted to be honored by
11254 the system allocator (malloc). This is a static value that can be used
11255 in user storage pools based on malloc either to reject allocation
11256 with alignment too large or to enable a realignment circuitry if the
11257 alignment request is larger than this value.
11259 @node Attribute Target_Name,Attribute To_Address,Attribute System_Allocator_Alignment,Implementation Defined Attributes
11260 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-target-name}@anchor{19d}
11261 @section Attribute Target_Name
11264 @geindex Target_Name
11266 @code{Standard'Target_Name} (@code{Standard} is the only permissible
11267 prefix) provides a static string value that identifies the target
11268 for the current compilation. For GCC implementations, this is the
11269 standard gcc target name without the terminating slash (for
11270 example, GNAT 5.0 on windows yields "i586-pc-mingw32msv").
11272 @node Attribute To_Address,Attribute To_Any,Attribute Target_Name,Implementation Defined Attributes
11273 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-to-address}@anchor{19e}
11274 @section Attribute To_Address
11277 @geindex To_Address
11279 The @code{System'To_Address}
11280 (@code{System} is the only permissible prefix)
11281 denotes a function identical to
11282 @code{System.Storage_Elements.To_Address} except that
11283 it is a static attribute. This means that if its argument is
11284 a static expression, then the result of the attribute is a
11285 static expression. This means that such an expression can be
11286 used in contexts (e.g., preelaborable packages) which require a
11287 static expression and where the function call could not be used
11288 (since the function call is always nonstatic, even if its
11289 argument is static). The argument must be in the range
11290 -(2**(m-1)) .. 2**m-1, where m is the memory size
11291 (typically 32 or 64). Negative values are intepreted in a
11292 modular manner (e.g., -1 means the same as 16#FFFF_FFFF# on
11293 a 32 bits machine).
11295 @node Attribute To_Any,Attribute Type_Class,Attribute To_Address,Implementation Defined Attributes
11296 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-to-any}@anchor{19f}
11297 @section Attribute To_Any
11302 This internal attribute is used for the generation of remote subprogram
11303 stubs in the context of the Distributed Systems Annex.
11305 @node Attribute Type_Class,Attribute Type_Key,Attribute To_Any,Implementation Defined Attributes
11306 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-type-class}@anchor{1a0}
11307 @section Attribute Type_Class
11310 @geindex Type_Class
11312 @code{typ'Type_Class} for any type or subtype @cite{typ} yields
11313 the value of the type class for the full type of @cite{typ}. If
11314 @cite{typ} is a generic formal type, the value is the value for the
11315 corresponding actual subtype. The value of this attribute is of type
11316 @code{System.Aux_DEC.Type_Class}, which has the following definition:
11320 (Type_Class_Enumeration,
11321 Type_Class_Integer,
11322 Type_Class_Fixed_Point,
11323 Type_Class_Floating_Point,
11328 Type_Class_Address);
11331 Protected types yield the value @code{Type_Class_Task}, which thus
11332 applies to all concurrent types. This attribute is designed to
11333 be compatible with the DEC Ada 83 attribute of the same name.
11335 @node Attribute Type_Key,Attribute TypeCode,Attribute Type_Class,Implementation Defined Attributes
11336 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-type-key}@anchor{1a1}
11337 @section Attribute Type_Key
11342 The @code{Type_Key} attribute is applicable to a type or subtype and
11343 yields a value of type Standard.String containing encoded information
11344 about the type or subtype. This provides improved compatibility with
11345 other implementations that support this attribute.
11347 @node Attribute TypeCode,Attribute Unconstrained_Array,Attribute Type_Key,Implementation Defined Attributes
11348 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-typecode}@anchor{1a2}
11349 @section Attribute TypeCode
11354 This internal attribute is used for the generation of remote subprogram
11355 stubs in the context of the Distributed Systems Annex.
11357 @node Attribute Unconstrained_Array,Attribute Universal_Literal_String,Attribute TypeCode,Implementation Defined Attributes
11358 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-unconstrained-array}@anchor{1a3}
11359 @section Attribute Unconstrained_Array
11362 @geindex Unconstrained_Array
11364 The @code{Unconstrained_Array} attribute can be used with a prefix that
11365 denotes any type or subtype. It is a static attribute that yields
11366 @code{True} if the prefix designates an unconstrained array,
11367 and @code{False} otherwise. In a generic instance, the result is
11368 still static, and yields the result of applying this test to the
11371 @node Attribute Universal_Literal_String,Attribute Unrestricted_Access,Attribute Unconstrained_Array,Implementation Defined Attributes
11372 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-universal-literal-string}@anchor{1a4}
11373 @section Attribute Universal_Literal_String
11376 @geindex Named numbers
11377 @geindex representation of
11379 @geindex Universal_Literal_String
11381 The prefix of @code{Universal_Literal_String} must be a named
11382 number. The static result is the string consisting of the characters of
11383 the number as defined in the original source. This allows the user
11384 program to access the actual text of named numbers without intermediate
11385 conversions and without the need to enclose the strings in quotes (which
11386 would preclude their use as numbers).
11388 For example, the following program prints the first 50 digits of pi:
11391 with Text_IO; use Text_IO;
11395 Put (Ada.Numerics.Pi'Universal_Literal_String);
11399 @node Attribute Unrestricted_Access,Attribute Update,Attribute Universal_Literal_String,Implementation Defined Attributes
11400 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-unrestricted-access}@anchor{1a5}
11401 @section Attribute Unrestricted_Access
11405 @geindex unrestricted
11407 @geindex Unrestricted_Access
11409 The @code{Unrestricted_Access} attribute is similar to @code{Access}
11410 except that all accessibility and aliased view checks are omitted. This
11411 is a user-beware attribute.
11413 For objects, it is similar to @code{Address}, for which it is a
11414 desirable replacement where the value desired is an access type.
11415 In other words, its effect is similar to first applying the
11416 @code{Address} attribute and then doing an unchecked conversion to a
11417 desired access type.
11419 For subprograms, @code{P'Unrestricted_Access} may be used where
11420 @code{P'Access} would be illegal, to construct a value of a
11421 less-nested named access type that designates a more-nested
11422 subprogram. This value may be used in indirect calls, so long as the
11423 more-nested subprogram still exists; once the subprogram containing it
11424 has returned, such calls are erroneous. For example:
11429 type Less_Nested is not null access procedure;
11430 Global : Less_Nested;
11438 Local_Var : Integer;
11440 procedure More_Nested is
11445 Global := More_Nested'Unrestricted_Access;
11452 When P1 is called from P2, the call via Global is OK, but if P1 were
11453 called after P2 returns, it would be an erroneous use of a dangling
11456 For objects, it is possible to use @code{Unrestricted_Access} for any
11457 type. However, if the result is of an access-to-unconstrained array
11458 subtype, then the resulting pointer has the same scope as the context
11459 of the attribute, and must not be returned to some enclosing scope.
11460 For instance, if a function uses @code{Unrestricted_Access} to create
11461 an access-to-unconstrained-array and returns that value to the caller,
11462 the result will involve dangling pointers. In addition, it is only
11463 valid to create pointers to unconstrained arrays using this attribute
11464 if the pointer has the normal default 'fat' representation where a
11465 pointer has two components, one points to the array and one points to
11466 the bounds. If a size clause is used to force 'thin' representation
11467 for a pointer to unconstrained where there is only space for a single
11468 pointer, then the resulting pointer is not usable.
11470 In the simple case where a direct use of Unrestricted_Access attempts
11471 to make a thin pointer for a non-aliased object, the compiler will
11472 reject the use as illegal, as shown in the following example:
11475 with System; use System;
11476 procedure SliceUA2 is
11477 type A is access all String;
11478 for A'Size use Standard'Address_Size;
11480 procedure P (Arg : A) is
11485 X : String := "hello world!";
11486 X2 : aliased String := "hello world!";
11488 AV : A := X'Unrestricted_Access; -- ERROR
11490 >>> illegal use of Unrestricted_Access attribute
11491 >>> attempt to generate thin pointer to unaliased object
11494 P (X'Unrestricted_Access); -- ERROR
11496 >>> illegal use of Unrestricted_Access attribute
11497 >>> attempt to generate thin pointer to unaliased object
11499 P (X(7 .. 12)'Unrestricted_Access); -- ERROR
11501 >>> illegal use of Unrestricted_Access attribute
11502 >>> attempt to generate thin pointer to unaliased object
11504 P (X2'Unrestricted_Access); -- OK
11508 but other cases cannot be detected by the compiler, and are
11509 considered to be erroneous. Consider the following example:
11512 with System; use System;
11513 with System; use System;
11514 procedure SliceUA is
11515 type AF is access all String;
11517 type A is access all String;
11518 for A'Size use Standard'Address_Size;
11520 procedure P (Arg : A) is
11522 if Arg'Length /= 6 then
11523 raise Program_Error;
11527 X : String := "hello world!";
11528 Y : AF := X (7 .. 12)'Unrestricted_Access;
11535 A normal unconstrained array value
11536 or a constrained array object marked as aliased has the bounds in memory
11537 just before the array, so a thin pointer can retrieve both the data and
11538 the bounds. But in this case, the non-aliased object @code{X} does not have the
11539 bounds before the string. If the size clause for type @code{A}
11540 were not present, then the pointer
11541 would be a fat pointer, where one component is a pointer to the bounds,
11542 and all would be well. But with the size clause present, the conversion from
11543 fat pointer to thin pointer in the call loses the bounds, and so this
11544 is erroneous, and the program likely raises a @code{Program_Error} exception.
11546 In general, it is advisable to completely
11547 avoid mixing the use of thin pointers and the use of
11548 @code{Unrestricted_Access} where the designated type is an
11549 unconstrained array. The use of thin pointers should be restricted to
11550 cases of porting legacy code that implicitly assumes the size of pointers,
11551 and such code should not in any case be using this attribute.
11553 Another erroneous situation arises if the attribute is
11554 applied to a constant. The resulting pointer can be used to access the
11555 constant, but the effect of trying to modify a constant in this manner
11556 is not well-defined. Consider this example:
11559 P : constant Integer := 4;
11560 type R is access all Integer;
11561 RV : R := P'Unrestricted_Access;
11566 Here we attempt to modify the constant P from 4 to 3, but the compiler may
11567 or may not notice this attempt, and subsequent references to P may yield
11568 either the value 3 or the value 4 or the assignment may blow up if the
11569 compiler decides to put P in read-only memory. One particular case where
11570 @code{Unrestricted_Access} can be used in this way is to modify the
11571 value of an @code{in} parameter:
11574 procedure K (S : in String) is
11575 type R is access all Character;
11576 RV : R := S (3)'Unrestricted_Access;
11582 In general this is a risky approach. It may appear to "work" but such uses of
11583 @code{Unrestricted_Access} are potentially non-portable, even from one version
11584 of GNAT to another, so are best avoided if possible.
11586 @node Attribute Update,Attribute Valid_Scalars,Attribute Unrestricted_Access,Implementation Defined Attributes
11587 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-update}@anchor{1a6}
11588 @section Attribute Update
11593 The @code{Update} attribute creates a copy of an array or record value
11594 with one or more modified components. The syntax is:
11597 PREFIX'Update ( RECORD_COMPONENT_ASSOCIATION_LIST )
11598 PREFIX'Update ( ARRAY_COMPONENT_ASSOCIATION @{, ARRAY_COMPONENT_ASSOCIATION @} )
11599 PREFIX'Update ( MULTIDIMENSIONAL_ARRAY_COMPONENT_ASSOCIATION
11600 @{, MULTIDIMENSIONAL_ARRAY_COMPONENT_ASSOCIATION @} )
11602 MULTIDIMENSIONAL_ARRAY_COMPONENT_ASSOCIATION ::= INDEX_EXPRESSION_LIST_LIST => EXPRESSION
11603 INDEX_EXPRESSION_LIST_LIST ::= INDEX_EXPRESSION_LIST @{| INDEX_EXPRESSION_LIST @}
11604 INDEX_EXPRESSION_LIST ::= ( EXPRESSION @{, EXPRESSION @} )
11607 where @code{PREFIX} is the name of an array or record object, the
11608 association list in parentheses does not contain an @code{others}
11609 choice and the box symbol @code{<>} may not appear in any
11610 expression. The effect is to yield a copy of the array or record value
11611 which is unchanged apart from the components mentioned in the
11612 association list, which are changed to the indicated value. The
11613 original value of the array or record value is not affected. For
11617 type Arr is Array (1 .. 5) of Integer;
11619 Avar1 : Arr := (1,2,3,4,5);
11620 Avar2 : Arr := Avar1'Update (2 => 10, 3 .. 4 => 20);
11623 yields a value for @code{Avar2} of 1,10,20,20,5 with @code{Avar1}
11624 begin unmodified. Similarly:
11627 type Rec is A, B, C : Integer;
11629 Rvar1 : Rec := (A => 1, B => 2, C => 3);
11630 Rvar2 : Rec := Rvar1'Update (B => 20);
11633 yields a value for @code{Rvar2} of (A => 1, B => 20, C => 3),
11634 with @code{Rvar1} being unmodifed.
11635 Note that the value of the attribute reference is computed
11636 completely before it is used. This means that if you write:
11639 Avar1 := Avar1'Update (1 => 10, 2 => Function_Call);
11642 then the value of @code{Avar1} is not modified if @code{Function_Call}
11643 raises an exception, unlike the effect of a series of direct assignments
11644 to elements of @code{Avar1}. In general this requires that
11645 two extra complete copies of the object are required, which should be
11646 kept in mind when considering efficiency.
11648 The @code{Update} attribute cannot be applied to prefixes of a limited
11649 type, and cannot reference discriminants in the case of a record type.
11650 The accessibility level of an Update attribute result object is defined
11651 as for an aggregate.
11653 In the record case, no component can be mentioned more than once. In
11654 the array case, two overlapping ranges can appear in the association list,
11655 in which case the modifications are processed left to right.
11657 Multi-dimensional arrays can be modified, as shown by this example:
11660 A : array (1 .. 10, 1 .. 10) of Integer;
11662 A := A'Update ((1, 2) => 20, (3, 4) => 30);
11665 which changes element (1,2) to 20 and (3,4) to 30.
11667 @node Attribute Valid_Scalars,Attribute VADS_Size,Attribute Update,Implementation Defined Attributes
11668 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-valid-scalars}@anchor{1a7}
11669 @section Attribute Valid_Scalars
11672 @geindex Valid_Scalars
11674 The @code{'Valid_Scalars} attribute is intended to make it easier to check the
11675 validity of scalar subcomponents of composite objects. The attribute is defined
11676 for any prefix @code{P} which denotes an object. Prefix @code{P} can be any type
11677 except for tagged private or @code{Unchecked_Union} types. The value of the
11678 attribute is of type @code{Boolean}.
11680 @code{P'Valid_Scalars} yields @code{True} if and only if the evaluation of
11681 @code{C'Valid} yields @code{True} for every scalar subcomponent @code{C} of @code{P}, or if
11682 @code{P} has no scalar subcomponents. Attribute @code{'Valid_Scalars} is equivalent
11683 to attribute @code{'Valid} for scalar types.
11685 It is not specified in what order the subcomponents are checked, nor whether
11686 any more are checked after any one of them is determined to be invalid. If the
11687 prefix @code{P} is of a class-wide type @code{T'Class} (where @code{T} is the associated
11688 specific type), or if the prefix @code{P} is of a specific tagged type @code{T}, then
11689 only the subcomponents of @code{T} are checked; in other words, components of
11690 extensions of @code{T} are not checked even if @code{T'Class (P)'Tag /= T'Tag}.
11692 The compiler will issue a warning if it can be determined at compile time that
11693 the prefix of the attribute has no scalar subcomponents.
11695 Note: @code{Valid_Scalars} can generate a lot of code, especially in the case of
11696 a large variant record. If the attribute is called in many places in the same
11697 program applied to objects of the same type, it can reduce program size to
11698 write a function with a single use of the attribute, and then call that
11699 function from multiple places.
11701 @node Attribute VADS_Size,Attribute Value_Size,Attribute Valid_Scalars,Implementation Defined Attributes
11702 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-vads-size}@anchor{1a8}
11703 @section Attribute VADS_Size
11707 @geindex VADS compatibility
11711 The @code{'VADS_Size} attribute is intended to make it easier to port
11712 legacy code which relies on the semantics of @code{'Size} as implemented
11713 by the VADS Ada 83 compiler. GNAT makes a best effort at duplicating the
11714 same semantic interpretation. In particular, @code{'VADS_Size} applied
11715 to a predefined or other primitive type with no Size clause yields the
11716 Object_Size (for example, @code{Natural'Size} is 32 rather than 31 on
11717 typical machines). In addition @code{'VADS_Size} applied to an object
11718 gives the result that would be obtained by applying the attribute to
11719 the corresponding type.
11721 @node Attribute Value_Size,Attribute Wchar_T_Size,Attribute VADS_Size,Implementation Defined Attributes
11722 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes id6}@anchor{1a9}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-value-size}@anchor{15b}
11723 @section Attribute Value_Size
11727 @geindex setting for not-first subtype
11729 @geindex Value_Size
11731 @code{type'Value_Size} is the number of bits required to represent
11732 a value of the given subtype. It is the same as @code{type'Size},
11733 but, unlike @code{Size}, may be set for non-first subtypes.
11735 @node Attribute Wchar_T_Size,Attribute Word_Size,Attribute Value_Size,Implementation Defined Attributes
11736 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-wchar-t-size}@anchor{1aa}
11737 @section Attribute Wchar_T_Size
11740 @geindex Wchar_T_Size
11742 @code{Standard'Wchar_T_Size} (@code{Standard} is the only permissible
11743 prefix) provides the size in bits of the C @code{wchar_t} type
11744 primarily for constructing the definition of this type in
11745 package @code{Interfaces.C}. The result is a static constant.
11747 @node Attribute Word_Size,,Attribute Wchar_T_Size,Implementation Defined Attributes
11748 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_attributes attribute-word-size}@anchor{1ab}
11749 @section Attribute Word_Size
11754 @code{Standard'Word_Size} (@code{Standard} is the only permissible
11755 prefix) provides the value @code{System.Word_Size}. The result is
11758 @node Standard and Implementation Defined Restrictions,Implementation Advice,Implementation Defined Attributes,Top
11759 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions standard-and-implementation-defined-restrictions}@anchor{9}@anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions doc}@anchor{1ac}@anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions id1}@anchor{1ad}
11760 @chapter Standard and Implementation Defined Restrictions
11763 All Ada Reference Manual-defined Restriction identifiers are implemented:
11769 language-defined restrictions (see 13.12.1)
11772 tasking restrictions (see D.7)
11775 high integrity restrictions (see H.4)
11778 GNAT implements additional restriction identifiers. All restrictions, whether
11779 language defined or GNAT-specific, are listed in the following.
11782 * Partition-Wide Restrictions::
11783 * Program Unit Level Restrictions::
11787 @node Partition-Wide Restrictions,Program Unit Level Restrictions,,Standard and Implementation Defined Restrictions
11788 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions partition-wide-restrictions}@anchor{1ae}@anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions id2}@anchor{1af}
11789 @section Partition-Wide Restrictions
11792 There are two separate lists of restriction identifiers. The first
11793 set requires consistency throughout a partition (in other words, if the
11794 restriction identifier is used for any compilation unit in the partition,
11795 then all compilation units in the partition must obey the restriction).
11798 * Immediate_Reclamation::
11799 * Max_Asynchronous_Select_Nesting::
11800 * Max_Entry_Queue_Length::
11801 * Max_Protected_Entries::
11802 * Max_Select_Alternatives::
11803 * Max_Storage_At_Blocking::
11804 * Max_Task_Entries::
11806 * No_Abort_Statements::
11807 * No_Access_Parameter_Allocators::
11808 * No_Access_Subprograms::
11810 * No_Anonymous_Allocators::
11811 * No_Asynchronous_Control::
11813 * No_Coextensions::
11814 * No_Default_Initialization::
11817 * No_Direct_Boolean_Operators::
11819 * No_Dispatching_Calls::
11820 * No_Dynamic_Attachment::
11821 * No_Dynamic_Priorities::
11822 * No_Entry_Calls_In_Elaboration_Code::
11823 * No_Enumeration_Maps::
11824 * No_Exception_Handlers::
11825 * No_Exception_Propagation::
11826 * No_Exception_Registration::
11828 * No_Finalization::
11830 * No_Floating_Point::
11831 * No_Implicit_Conditionals::
11832 * No_Implicit_Dynamic_Code::
11833 * No_Implicit_Heap_Allocations::
11834 * No_Implicit_Protected_Object_Allocations::
11835 * No_Implicit_Task_Allocations::
11836 * No_Initialize_Scalars::
11838 * No_Local_Allocators::
11839 * No_Local_Protected_Objects::
11840 * No_Local_Timing_Events::
11841 * No_Long_Long_Integers::
11842 * No_Multiple_Elaboration::
11843 * No_Nested_Finalization::
11844 * No_Protected_Type_Allocators::
11845 * No_Protected_Types::
11848 * No_Relative_Delay::
11849 * No_Requeue_Statements::
11850 * No_Secondary_Stack::
11851 * No_Select_Statements::
11852 * No_Specific_Termination_Handlers::
11853 * No_Specification_of_Aspect::
11854 * No_Standard_Allocators_After_Elaboration::
11855 * No_Standard_Storage_Pools::
11856 * No_Stream_Optimizations::
11858 * No_Task_Allocators::
11859 * No_Task_At_Interrupt_Priority::
11860 * No_Task_Attributes_Package::
11861 * No_Task_Hierarchy::
11862 * No_Task_Termination::
11864 * No_Terminate_Alternatives::
11865 * No_Unchecked_Access::
11866 * No_Unchecked_Conversion::
11867 * No_Unchecked_Deallocation::
11868 * No_Use_Of_Entity::
11870 * Simple_Barriers::
11871 * Static_Priorities::
11872 * Static_Storage_Size::
11876 @node Immediate_Reclamation,Max_Asynchronous_Select_Nesting,,Partition-Wide Restrictions
11877 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions immediate-reclamation}@anchor{1b0}
11878 @subsection Immediate_Reclamation
11881 @geindex Immediate_Reclamation
11883 [RM H.4] This restriction ensures that, except for storage occupied by
11884 objects created by allocators and not deallocated via unchecked
11885 deallocation, any storage reserved at run time for an object is
11886 immediately reclaimed when the object no longer exists.
11888 @node Max_Asynchronous_Select_Nesting,Max_Entry_Queue_Length,Immediate_Reclamation,Partition-Wide Restrictions
11889 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions max-asynchronous-select-nesting}@anchor{1b1}
11890 @subsection Max_Asynchronous_Select_Nesting
11893 @geindex Max_Asynchronous_Select_Nesting
11895 [RM D.7] Specifies the maximum dynamic nesting level of asynchronous
11896 selects. Violations of this restriction with a value of zero are
11897 detected at compile time. Violations of this restriction with values
11898 other than zero cause Storage_Error to be raised.
11900 @node Max_Entry_Queue_Length,Max_Protected_Entries,Max_Asynchronous_Select_Nesting,Partition-Wide Restrictions
11901 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions max-entry-queue-length}@anchor{1b2}
11902 @subsection Max_Entry_Queue_Length
11905 @geindex Max_Entry_Queue_Length
11907 [RM D.7] This restriction is a declaration that any protected entry compiled in
11908 the scope of the restriction has at most the specified number of
11909 tasks waiting on the entry at any one time, and so no queue is required.
11910 Note that this restriction is checked at run time. Violation of this
11911 restriction results in the raising of Program_Error exception at the point of
11914 @geindex Max_Entry_Queue_Depth
11916 The restriction @code{Max_Entry_Queue_Depth} is recognized as a
11917 synonym for @code{Max_Entry_Queue_Length}. This is retained for historical
11918 compatibility purposes (and a warning will be generated for its use if
11919 warnings on obsolescent features are activated).
11921 @node Max_Protected_Entries,Max_Select_Alternatives,Max_Entry_Queue_Length,Partition-Wide Restrictions
11922 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions max-protected-entries}@anchor{1b3}
11923 @subsection Max_Protected_Entries
11926 @geindex Max_Protected_Entries
11928 [RM D.7] Specifies the maximum number of entries per protected type. The
11929 bounds of every entry family of a protected unit shall be static, or shall be
11930 defined by a discriminant of a subtype whose corresponding bound is static.
11932 @node Max_Select_Alternatives,Max_Storage_At_Blocking,Max_Protected_Entries,Partition-Wide Restrictions
11933 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions max-select-alternatives}@anchor{1b4}
11934 @subsection Max_Select_Alternatives
11937 @geindex Max_Select_Alternatives
11939 [RM D.7] Specifies the maximum number of alternatives in a selective accept.
11941 @node Max_Storage_At_Blocking,Max_Task_Entries,Max_Select_Alternatives,Partition-Wide Restrictions
11942 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions max-storage-at-blocking}@anchor{1b5}
11943 @subsection Max_Storage_At_Blocking
11946 @geindex Max_Storage_At_Blocking
11948 [RM D.7] Specifies the maximum portion (in storage elements) of a task's
11949 Storage_Size that can be retained by a blocked task. A violation of this
11950 restriction causes Storage_Error to be raised.
11952 @node Max_Task_Entries,Max_Tasks,Max_Storage_At_Blocking,Partition-Wide Restrictions
11953 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions max-task-entries}@anchor{1b6}
11954 @subsection Max_Task_Entries
11957 @geindex Max_Task_Entries
11959 [RM D.7] Specifies the maximum number of entries
11960 per task. The bounds of every entry family
11961 of a task unit shall be static, or shall be
11962 defined by a discriminant of a subtype whose
11963 corresponding bound is static.
11965 @node Max_Tasks,No_Abort_Statements,Max_Task_Entries,Partition-Wide Restrictions
11966 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions max-tasks}@anchor{1b7}
11967 @subsection Max_Tasks
11972 [RM D.7] Specifies the maximum number of task that may be created, not
11973 counting the creation of the environment task. Violations of this
11974 restriction with a value of zero are detected at compile
11975 time. Violations of this restriction with values other than zero cause
11976 Storage_Error to be raised.
11978 @node No_Abort_Statements,No_Access_Parameter_Allocators,Max_Tasks,Partition-Wide Restrictions
11979 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-abort-statements}@anchor{1b8}
11980 @subsection No_Abort_Statements
11983 @geindex No_Abort_Statements
11985 [RM D.7] There are no abort_statements, and there are
11986 no calls to Task_Identification.Abort_Task.
11988 @node No_Access_Parameter_Allocators,No_Access_Subprograms,No_Abort_Statements,Partition-Wide Restrictions
11989 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-access-parameter-allocators}@anchor{1b9}
11990 @subsection No_Access_Parameter_Allocators
11993 @geindex No_Access_Parameter_Allocators
11995 [RM H.4] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no
11996 occurrences of an allocator as the actual parameter to an access
11999 @node No_Access_Subprograms,No_Allocators,No_Access_Parameter_Allocators,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12000 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-access-subprograms}@anchor{1ba}
12001 @subsection No_Access_Subprograms
12004 @geindex No_Access_Subprograms
12006 [RM H.4] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no
12007 declarations of access-to-subprogram types.
12009 @node No_Allocators,No_Anonymous_Allocators,No_Access_Subprograms,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12010 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-allocators}@anchor{1bb}
12011 @subsection No_Allocators
12014 @geindex No_Allocators
12016 [RM H.4] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no
12017 occurrences of an allocator.
12019 @node No_Anonymous_Allocators,No_Asynchronous_Control,No_Allocators,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12020 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-anonymous-allocators}@anchor{1bc}
12021 @subsection No_Anonymous_Allocators
12024 @geindex No_Anonymous_Allocators
12026 [RM H.4] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no
12027 occurrences of an allocator of anonymous access type.
12029 @node No_Asynchronous_Control,No_Calendar,No_Anonymous_Allocators,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12030 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-asynchronous-control}@anchor{1bd}
12031 @subsection No_Asynchronous_Control
12034 @geindex No_Asynchronous_Control
12036 [RM J.13] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no semantic
12037 dependences on the predefined package Asynchronous_Task_Control.
12039 @node No_Calendar,No_Coextensions,No_Asynchronous_Control,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12040 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-calendar}@anchor{1be}
12041 @subsection No_Calendar
12044 @geindex No_Calendar
12046 [GNAT] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no semantic
12047 dependences on package Calendar.
12049 @node No_Coextensions,No_Default_Initialization,No_Calendar,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12050 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-coextensions}@anchor{1bf}
12051 @subsection No_Coextensions
12054 @geindex No_Coextensions
12056 [RM H.4] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no
12057 coextensions. See 3.10.2.
12059 @node No_Default_Initialization,No_Delay,No_Coextensions,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12060 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-default-initialization}@anchor{1c0}
12061 @subsection No_Default_Initialization
12064 @geindex No_Default_Initialization
12066 [GNAT] This restriction prohibits any instance of default initialization
12067 of variables. The binder implements a consistency rule which prevents
12068 any unit compiled without the restriction from with'ing a unit with the
12069 restriction (this allows the generation of initialization procedures to
12070 be skipped, since you can be sure that no call is ever generated to an
12071 initialization procedure in a unit with the restriction active). If used
12072 in conjunction with Initialize_Scalars or Normalize_Scalars, the effect
12073 is to prohibit all cases of variables declared without a specific
12074 initializer (including the case of OUT scalar parameters).
12076 @node No_Delay,No_Dependence,No_Default_Initialization,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12077 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-delay}@anchor{1c1}
12078 @subsection No_Delay
12083 [RM H.4] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no
12084 delay statements and no semantic dependences on package Calendar.
12086 @node No_Dependence,No_Direct_Boolean_Operators,No_Delay,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12087 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-dependence}@anchor{1c2}
12088 @subsection No_Dependence
12091 @geindex No_Dependence
12093 [RM 13.12.1] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no
12094 dependences on a library unit.
12096 @node No_Direct_Boolean_Operators,No_Dispatch,No_Dependence,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12097 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-direct-boolean-operators}@anchor{1c3}
12098 @subsection No_Direct_Boolean_Operators
12101 @geindex No_Direct_Boolean_Operators
12103 [GNAT] This restriction ensures that no logical operators (and/or/xor)
12104 are used on operands of type Boolean (or any type derived from Boolean).
12105 This is intended for use in safety critical programs where the certification
12106 protocol requires the use of short-circuit (and then, or else) forms for all
12107 composite boolean operations.
12109 @node No_Dispatch,No_Dispatching_Calls,No_Direct_Boolean_Operators,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12110 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-dispatch}@anchor{1c4}
12111 @subsection No_Dispatch
12114 @geindex No_Dispatch
12116 [RM H.4] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no
12117 occurrences of @code{T'Class}, for any (tagged) subtype @code{T}.
12119 @node No_Dispatching_Calls,No_Dynamic_Attachment,No_Dispatch,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12120 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-dispatching-calls}@anchor{1c5}
12121 @subsection No_Dispatching_Calls
12124 @geindex No_Dispatching_Calls
12126 [GNAT] This restriction ensures at compile time that the code generated by the
12127 compiler involves no dispatching calls. The use of this restriction allows the
12128 safe use of record extensions, classwide membership tests and other classwide
12129 features not involving implicit dispatching. This restriction ensures that
12130 the code contains no indirect calls through a dispatching mechanism. Note that
12131 this includes internally-generated calls created by the compiler, for example
12132 in the implementation of class-wide objects assignments. The
12133 membership test is allowed in the presence of this restriction, because its
12134 implementation requires no dispatching.
12135 This restriction is comparable to the official Ada restriction
12136 @code{No_Dispatch} except that it is a bit less restrictive in that it allows
12137 all classwide constructs that do not imply dispatching.
12138 The following example indicates constructs that violate this restriction.
12142 type T is tagged record
12145 procedure P (X : T);
12147 type DT is new T with record
12148 More_Data : Natural;
12150 procedure Q (X : DT);
12154 procedure Example is
12155 procedure Test (O : T'Class) is
12156 N : Natural := O'Size;-- Error: Dispatching call
12157 C : T'Class := O; -- Error: implicit Dispatching Call
12159 if O in DT'Class then -- OK : Membership test
12160 Q (DT (O)); -- OK : Type conversion plus direct call
12162 P (O); -- Error: Dispatching call
12168 P (Obj); -- OK : Direct call
12169 P (T (Obj)); -- OK : Type conversion plus direct call
12170 P (T'Class (Obj)); -- Error: Dispatching call
12172 Test (Obj); -- OK : Type conversion
12174 if Obj in T'Class then -- OK : Membership test
12180 @node No_Dynamic_Attachment,No_Dynamic_Priorities,No_Dispatching_Calls,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12181 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-dynamic-attachment}@anchor{1c6}
12182 @subsection No_Dynamic_Attachment
12185 @geindex No_Dynamic_Attachment
12187 [RM D.7] This restriction ensures that there is no call to any of the
12188 operations defined in package Ada.Interrupts
12189 (Is_Reserved, Is_Attached, Current_Handler, Attach_Handler, Exchange_Handler,
12190 Detach_Handler, and Reference).
12192 @geindex No_Dynamic_Interrupts
12194 The restriction @code{No_Dynamic_Interrupts} is recognized as a
12195 synonym for @code{No_Dynamic_Attachment}. This is retained for historical
12196 compatibility purposes (and a warning will be generated for its use if
12197 warnings on obsolescent features are activated).
12199 @node No_Dynamic_Priorities,No_Entry_Calls_In_Elaboration_Code,No_Dynamic_Attachment,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12200 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-dynamic-priorities}@anchor{1c7}
12201 @subsection No_Dynamic_Priorities
12204 @geindex No_Dynamic_Priorities
12206 [RM D.7] There are no semantic dependencies on the package Dynamic_Priorities.
12208 @node No_Entry_Calls_In_Elaboration_Code,No_Enumeration_Maps,No_Dynamic_Priorities,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12209 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-entry-calls-in-elaboration-code}@anchor{1c8}
12210 @subsection No_Entry_Calls_In_Elaboration_Code
12213 @geindex No_Entry_Calls_In_Elaboration_Code
12215 [GNAT] This restriction ensures at compile time that no task or protected entry
12216 calls are made during elaboration code. As a result of the use of this
12217 restriction, the compiler can assume that no code past an accept statement
12218 in a task can be executed at elaboration time.
12220 @node No_Enumeration_Maps,No_Exception_Handlers,No_Entry_Calls_In_Elaboration_Code,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12221 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-enumeration-maps}@anchor{1c9}
12222 @subsection No_Enumeration_Maps
12225 @geindex No_Enumeration_Maps
12227 [GNAT] This restriction ensures at compile time that no operations requiring
12228 enumeration maps are used (that is Image and Value attributes applied
12229 to enumeration types).
12231 @node No_Exception_Handlers,No_Exception_Propagation,No_Enumeration_Maps,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12232 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-exception-handlers}@anchor{1ca}
12233 @subsection No_Exception_Handlers
12236 @geindex No_Exception_Handlers
12238 [GNAT] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no explicit
12239 exception handlers. It also indicates that no exception propagation will
12240 be provided. In this mode, exceptions may be raised but will result in
12241 an immediate call to the last chance handler, a routine that the user
12242 must define with the following profile:
12245 procedure Last_Chance_Handler
12246 (Source_Location : System.Address; Line : Integer);
12247 pragma Export (C, Last_Chance_Handler,
12248 "__gnat_last_chance_handler");
12251 The parameter is a C null-terminated string representing a message to be
12252 associated with the exception (typically the source location of the raise
12253 statement generated by the compiler). The Line parameter when nonzero
12254 represents the line number in the source program where the raise occurs.
12256 @node No_Exception_Propagation,No_Exception_Registration,No_Exception_Handlers,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12257 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-exception-propagation}@anchor{1cb}
12258 @subsection No_Exception_Propagation
12261 @geindex No_Exception_Propagation
12263 [GNAT] This restriction guarantees that exceptions are never propagated
12264 to an outer subprogram scope. The only case in which an exception may
12265 be raised is when the handler is statically in the same subprogram, so
12266 that the effect of a raise is essentially like a goto statement. Any
12267 other raise statement (implicit or explicit) will be considered
12268 unhandled. Exception handlers are allowed, but may not contain an
12269 exception occurrence identifier (exception choice). In addition, use of
12270 the package GNAT.Current_Exception is not permitted, and reraise
12271 statements (raise with no operand) are not permitted.
12273 @node No_Exception_Registration,No_Exceptions,No_Exception_Propagation,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12274 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-exception-registration}@anchor{1cc}
12275 @subsection No_Exception_Registration
12278 @geindex No_Exception_Registration
12280 [GNAT] This restriction ensures at compile time that no stream operations for
12281 types Exception_Id or Exception_Occurrence are used. This also makes it
12282 impossible to pass exceptions to or from a partition with this restriction
12283 in a distributed environment. If this restriction is active, the generated
12284 code is simplified by omitting the otherwise-required global registration
12285 of exceptions when they are declared.
12287 @node No_Exceptions,No_Finalization,No_Exception_Registration,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12288 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-exceptions}@anchor{1cd}
12289 @subsection No_Exceptions
12292 @geindex No_Exceptions
12294 [RM H.4] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no
12295 raise statements and no exception handlers.
12297 @node No_Finalization,No_Fixed_Point,No_Exceptions,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12298 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-finalization}@anchor{1ce}
12299 @subsection No_Finalization
12302 @geindex No_Finalization
12304 [GNAT] This restriction disables the language features described in
12305 chapter 7.6 of the Ada 2005 RM as well as all form of code generation
12306 performed by the compiler to support these features. The following types
12307 are no longer considered controlled when this restriction is in effect:
12313 @code{Ada.Finalization.Controlled}
12316 @code{Ada.Finalization.Limited_Controlled}
12319 Derivations from @code{Controlled} or @code{Limited_Controlled}
12331 Array and record types with controlled components
12334 The compiler no longer generates code to initialize, finalize or adjust an
12335 object or a nested component, either declared on the stack or on the heap. The
12336 deallocation of a controlled object no longer finalizes its contents.
12338 @node No_Fixed_Point,No_Floating_Point,No_Finalization,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12339 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-fixed-point}@anchor{1cf}
12340 @subsection No_Fixed_Point
12343 @geindex No_Fixed_Point
12345 [RM H.4] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no
12346 occurrences of fixed point types and operations.
12348 @node No_Floating_Point,No_Implicit_Conditionals,No_Fixed_Point,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12349 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-floating-point}@anchor{1d0}
12350 @subsection No_Floating_Point
12353 @geindex No_Floating_Point
12355 [RM H.4] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no
12356 occurrences of floating point types and operations.
12358 @node No_Implicit_Conditionals,No_Implicit_Dynamic_Code,No_Floating_Point,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12359 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-implicit-conditionals}@anchor{1d1}
12360 @subsection No_Implicit_Conditionals
12363 @geindex No_Implicit_Conditionals
12365 [GNAT] This restriction ensures that the generated code does not contain any
12366 implicit conditionals, either by modifying the generated code where possible,
12367 or by rejecting any construct that would otherwise generate an implicit
12368 conditional. Note that this check does not include run time constraint
12369 checks, which on some targets may generate implicit conditionals as
12370 well. To control the latter, constraint checks can be suppressed in the
12371 normal manner. Constructs generating implicit conditionals include comparisons
12372 of composite objects and the Max/Min attributes.
12374 @node No_Implicit_Dynamic_Code,No_Implicit_Heap_Allocations,No_Implicit_Conditionals,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12375 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-implicit-dynamic-code}@anchor{1d2}
12376 @subsection No_Implicit_Dynamic_Code
12379 @geindex No_Implicit_Dynamic_Code
12381 @geindex trampoline
12383 [GNAT] This restriction prevents the compiler from building 'trampolines'.
12384 This is a structure that is built on the stack and contains dynamic
12385 code to be executed at run time. On some targets, a trampoline is
12386 built for the following features: @code{Access},
12387 @code{Unrestricted_Access}, or @code{Address} of a nested subprogram;
12388 nested task bodies; primitive operations of nested tagged types.
12389 Trampolines do not work on machines that prevent execution of stack
12390 data. For example, on windows systems, enabling DEP (data execution
12391 protection) will cause trampolines to raise an exception.
12392 Trampolines are also quite slow at run time.
12394 On many targets, trampolines have been largely eliminated. Look at the
12395 version of system.ads for your target --- if it has
12396 Always_Compatible_Rep equal to False, then trampolines are largely
12397 eliminated. In particular, a trampoline is built for the following
12398 features: @code{Address} of a nested subprogram;
12399 @code{Access} or @code{Unrestricted_Access} of a nested subprogram,
12400 but only if pragma Favor_Top_Level applies, or the access type has a
12401 foreign-language convention; primitive operations of nested tagged
12404 @node No_Implicit_Heap_Allocations,No_Implicit_Protected_Object_Allocations,No_Implicit_Dynamic_Code,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12405 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-implicit-heap-allocations}@anchor{1d3}
12406 @subsection No_Implicit_Heap_Allocations
12409 @geindex No_Implicit_Heap_Allocations
12411 [RM D.7] No constructs are allowed to cause implicit heap allocation.
12413 @node No_Implicit_Protected_Object_Allocations,No_Implicit_Task_Allocations,No_Implicit_Heap_Allocations,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12414 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-implicit-protected-object-allocations}@anchor{1d4}
12415 @subsection No_Implicit_Protected_Object_Allocations
12418 @geindex No_Implicit_Protected_Object_Allocations
12420 [GNAT] No constructs are allowed to cause implicit heap allocation of a
12423 @node No_Implicit_Task_Allocations,No_Initialize_Scalars,No_Implicit_Protected_Object_Allocations,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12424 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-implicit-task-allocations}@anchor{1d5}
12425 @subsection No_Implicit_Task_Allocations
12428 @geindex No_Implicit_Task_Allocations
12430 [GNAT] No constructs are allowed to cause implicit heap allocation of a task.
12432 @node No_Initialize_Scalars,No_IO,No_Implicit_Task_Allocations,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12433 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-initialize-scalars}@anchor{1d6}
12434 @subsection No_Initialize_Scalars
12437 @geindex No_Initialize_Scalars
12439 [GNAT] This restriction ensures that no unit in the partition is compiled with
12440 pragma Initialize_Scalars. This allows the generation of more efficient
12441 code, and in particular eliminates dummy null initialization routines that
12442 are otherwise generated for some record and array types.
12444 @node No_IO,No_Local_Allocators,No_Initialize_Scalars,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12445 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-io}@anchor{1d7}
12451 [RM H.4] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no
12452 dependences on any of the library units Sequential_IO, Direct_IO,
12453 Text_IO, Wide_Text_IO, Wide_Wide_Text_IO, or Stream_IO.
12455 @node No_Local_Allocators,No_Local_Protected_Objects,No_IO,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12456 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-local-allocators}@anchor{1d8}
12457 @subsection No_Local_Allocators
12460 @geindex No_Local_Allocators
12462 [RM H.4] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no
12463 occurrences of an allocator in subprograms, generic subprograms, tasks,
12466 @node No_Local_Protected_Objects,No_Local_Timing_Events,No_Local_Allocators,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12467 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-local-protected-objects}@anchor{1d9}
12468 @subsection No_Local_Protected_Objects
12471 @geindex No_Local_Protected_Objects
12473 [RM D.7] This restriction ensures at compile time that protected objects are
12474 only declared at the library level.
12476 @node No_Local_Timing_Events,No_Long_Long_Integers,No_Local_Protected_Objects,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12477 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-local-timing-events}@anchor{1da}
12478 @subsection No_Local_Timing_Events
12481 @geindex No_Local_Timing_Events
12483 [RM D.7] All objects of type Ada.Timing_Events.Timing_Event are
12484 declared at the library level.
12486 @node No_Long_Long_Integers,No_Multiple_Elaboration,No_Local_Timing_Events,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12487 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-long-long-integers}@anchor{1db}
12488 @subsection No_Long_Long_Integers
12491 @geindex No_Long_Long_Integers
12493 [GNAT] This partition-wide restriction forbids any explicit reference to
12494 type Standard.Long_Long_Integer, and also forbids declaring range types whose
12495 implicit base type is Long_Long_Integer, and modular types whose size exceeds
12498 @node No_Multiple_Elaboration,No_Nested_Finalization,No_Long_Long_Integers,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12499 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-multiple-elaboration}@anchor{1dc}
12500 @subsection No_Multiple_Elaboration
12503 @geindex No_Multiple_Elaboration
12505 [GNAT] When this restriction is active, we are not requesting control-flow
12506 preservation with -fpreserve-control-flow, and the static elaboration model is
12507 used, the compiler is allowed to suppress the elaboration counter normally
12508 associated with the unit, even if the unit has elaboration code. This counter
12509 is typically used to check for access before elaboration and to control
12510 multiple elaboration attempts. If the restriction is used, then the
12511 situations in which multiple elaboration is possible, including non-Ada main
12512 programs and Stand Alone libraries, are not permitted and will be diagnosed
12515 @node No_Nested_Finalization,No_Protected_Type_Allocators,No_Multiple_Elaboration,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12516 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-nested-finalization}@anchor{1dd}
12517 @subsection No_Nested_Finalization
12520 @geindex No_Nested_Finalization
12522 [RM D.7] All objects requiring finalization are declared at the library level.
12524 @node No_Protected_Type_Allocators,No_Protected_Types,No_Nested_Finalization,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12525 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-protected-type-allocators}@anchor{1de}
12526 @subsection No_Protected_Type_Allocators
12529 @geindex No_Protected_Type_Allocators
12531 [RM D.7] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no allocator
12532 expressions that attempt to allocate protected objects.
12534 @node No_Protected_Types,No_Recursion,No_Protected_Type_Allocators,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12535 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-protected-types}@anchor{1df}
12536 @subsection No_Protected_Types
12539 @geindex No_Protected_Types
12541 [RM H.4] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no
12542 declarations of protected types or protected objects.
12544 @node No_Recursion,No_Reentrancy,No_Protected_Types,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12545 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-recursion}@anchor{1e0}
12546 @subsection No_Recursion
12549 @geindex No_Recursion
12551 [RM H.4] A program execution is erroneous if a subprogram is invoked as
12552 part of its execution.
12554 @node No_Reentrancy,No_Relative_Delay,No_Recursion,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12555 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-reentrancy}@anchor{1e1}
12556 @subsection No_Reentrancy
12559 @geindex No_Reentrancy
12561 [RM H.4] A program execution is erroneous if a subprogram is executed by
12562 two tasks at the same time.
12564 @node No_Relative_Delay,No_Requeue_Statements,No_Reentrancy,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12565 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-relative-delay}@anchor{1e2}
12566 @subsection No_Relative_Delay
12569 @geindex No_Relative_Delay
12571 [RM D.7] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no delay
12572 relative statements and prevents expressions such as @code{delay 1.23;} from
12573 appearing in source code.
12575 @node No_Requeue_Statements,No_Secondary_Stack,No_Relative_Delay,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12576 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-requeue-statements}@anchor{1e3}
12577 @subsection No_Requeue_Statements
12580 @geindex No_Requeue_Statements
12582 [RM D.7] This restriction ensures at compile time that no requeue statements
12583 are permitted and prevents keyword @code{requeue} from being used in source
12586 @geindex No_Requeue
12588 The restriction @code{No_Requeue} is recognized as a
12589 synonym for @code{No_Requeue_Statements}. This is retained for historical
12590 compatibility purposes (and a warning will be generated for its use if
12591 warnings on oNobsolescent features are activated).
12593 @node No_Secondary_Stack,No_Select_Statements,No_Requeue_Statements,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12594 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-secondary-stack}@anchor{1e4}
12595 @subsection No_Secondary_Stack
12598 @geindex No_Secondary_Stack
12600 [GNAT] This restriction ensures at compile time that the generated code
12601 does not contain any reference to the secondary stack. The secondary
12602 stack is used to implement functions returning unconstrained objects
12603 (arrays or records) on some targets. Suppresses the allocation of
12604 secondary stacks for tasks (excluding the environment task) at run time.
12606 @node No_Select_Statements,No_Specific_Termination_Handlers,No_Secondary_Stack,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12607 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-select-statements}@anchor{1e5}
12608 @subsection No_Select_Statements
12611 @geindex No_Select_Statements
12613 [RM D.7] This restriction ensures at compile time no select statements of any
12614 kind are permitted, that is the keyword @code{select} may not appear.
12616 @node No_Specific_Termination_Handlers,No_Specification_of_Aspect,No_Select_Statements,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12617 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-specific-termination-handlers}@anchor{1e6}
12618 @subsection No_Specific_Termination_Handlers
12621 @geindex No_Specific_Termination_Handlers
12623 [RM D.7] There are no calls to Ada.Task_Termination.Set_Specific_Handler
12624 or to Ada.Task_Termination.Specific_Handler.
12626 @node No_Specification_of_Aspect,No_Standard_Allocators_After_Elaboration,No_Specific_Termination_Handlers,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12627 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-specification-of-aspect}@anchor{1e7}
12628 @subsection No_Specification_of_Aspect
12631 @geindex No_Specification_of_Aspect
12633 [RM 13.12.1] This restriction checks at compile time that no aspect
12634 specification, attribute definition clause, or pragma is given for a
12637 @node No_Standard_Allocators_After_Elaboration,No_Standard_Storage_Pools,No_Specification_of_Aspect,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12638 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-standard-allocators-after-elaboration}@anchor{1e8}
12639 @subsection No_Standard_Allocators_After_Elaboration
12642 @geindex No_Standard_Allocators_After_Elaboration
12644 [RM D.7] Specifies that an allocator using a standard storage pool
12645 should never be evaluated at run time after the elaboration of the
12646 library items of the partition has completed. Otherwise, Storage_Error
12649 @node No_Standard_Storage_Pools,No_Stream_Optimizations,No_Standard_Allocators_After_Elaboration,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12650 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-standard-storage-pools}@anchor{1e9}
12651 @subsection No_Standard_Storage_Pools
12654 @geindex No_Standard_Storage_Pools
12656 [GNAT] This restriction ensures at compile time that no access types
12657 use the standard default storage pool. Any access type declared must
12658 have an explicit Storage_Pool attribute defined specifying a
12659 user-defined storage pool.
12661 @node No_Stream_Optimizations,No_Streams,No_Standard_Storage_Pools,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12662 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-stream-optimizations}@anchor{1ea}
12663 @subsection No_Stream_Optimizations
12666 @geindex No_Stream_Optimizations
12668 [GNAT] This restriction affects the performance of stream operations on types
12669 @code{String}, @code{Wide_String} and @code{Wide_Wide_String}. By default, the
12670 compiler uses block reads and writes when manipulating @code{String} objects
12671 due to their supperior performance. When this restriction is in effect, the
12672 compiler performs all IO operations on a per-character basis.
12674 @node No_Streams,No_Task_Allocators,No_Stream_Optimizations,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12675 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-streams}@anchor{1eb}
12676 @subsection No_Streams
12679 @geindex No_Streams
12681 [GNAT] This restriction ensures at compile/bind time that there are no
12682 stream objects created and no use of stream attributes.
12683 This restriction does not forbid dependences on the package
12684 @code{Ada.Streams}. So it is permissible to with
12685 @code{Ada.Streams} (or another package that does so itself)
12686 as long as no actual stream objects are created and no
12687 stream attributes are used.
12689 Note that the use of restriction allows optimization of tagged types,
12690 since they do not need to worry about dispatching stream operations.
12691 To take maximum advantage of this space-saving optimization, any
12692 unit declaring a tagged type should be compiled with the restriction,
12693 though this is not required.
12695 @node No_Task_Allocators,No_Task_At_Interrupt_Priority,No_Streams,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12696 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-task-allocators}@anchor{1ec}
12697 @subsection No_Task_Allocators
12700 @geindex No_Task_Allocators
12702 [RM D.7] There are no allocators for task types
12703 or types containing task subcomponents.
12705 @node No_Task_At_Interrupt_Priority,No_Task_Attributes_Package,No_Task_Allocators,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12706 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-task-at-interrupt-priority}@anchor{1ed}
12707 @subsection No_Task_At_Interrupt_Priority
12710 @geindex No_Task_At_Interrupt_Priority
12712 [GNAT] This restriction ensures at compile time that there is no
12713 Interrupt_Priority aspect or pragma for a task or a task type. As
12714 a consequence, the tasks are always created with a priority below
12715 that an interrupt priority.
12717 @node No_Task_Attributes_Package,No_Task_Hierarchy,No_Task_At_Interrupt_Priority,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12718 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-task-attributes-package}@anchor{1ee}
12719 @subsection No_Task_Attributes_Package
12722 @geindex No_Task_Attributes_Package
12724 [GNAT] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no implicit or
12725 explicit dependencies on the package @code{Ada.Task_Attributes}.
12727 @geindex No_Task_Attributes
12729 The restriction @code{No_Task_Attributes} is recognized as a synonym
12730 for @code{No_Task_Attributes_Package}. This is retained for historical
12731 compatibility purposes (and a warning will be generated for its use if
12732 warnings on obsolescent features are activated).
12734 @node No_Task_Hierarchy,No_Task_Termination,No_Task_Attributes_Package,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12735 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-task-hierarchy}@anchor{1ef}
12736 @subsection No_Task_Hierarchy
12739 @geindex No_Task_Hierarchy
12741 [RM D.7] All (non-environment) tasks depend
12742 directly on the environment task of the partition.
12744 @node No_Task_Termination,No_Tasking,No_Task_Hierarchy,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12745 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-task-termination}@anchor{1f0}
12746 @subsection No_Task_Termination
12749 @geindex No_Task_Termination
12751 [RM D.7] Tasks that terminate are erroneous.
12753 @node No_Tasking,No_Terminate_Alternatives,No_Task_Termination,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12754 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-tasking}@anchor{1f1}
12755 @subsection No_Tasking
12758 @geindex No_Tasking
12760 [GNAT] This restriction prevents the declaration of tasks or task types
12761 throughout the partition. It is similar in effect to the use of
12762 @code{Max_Tasks => 0} except that violations are caught at compile time
12763 and cause an error message to be output either by the compiler or
12766 @node No_Terminate_Alternatives,No_Unchecked_Access,No_Tasking,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12767 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-terminate-alternatives}@anchor{1f2}
12768 @subsection No_Terminate_Alternatives
12771 @geindex No_Terminate_Alternatives
12773 [RM D.7] There are no selective accepts with terminate alternatives.
12775 @node No_Unchecked_Access,No_Unchecked_Conversion,No_Terminate_Alternatives,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12776 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-unchecked-access}@anchor{1f3}
12777 @subsection No_Unchecked_Access
12780 @geindex No_Unchecked_Access
12782 [RM H.4] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no
12783 occurrences of the Unchecked_Access attribute.
12785 @node No_Unchecked_Conversion,No_Unchecked_Deallocation,No_Unchecked_Access,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12786 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-unchecked-conversion}@anchor{1f4}
12787 @subsection No_Unchecked_Conversion
12790 @geindex No_Unchecked_Conversion
12792 [RM J.13] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no semantic
12793 dependences on the predefined generic function Unchecked_Conversion.
12795 @node No_Unchecked_Deallocation,No_Use_Of_Entity,No_Unchecked_Conversion,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12796 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-unchecked-deallocation}@anchor{1f5}
12797 @subsection No_Unchecked_Deallocation
12800 @geindex No_Unchecked_Deallocation
12802 [RM J.13] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no semantic
12803 dependences on the predefined generic procedure Unchecked_Deallocation.
12805 @node No_Use_Of_Entity,Pure_Barriers,No_Unchecked_Deallocation,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12806 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-use-of-entity}@anchor{1f6}
12807 @subsection No_Use_Of_Entity
12810 @geindex No_Use_Of_Entity
12812 [GNAT] This restriction ensures at compile time that there are no references
12813 to the entity given in the form
12816 No_Use_Of_Entity => Name
12819 where @code{Name} is the fully qualified entity, for example
12822 No_Use_Of_Entity => Ada.Text_IO.Put_Line
12825 @node Pure_Barriers,Simple_Barriers,No_Use_Of_Entity,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12826 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions pure-barriers}@anchor{1f7}
12827 @subsection Pure_Barriers
12830 @geindex Pure_Barriers
12832 [GNAT] This restriction ensures at compile time that protected entry
12833 barriers are restricted to:
12839 components of the protected object (excluding selection from dereferences),
12842 constant declarations,
12848 enumeration literals,
12857 character literals,
12860 implicitly defined comparison operators,
12863 uses of the Standard."not" operator,
12866 short-circuit operator,
12869 the Count attribute
12872 This restriction is a relaxation of the Simple_Barriers restriction,
12873 but still ensures absence of side effects, exceptions, and recursion
12874 during the evaluation of the barriers.
12876 @node Simple_Barriers,Static_Priorities,Pure_Barriers,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12877 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions simple-barriers}@anchor{1f8}
12878 @subsection Simple_Barriers
12881 @geindex Simple_Barriers
12883 [RM D.7] This restriction ensures at compile time that barriers in entry
12884 declarations for protected types are restricted to either static boolean
12885 expressions or references to simple boolean variables defined in the private
12886 part of the protected type. No other form of entry barriers is permitted.
12888 @geindex Boolean_Entry_Barriers
12890 The restriction @code{Boolean_Entry_Barriers} is recognized as a
12891 synonym for @code{Simple_Barriers}. This is retained for historical
12892 compatibility purposes (and a warning will be generated for its use if
12893 warnings on obsolescent features are activated).
12895 @node Static_Priorities,Static_Storage_Size,Simple_Barriers,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12896 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions static-priorities}@anchor{1f9}
12897 @subsection Static_Priorities
12900 @geindex Static_Priorities
12902 [GNAT] This restriction ensures at compile time that all priority expressions
12903 are static, and that there are no dependences on the package
12904 @code{Ada.Dynamic_Priorities}.
12906 @node Static_Storage_Size,,Static_Priorities,Partition-Wide Restrictions
12907 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions static-storage-size}@anchor{1fa}
12908 @subsection Static_Storage_Size
12911 @geindex Static_Storage_Size
12913 [GNAT] This restriction ensures at compile time that any expression appearing
12914 in a Storage_Size pragma or attribute definition clause is static.
12916 @node Program Unit Level Restrictions,,Partition-Wide Restrictions,Standard and Implementation Defined Restrictions
12917 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions program-unit-level-restrictions}@anchor{1fb}@anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions id3}@anchor{1fc}
12918 @section Program Unit Level Restrictions
12921 The second set of restriction identifiers
12922 does not require partition-wide consistency.
12923 The restriction may be enforced for a single
12924 compilation unit without any effect on any of the
12925 other compilation units in the partition.
12928 * No_Elaboration_Code::
12929 * No_Dynamic_Sized_Objects::
12931 * No_Implementation_Aspect_Specifications::
12932 * No_Implementation_Attributes::
12933 * No_Implementation_Identifiers::
12934 * No_Implementation_Pragmas::
12935 * No_Implementation_Restrictions::
12936 * No_Implementation_Units::
12937 * No_Implicit_Aliasing::
12938 * No_Implicit_Loops::
12939 * No_Obsolescent_Features::
12940 * No_Wide_Characters::
12941 * Static_Dispatch_Tables::
12946 @node No_Elaboration_Code,No_Dynamic_Sized_Objects,,Program Unit Level Restrictions
12947 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-elaboration-code}@anchor{1fd}
12948 @subsection No_Elaboration_Code
12951 @geindex No_Elaboration_Code
12953 [GNAT] This restriction ensures at compile time that no elaboration code is
12954 generated. Note that this is not the same condition as is enforced
12955 by pragma @code{Preelaborate}. There are cases in which pragma
12956 @code{Preelaborate} still permits code to be generated (e.g., code
12957 to initialize a large array to all zeroes), and there are cases of units
12958 which do not meet the requirements for pragma @code{Preelaborate},
12959 but for which no elaboration code is generated. Generally, it is
12960 the case that preelaborable units will meet the restrictions, with
12961 the exception of large aggregates initialized with an others_clause,
12962 and exception declarations (which generate calls to a run-time
12963 registry procedure). This restriction is enforced on
12964 a unit by unit basis, it need not be obeyed consistently
12965 throughout a partition.
12967 In the case of aggregates with others, if the aggregate has a dynamic
12968 size, there is no way to eliminate the elaboration code (such dynamic
12969 bounds would be incompatible with @code{Preelaborate} in any case). If
12970 the bounds are static, then use of this restriction actually modifies
12971 the code choice of the compiler to avoid generating a loop, and instead
12972 generate the aggregate statically if possible, no matter how many times
12973 the data for the others clause must be repeatedly generated.
12975 It is not possible to precisely document
12976 the constructs which are compatible with this restriction, since,
12977 unlike most other restrictions, this is not a restriction on the
12978 source code, but a restriction on the generated object code. For
12979 example, if the source contains a declaration:
12982 Val : constant Integer := X;
12985 where X is not a static constant, it may be possible, depending
12986 on complex optimization circuitry, for the compiler to figure
12987 out the value of X at compile time, in which case this initialization
12988 can be done by the loader, and requires no initialization code. It
12989 is not possible to document the precise conditions under which the
12990 optimizer can figure this out.
12992 Note that this the implementation of this restriction requires full
12993 code generation. If it is used in conjunction with "semantics only"
12994 checking, then some cases of violations may be missed.
12996 When this restriction is active, we are not requesting control-flow
12997 preservation with -fpreserve-control-flow, and the static elaboration model is
12998 used, the compiler is allowed to suppress the elaboration counter normally
12999 associated with the unit. This counter is typically used to check for access
13000 before elaboration and to control multiple elaboration attempts.
13002 @node No_Dynamic_Sized_Objects,No_Entry_Queue,No_Elaboration_Code,Program Unit Level Restrictions
13003 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-dynamic-sized-objects}@anchor{1fe}
13004 @subsection No_Dynamic_Sized_Objects
13007 @geindex No_Dynamic_Sized_Objects
13009 [GNAT] This restriction disallows certain constructs that might lead to the
13010 creation of dynamic-sized composite objects (or array or discriminated type).
13011 An array subtype indication is illegal if the bounds are not static
13012 or references to discriminants of an enclosing type.
13013 A discriminated subtype indication is illegal if the type has
13014 discriminant-dependent array components or a variant part, and the
13015 discriminants are not static. In addition, array and record aggregates are
13016 illegal in corresponding cases. Note that this restriction does not forbid
13017 access discriminants. It is often a good idea to combine this restriction
13018 with No_Secondary_Stack.
13020 @node No_Entry_Queue,No_Implementation_Aspect_Specifications,No_Dynamic_Sized_Objects,Program Unit Level Restrictions
13021 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-entry-queue}@anchor{1ff}
13022 @subsection No_Entry_Queue
13025 @geindex No_Entry_Queue
13027 [GNAT] This restriction is a declaration that any protected entry compiled in
13028 the scope of the restriction has at most one task waiting on the entry
13029 at any one time, and so no queue is required. This restriction is not
13030 checked at compile time. A program execution is erroneous if an attempt
13031 is made to queue a second task on such an entry.
13033 @node No_Implementation_Aspect_Specifications,No_Implementation_Attributes,No_Entry_Queue,Program Unit Level Restrictions
13034 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-implementation-aspect-specifications}@anchor{200}
13035 @subsection No_Implementation_Aspect_Specifications
13038 @geindex No_Implementation_Aspect_Specifications
13040 [RM 13.12.1] This restriction checks at compile time that no
13041 GNAT-defined aspects are present. With this restriction, the only
13042 aspects that can be used are those defined in the Ada Reference Manual.
13044 @node No_Implementation_Attributes,No_Implementation_Identifiers,No_Implementation_Aspect_Specifications,Program Unit Level Restrictions
13045 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-implementation-attributes}@anchor{201}
13046 @subsection No_Implementation_Attributes
13049 @geindex No_Implementation_Attributes
13051 [RM 13.12.1] This restriction checks at compile time that no
13052 GNAT-defined attributes are present. With this restriction, the only
13053 attributes that can be used are those defined in the Ada Reference
13056 @node No_Implementation_Identifiers,No_Implementation_Pragmas,No_Implementation_Attributes,Program Unit Level Restrictions
13057 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-implementation-identifiers}@anchor{202}
13058 @subsection No_Implementation_Identifiers
13061 @geindex No_Implementation_Identifiers
13063 [RM 13.12.1] This restriction checks at compile time that no
13064 implementation-defined identifiers (marked with pragma Implementation_Defined)
13065 occur within language-defined packages.
13067 @node No_Implementation_Pragmas,No_Implementation_Restrictions,No_Implementation_Identifiers,Program Unit Level Restrictions
13068 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-implementation-pragmas}@anchor{203}
13069 @subsection No_Implementation_Pragmas
13072 @geindex No_Implementation_Pragmas
13074 [RM 13.12.1] This restriction checks at compile time that no
13075 GNAT-defined pragmas are present. With this restriction, the only
13076 pragmas that can be used are those defined in the Ada Reference Manual.
13078 @node No_Implementation_Restrictions,No_Implementation_Units,No_Implementation_Pragmas,Program Unit Level Restrictions
13079 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-implementation-restrictions}@anchor{204}
13080 @subsection No_Implementation_Restrictions
13083 @geindex No_Implementation_Restrictions
13085 [GNAT] This restriction checks at compile time that no GNAT-defined restriction
13086 identifiers (other than @code{No_Implementation_Restrictions} itself)
13087 are present. With this restriction, the only other restriction identifiers
13088 that can be used are those defined in the Ada Reference Manual.
13090 @node No_Implementation_Units,No_Implicit_Aliasing,No_Implementation_Restrictions,Program Unit Level Restrictions
13091 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-implementation-units}@anchor{205}
13092 @subsection No_Implementation_Units
13095 @geindex No_Implementation_Units
13097 [RM 13.12.1] This restriction checks at compile time that there is no
13098 mention in the context clause of any implementation-defined descendants
13099 of packages Ada, Interfaces, or System.
13101 @node No_Implicit_Aliasing,No_Implicit_Loops,No_Implementation_Units,Program Unit Level Restrictions
13102 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-implicit-aliasing}@anchor{206}
13103 @subsection No_Implicit_Aliasing
13106 @geindex No_Implicit_Aliasing
13108 [GNAT] This restriction, which is not required to be partition-wide consistent,
13109 requires an explicit aliased keyword for an object to which 'Access,
13110 'Unchecked_Access, or 'Address is applied, and forbids entirely the use of
13111 the 'Unrestricted_Access attribute for objects. Note: the reason that
13112 Unrestricted_Access is forbidden is that it would require the prefix
13113 to be aliased, and in such cases, it can always be replaced by
13114 the standard attribute Unchecked_Access which is preferable.
13116 @node No_Implicit_Loops,No_Obsolescent_Features,No_Implicit_Aliasing,Program Unit Level Restrictions
13117 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-implicit-loops}@anchor{207}
13118 @subsection No_Implicit_Loops
13121 @geindex No_Implicit_Loops
13123 [GNAT] This restriction ensures that the generated code of the unit marked
13124 with this restriction does not contain any implicit @code{for} loops, either by
13125 modifying the generated code where possible, or by rejecting any construct
13126 that would otherwise generate an implicit @code{for} loop. If this restriction is
13127 active, it is possible to build large array aggregates with all static
13128 components without generating an intermediate temporary, and without generating
13129 a loop to initialize individual components. Otherwise, a loop is created for
13130 arrays larger than about 5000 scalar components. Note that if this restriction
13131 is set in the spec of a package, it will not apply to its body.
13133 @node No_Obsolescent_Features,No_Wide_Characters,No_Implicit_Loops,Program Unit Level Restrictions
13134 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-obsolescent-features}@anchor{208}
13135 @subsection No_Obsolescent_Features
13138 @geindex No_Obsolescent_Features
13140 [RM 13.12.1] This restriction checks at compile time that no obsolescent
13141 features are used, as defined in Annex J of the Ada Reference Manual.
13143 @node No_Wide_Characters,Static_Dispatch_Tables,No_Obsolescent_Features,Program Unit Level Restrictions
13144 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions no-wide-characters}@anchor{209}
13145 @subsection No_Wide_Characters
13148 @geindex No_Wide_Characters
13150 [GNAT] This restriction ensures at compile time that no uses of the types
13151 @code{Wide_Character} or @code{Wide_String} or corresponding wide
13153 appear, and that no wide or wide wide string or character literals
13154 appear in the program (that is literals representing characters not in
13155 type @code{Character}).
13157 @node Static_Dispatch_Tables,SPARK_05,No_Wide_Characters,Program Unit Level Restrictions
13158 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions static-dispatch-tables}@anchor{20a}
13159 @subsection Static_Dispatch_Tables
13162 @geindex Static_Dispatch_Tables
13164 [GNAT] This restriction checks at compile time that all the artifacts
13165 associated with dispatch tables can be placed in read-only memory.
13167 @node SPARK_05,,Static_Dispatch_Tables,Program Unit Level Restrictions
13168 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_and_implementation_defined_restrictions spark-05}@anchor{20b}
13169 @subsection SPARK_05
13174 [GNAT] This restriction checks at compile time that some constructs forbidden
13175 in SPARK 2005 are not present. Note that SPARK 2005 has been superseded by
13176 SPARK 2014, whose restrictions are checked by the tool GNATprove. To check that
13177 a codebase respects SPARK 2014 restrictions, mark the code with pragma or
13178 aspect @code{SPARK_Mode}, and run the tool GNATprove at Stone assurance level, as
13182 gnatprove -P project.gpr --mode=stone
13188 gnatprove -P project.gpr --mode=check_all
13191 With restriction @code{SPARK_05}, error messages related to SPARK 2005 restriction
13195 violation of restriction "SPARK_05" at <source-location>
13201 The restriction @code{SPARK} is recognized as a synonym for @code{SPARK_05}. This is
13202 retained for historical compatibility purposes (and an unconditional warning
13203 will be generated for its use, advising replacement by @code{SPARK_05}).
13205 This is not a replacement for the semantic checks performed by the
13206 SPARK Examiner tool, as the compiler currently only deals with code,
13207 not SPARK 2005 annotations, and does not guarantee catching all
13208 cases of constructs forbidden by SPARK 2005.
13210 Thus it may well be the case that code which passes the compiler with
13211 the SPARK 2005 restriction is rejected by the SPARK Examiner, e.g. due to
13212 the different visibility rules of the Examiner based on SPARK 2005
13213 @code{inherit} annotations.
13215 This restriction can be useful in providing an initial filter for code
13216 developed using SPARK 2005, or in examining legacy code to see how far
13217 it is from meeting SPARK 2005 restrictions.
13219 The list below summarizes the checks that are performed when this
13220 restriction is in force:
13226 No block statements
13229 No case statements with only an others clause
13232 Exit statements in loops must respect the SPARK 2005 language restrictions
13238 Return can only appear as last statement in function
13241 Function must have return statement
13244 Loop parameter specification must include subtype mark
13247 Prefix of expanded name cannot be a loop statement
13250 Abstract subprogram not allowed
13253 User-defined operators not allowed
13256 Access type parameters not allowed
13259 Default expressions for parameters not allowed
13262 Default expressions for record fields not allowed
13265 No tasking constructs allowed
13268 Label needed at end of subprograms and packages
13271 No mixing of positional and named parameter association
13274 No access types as result type
13277 No unconstrained arrays as result types
13283 Initial and later declarations must be in correct order (declaration can't come after body)
13286 No attributes on private types if full declaration not visible
13289 No package declaration within package specification
13292 No controlled types
13295 No discriminant types
13301 Selector name cannot be operator symbol (i.e. operator symbol cannot be prefixed)
13304 Access attribute not allowed
13307 Allocator not allowed
13310 Result of catenation must be String
13313 Operands of catenation must be string literal, static char or another catenation
13316 No conditional expressions
13319 No explicit dereference
13322 Quantified expression not allowed
13325 Slicing not allowed
13328 No exception renaming
13331 No generic renaming
13340 Aggregates must be qualified
13343 Nonstatic choice in array aggregates not allowed
13346 The only view conversions which are allowed as in-out parameters are conversions of a tagged type to an ancestor type
13349 No mixing of positional and named association in aggregate, no multi choice
13352 AND, OR and XOR for arrays only allowed when operands have same static bounds
13355 Fixed point operands to * or / must be qualified or converted
13358 Comparison operators not allowed for Booleans or arrays (except strings)
13361 Equality not allowed for arrays with non-matching static bounds (except strings)
13364 Conversion / qualification not allowed for arrays with non-matching static bounds
13367 Subprogram declaration only allowed in package spec (unless followed by import)
13370 Access types not allowed
13373 Incomplete type declaration not allowed
13376 Object and subtype declarations must respect SPARK 2005 restrictions
13379 Digits or delta constraint not allowed
13382 Decimal fixed point type not allowed
13385 Aliasing of objects not allowed
13388 Modular type modulus must be power of 2
13391 Base not allowed on subtype mark
13394 Unary operators not allowed on modular types (except not)
13397 Untagged record cannot be null
13400 No class-wide operations
13403 Initialization expressions must respect SPARK 2005 restrictions
13406 Nonstatic ranges not allowed except in iteration schemes
13409 String subtypes must have lower bound of 1
13412 Subtype of Boolean cannot have constraint
13415 At most one tagged type or extension per package
13418 Interface is not allowed
13421 Character literal cannot be prefixed (selector name cannot be character literal)
13424 Record aggregate cannot contain 'others'
13427 Component association in record aggregate must contain a single choice
13430 Ancestor part cannot be a type mark
13433 Attributes 'Image, 'Width and 'Value not allowed
13436 Functions may not update globals
13439 Subprograms may not contain direct calls to themselves (prevents recursion within unit)
13442 Call to subprogram not allowed in same unit before body has been seen (prevents recursion within unit)
13445 The following restrictions are enforced, but note that they are actually more
13446 strict that the latest SPARK 2005 language definition:
13452 No derived types other than tagged type extensions
13455 Subtype of unconstrained array must have constraint
13458 This list summarises the main SPARK 2005 language rules that are not
13459 currently checked by the SPARK_05 restriction:
13465 SPARK 2005 annotations are treated as comments so are not checked at all
13468 Based real literals not allowed
13471 Objects cannot be initialized at declaration by calls to user-defined functions
13474 Objects cannot be initialized at declaration by assignments from variables
13477 Objects cannot be initialized at declaration by assignments from indexed/selected components
13480 Ranges shall not be null
13483 A fixed point delta expression must be a simple expression
13486 Restrictions on where renaming declarations may be placed
13489 Externals of mode 'out' cannot be referenced
13492 Externals of mode 'in' cannot be updated
13495 Loop with no iteration scheme or exits only allowed as last statement in main program or task
13498 Subprogram cannot have parent unit name
13501 SPARK 2005 inherited subprogram must be prefixed with overriding
13504 External variables (or functions that reference them) may not be passed as actual parameters
13507 Globals must be explicitly mentioned in contract
13510 Deferred constants cannot be completed by pragma Import
13513 Package initialization cannot read/write variables from other packages
13516 Prefix not allowed for entities that are directly visible
13519 Identifier declaration can't override inherited package name
13522 Cannot use Standard or other predefined packages as identifiers
13525 After renaming, cannot use the original name
13528 Subprograms can only be renamed to remove package prefix
13531 Pragma import must be immediately after entity it names
13534 No mutual recursion between multiple units (this can be checked with gnatcheck)
13537 Note that if a unit is compiled in Ada 95 mode with the SPARK 2005 restriction,
13538 violations will be reported for constructs forbidden in SPARK 95,
13539 instead of SPARK 2005.
13541 @node Implementation Advice,Implementation Defined Characteristics,Standard and Implementation Defined Restrictions,Top
13542 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice doc}@anchor{20c}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice implementation-advice}@anchor{a}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice id1}@anchor{20d}
13543 @chapter Implementation Advice
13546 The main text of the Ada Reference Manual describes the required
13547 behavior of all Ada compilers, and the GNAT compiler conforms to
13548 these requirements.
13550 In addition, there are sections throughout the Ada Reference Manual headed
13551 by the phrase 'Implementation advice'. These sections are not normative,
13552 i.e., they do not specify requirements that all compilers must
13553 follow. Rather they provide advice on generally desirable behavior.
13554 They are not requirements, because they describe behavior that cannot
13555 be provided on all systems, or may be undesirable on some systems.
13557 As far as practical, GNAT follows the implementation advice in
13558 the Ada Reference Manual. Each such RM section corresponds to a section
13559 in this chapter whose title specifies the
13560 RM section number and paragraph number and the subject of
13561 the advice. The contents of each section consists of the RM text within
13563 followed by the GNAT interpretation of the advice. Most often, this simply says
13564 'followed', which means that GNAT follows the advice. However, in a
13565 number of cases, GNAT deliberately deviates from this advice, in which
13566 case the text describes what GNAT does and why.
13568 @geindex Error detection
13571 * RM 1.1.3(20); Error Detection: RM 1 1 3 20 Error Detection.
13572 * RM 1.1.3(31); Child Units: RM 1 1 3 31 Child Units.
13573 * RM 1.1.5(12); Bounded Errors: RM 1 1 5 12 Bounded Errors.
13574 * RM 2.8(16); Pragmas: RM 2 8 16 Pragmas.
13575 * RM 2.8(17-19); Pragmas: RM 2 8 17-19 Pragmas.
13576 * RM 3.5.2(5); Alternative Character Sets: RM 3 5 2 5 Alternative Character Sets.
13577 * RM 3.5.4(28); Integer Types: RM 3 5 4 28 Integer Types.
13578 * RM 3.5.4(29); Integer Types: RM 3 5 4 29 Integer Types.
13579 * RM 3.5.5(8); Enumeration Values: RM 3 5 5 8 Enumeration Values.
13580 * RM 3.5.7(17); Float Types: RM 3 5 7 17 Float Types.
13581 * RM 3.6.2(11); Multidimensional Arrays: RM 3 6 2 11 Multidimensional Arrays.
13582 * RM 9.6(30-31); Duration'Small: RM 9 6 30-31 Duration'Small.
13583 * RM 10.2.1(12); Consistent Representation: RM 10 2 1 12 Consistent Representation.
13584 * RM 11.4.1(19); Exception Information: RM 11 4 1 19 Exception Information.
13585 * RM 11.5(28); Suppression of Checks: RM 11 5 28 Suppression of Checks.
13586 * RM 13.1 (21-24); Representation Clauses: RM 13 1 21-24 Representation Clauses.
13587 * RM 13.2(6-8); Packed Types: RM 13 2 6-8 Packed Types.
13588 * RM 13.3(14-19); Address Clauses: RM 13 3 14-19 Address Clauses.
13589 * RM 13.3(29-35); Alignment Clauses: RM 13 3 29-35 Alignment Clauses.
13590 * RM 13.3(42-43); Size Clauses: RM 13 3 42-43 Size Clauses.
13591 * RM 13.3(50-56); Size Clauses: RM 13 3 50-56 Size Clauses.
13592 * RM 13.3(71-73); Component Size Clauses: RM 13 3 71-73 Component Size Clauses.
13593 * RM 13.4(9-10); Enumeration Representation Clauses: RM 13 4 9-10 Enumeration Representation Clauses.
13594 * RM 13.5.1(17-22); Record Representation Clauses: RM 13 5 1 17-22 Record Representation Clauses.
13595 * RM 13.5.2(5); Storage Place Attributes: RM 13 5 2 5 Storage Place Attributes.
13596 * RM 13.5.3(7-8); Bit Ordering: RM 13 5 3 7-8 Bit Ordering.
13597 * RM 13.7(37); Address as Private: RM 13 7 37 Address as Private.
13598 * RM 13.7.1(16); Address Operations: RM 13 7 1 16 Address Operations.
13599 * RM 13.9(14-17); Unchecked Conversion: RM 13 9 14-17 Unchecked Conversion.
13600 * RM 13.11(23-25); Implicit Heap Usage: RM 13 11 23-25 Implicit Heap Usage.
13601 * RM 13.11.2(17); Unchecked Deallocation: RM 13 11 2 17 Unchecked Deallocation.
13602 * RM 13.13.2(17); Stream Oriented Attributes: RM 13 13 2 17 Stream Oriented Attributes.
13603 * RM A.1(52); Names of Predefined Numeric Types: RM A 1 52 Names of Predefined Numeric Types.
13604 * RM A.3.2(49); Ada.Characters.Handling: RM A 3 2 49 Ada Characters Handling.
13605 * RM A.4.4(106); Bounded-Length String Handling: RM A 4 4 106 Bounded-Length String Handling.
13606 * RM A.5.2(46-47); Random Number Generation: RM A 5 2 46-47 Random Number Generation.
13607 * RM A.10.7(23); Get_Immediate: RM A 10 7 23 Get_Immediate.
13608 * RM B.1(39-41); Pragma Export: RM B 1 39-41 Pragma Export.
13609 * RM B.2(12-13); Package Interfaces: RM B 2 12-13 Package Interfaces.
13610 * RM B.3(63-71); Interfacing with C: RM B 3 63-71 Interfacing with C.
13611 * RM B.4(95-98); Interfacing with COBOL: RM B 4 95-98 Interfacing with COBOL.
13612 * RM B.5(22-26); Interfacing with Fortran: RM B 5 22-26 Interfacing with Fortran.
13613 * RM C.1(3-5); Access to Machine Operations: RM C 1 3-5 Access to Machine Operations.
13614 * RM C.1(10-16); Access to Machine Operations: RM C 1 10-16 Access to Machine Operations.
13615 * RM C.3(28); Interrupt Support: RM C 3 28 Interrupt Support.
13616 * RM C.3.1(20-21); Protected Procedure Handlers: RM C 3 1 20-21 Protected Procedure Handlers.
13617 * RM C.3.2(25); Package Interrupts: RM C 3 2 25 Package Interrupts.
13618 * RM C.4(14); Pre-elaboration Requirements: RM C 4 14 Pre-elaboration Requirements.
13619 * RM C.5(8); Pragma Discard_Names: RM C 5 8 Pragma Discard_Names.
13620 * RM C.7.2(30); The Package Task_Attributes: RM C 7 2 30 The Package Task_Attributes.
13621 * RM D.3(17); Locking Policies: RM D 3 17 Locking Policies.
13622 * RM D.4(16); Entry Queuing Policies: RM D 4 16 Entry Queuing Policies.
13623 * RM D.6(9-10); Preemptive Abort: RM D 6 9-10 Preemptive Abort.
13624 * RM D.7(21); Tasking Restrictions: RM D 7 21 Tasking Restrictions.
13625 * RM D.8(47-49); Monotonic Time: RM D 8 47-49 Monotonic Time.
13626 * RM E.5(28-29); Partition Communication Subsystem: RM E 5 28-29 Partition Communication Subsystem.
13627 * RM F(7); COBOL Support: RM F 7 COBOL Support.
13628 * RM F.1(2); Decimal Radix Support: RM F 1 2 Decimal Radix Support.
13629 * RM G; Numerics: RM G Numerics.
13630 * RM G.1.1(56-58); Complex Types: RM G 1 1 56-58 Complex Types.
13631 * RM G.1.2(49); Complex Elementary Functions: RM G 1 2 49 Complex Elementary Functions.
13632 * RM G.2.4(19); Accuracy Requirements: RM G 2 4 19 Accuracy Requirements.
13633 * RM G.2.6(15); Complex Arithmetic Accuracy: RM G 2 6 15 Complex Arithmetic Accuracy.
13634 * RM H.6(15/2); Pragma Partition_Elaboration_Policy: RM H 6 15/2 Pragma Partition_Elaboration_Policy.
13638 @node RM 1 1 3 20 Error Detection,RM 1 1 3 31 Child Units,,Implementation Advice
13639 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-1-1-3-20-error-detection}@anchor{20e}
13640 @section RM 1.1.3(20): Error Detection
13645 "If an implementation detects the use of an unsupported Specialized Needs
13646 Annex feature at run time, it should raise @code{Program_Error} if
13650 Not relevant. All specialized needs annex features are either supported,
13651 or diagnosed at compile time.
13653 @geindex Child Units
13655 @node RM 1 1 3 31 Child Units,RM 1 1 5 12 Bounded Errors,RM 1 1 3 20 Error Detection,Implementation Advice
13656 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-1-1-3-31-child-units}@anchor{20f}
13657 @section RM 1.1.3(31): Child Units
13662 "If an implementation wishes to provide implementation-defined
13663 extensions to the functionality of a language-defined library unit, it
13664 should normally do so by adding children to the library unit."
13669 @geindex Bounded errors
13671 @node RM 1 1 5 12 Bounded Errors,RM 2 8 16 Pragmas,RM 1 1 3 31 Child Units,Implementation Advice
13672 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-1-1-5-12-bounded-errors}@anchor{210}
13673 @section RM 1.1.5(12): Bounded Errors
13678 "If an implementation detects a bounded error or erroneous
13679 execution, it should raise @code{Program_Error}."
13682 Followed in all cases in which the implementation detects a bounded
13683 error or erroneous execution. Not all such situations are detected at
13688 @node RM 2 8 16 Pragmas,RM 2 8 17-19 Pragmas,RM 1 1 5 12 Bounded Errors,Implementation Advice
13689 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice id2}@anchor{211}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-2-8-16-pragmas}@anchor{212}
13690 @section RM 2.8(16): Pragmas
13695 "Normally, implementation-defined pragmas should have no semantic effect
13696 for error-free programs; that is, if the implementation-defined pragmas
13697 are removed from a working program, the program should still be legal,
13698 and should still have the same semantics."
13701 The following implementation defined pragmas are exceptions to this
13705 @multitable {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx} {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx}
13748 @emph{CPP_Constructor}
13764 @emph{Interface_Name}
13772 @emph{Machine_Attribute}
13780 @emph{Unimplemented_Unit}
13788 @emph{Unchecked_Union}
13797 In each of the above cases, it is essential to the purpose of the pragma
13798 that this advice not be followed. For details see
13799 @ref{7,,Implementation Defined Pragmas}.
13801 @node RM 2 8 17-19 Pragmas,RM 3 5 2 5 Alternative Character Sets,RM 2 8 16 Pragmas,Implementation Advice
13802 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-2-8-17-19-pragmas}@anchor{213}
13803 @section RM 2.8(17-19): Pragmas
13808 "Normally, an implementation should not define pragmas that can
13809 make an illegal program legal, except as follows:
13815 A pragma used to complete a declaration, such as a pragma @code{Import};
13818 A pragma used to configure the environment by adding, removing, or
13819 replacing @code{library_items}."
13823 See @ref{212,,RM 2.8(16); Pragmas}.
13825 @geindex Character Sets
13827 @geindex Alternative Character Sets
13829 @node RM 3 5 2 5 Alternative Character Sets,RM 3 5 4 28 Integer Types,RM 2 8 17-19 Pragmas,Implementation Advice
13830 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-3-5-2-5-alternative-character-sets}@anchor{214}
13831 @section RM 3.5.2(5): Alternative Character Sets
13836 "If an implementation supports a mode with alternative interpretations
13837 for @code{Character} and @code{Wide_Character}, the set of graphic
13838 characters of @code{Character} should nevertheless remain a proper
13839 subset of the set of graphic characters of @code{Wide_Character}. Any
13840 character set 'localizations' should be reflected in the results of
13841 the subprograms defined in the language-defined package
13842 @code{Characters.Handling} (see A.3) available in such a mode. In a mode with
13843 an alternative interpretation of @code{Character}, the implementation should
13844 also support a corresponding change in what is a legal
13845 @code{identifier_letter}."
13848 Not all wide character modes follow this advice, in particular the JIS
13849 and IEC modes reflect standard usage in Japan, and in these encoding,
13850 the upper half of the Latin-1 set is not part of the wide-character
13851 subset, since the most significant bit is used for wide character
13852 encoding. However, this only applies to the external forms. Internally
13853 there is no such restriction.
13855 @geindex Integer types
13857 @node RM 3 5 4 28 Integer Types,RM 3 5 4 29 Integer Types,RM 3 5 2 5 Alternative Character Sets,Implementation Advice
13858 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-3-5-4-28-integer-types}@anchor{215}
13859 @section RM 3.5.4(28): Integer Types
13864 "An implementation should support @code{Long_Integer} in addition to
13865 @code{Integer} if the target machine supports 32-bit (or longer)
13866 arithmetic. No other named integer subtypes are recommended for package
13867 @code{Standard}. Instead, appropriate named integer subtypes should be
13868 provided in the library package @code{Interfaces} (see B.2)."
13871 @code{Long_Integer} is supported. Other standard integer types are supported
13872 so this advice is not fully followed. These types
13873 are supported for convenient interface to C, and so that all hardware
13874 types of the machine are easily available.
13876 @node RM 3 5 4 29 Integer Types,RM 3 5 5 8 Enumeration Values,RM 3 5 4 28 Integer Types,Implementation Advice
13877 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-3-5-4-29-integer-types}@anchor{216}
13878 @section RM 3.5.4(29): Integer Types
13883 "An implementation for a two's complement machine should support
13884 modular types with a binary modulus up to @code{System.Max_Int*2+2}. An
13885 implementation should support a non-binary modules up to @code{Integer'Last}."
13890 @geindex Enumeration values
13892 @node RM 3 5 5 8 Enumeration Values,RM 3 5 7 17 Float Types,RM 3 5 4 29 Integer Types,Implementation Advice
13893 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-3-5-5-8-enumeration-values}@anchor{217}
13894 @section RM 3.5.5(8): Enumeration Values
13899 "For the evaluation of a call on @code{S'Pos} for an enumeration
13900 subtype, if the value of the operand does not correspond to the internal
13901 code for any enumeration literal of its type (perhaps due to an
13902 un-initialized variable), then the implementation should raise
13903 @code{Program_Error}. This is particularly important for enumeration
13904 types with noncontiguous internal codes specified by an
13905 enumeration_representation_clause."
13910 @geindex Float types
13912 @node RM 3 5 7 17 Float Types,RM 3 6 2 11 Multidimensional Arrays,RM 3 5 5 8 Enumeration Values,Implementation Advice
13913 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-3-5-7-17-float-types}@anchor{218}
13914 @section RM 3.5.7(17): Float Types
13919 "An implementation should support @code{Long_Float} in addition to
13920 @code{Float} if the target machine supports 11 or more digits of
13921 precision. No other named floating point subtypes are recommended for
13922 package @code{Standard}. Instead, appropriate named floating point subtypes
13923 should be provided in the library package @code{Interfaces} (see B.2)."
13926 @code{Short_Float} and @code{Long_Long_Float} are also provided. The
13927 former provides improved compatibility with other implementations
13928 supporting this type. The latter corresponds to the highest precision
13929 floating-point type supported by the hardware. On most machines, this
13930 will be the same as @code{Long_Float}, but on some machines, it will
13931 correspond to the IEEE extended form. The notable case is all ia32
13932 (x86) implementations, where @code{Long_Long_Float} corresponds to
13933 the 80-bit extended precision format supported in hardware on this
13934 processor. Note that the 128-bit format on SPARC is not supported,
13935 since this is a software rather than a hardware format.
13937 @geindex Multidimensional arrays
13940 @geindex multidimensional
13942 @node RM 3 6 2 11 Multidimensional Arrays,RM 9 6 30-31 Duration'Small,RM 3 5 7 17 Float Types,Implementation Advice
13943 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-3-6-2-11-multidimensional-arrays}@anchor{219}
13944 @section RM 3.6.2(11): Multidimensional Arrays
13949 "An implementation should normally represent multidimensional arrays in
13950 row-major order, consistent with the notation used for multidimensional
13951 array aggregates (see 4.3.3). However, if a pragma @code{Convention}
13952 (@code{Fortran}, ...) applies to a multidimensional array type, then
13953 column-major order should be used instead (see B.5, @emph{Interfacing with Fortran})."
13958 @geindex Duration'Small
13960 @node RM 9 6 30-31 Duration'Small,RM 10 2 1 12 Consistent Representation,RM 3 6 2 11 Multidimensional Arrays,Implementation Advice
13961 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-9-6-30-31-duration-small}@anchor{21a}
13962 @section RM 9.6(30-31): Duration'Small
13967 "Whenever possible in an implementation, the value of @code{Duration'Small}
13968 should be no greater than 100 microseconds."
13971 Followed. (@code{Duration'Small} = 10**(-9)).
13975 "The time base for @code{delay_relative_statements} should be monotonic;
13976 it need not be the same time base as used for @code{Calendar.Clock}."
13981 @node RM 10 2 1 12 Consistent Representation,RM 11 4 1 19 Exception Information,RM 9 6 30-31 Duration'Small,Implementation Advice
13982 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-10-2-1-12-consistent-representation}@anchor{21b}
13983 @section RM 10.2.1(12): Consistent Representation
13988 "In an implementation, a type declared in a pre-elaborated package should
13989 have the same representation in every elaboration of a given version of
13990 the package, whether the elaborations occur in distinct executions of
13991 the same program, or in executions of distinct programs or partitions
13992 that include the given version."
13995 Followed, except in the case of tagged types. Tagged types involve
13996 implicit pointers to a local copy of a dispatch table, and these pointers
13997 have representations which thus depend on a particular elaboration of the
13998 package. It is not easy to see how it would be possible to follow this
13999 advice without severely impacting efficiency of execution.
14001 @geindex Exception information
14003 @node RM 11 4 1 19 Exception Information,RM 11 5 28 Suppression of Checks,RM 10 2 1 12 Consistent Representation,Implementation Advice
14004 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-11-4-1-19-exception-information}@anchor{21c}
14005 @section RM 11.4.1(19): Exception Information
14010 "@code{Exception_Message} by default and @code{Exception_Information}
14011 should produce information useful for
14012 debugging. @code{Exception_Message} should be short, about one
14013 line. @code{Exception_Information} can be long. @code{Exception_Message}
14014 should not include the
14015 @code{Exception_Name}. @code{Exception_Information} should include both
14016 the @code{Exception_Name} and the @code{Exception_Message}."
14019 Followed. For each exception that doesn't have a specified
14020 @code{Exception_Message}, the compiler generates one containing the location
14021 of the raise statement. This location has the form 'file_name:line', where
14022 file_name is the short file name (without path information) and line is the line
14023 number in the file. Note that in the case of the Zero Cost Exception
14024 mechanism, these messages become redundant with the Exception_Information that
14025 contains a full backtrace of the calling sequence, so they are disabled.
14026 To disable explicitly the generation of the source location message, use the
14027 Pragma @code{Discard_Names}.
14029 @geindex Suppression of checks
14032 @geindex suppression of
14034 @node RM 11 5 28 Suppression of Checks,RM 13 1 21-24 Representation Clauses,RM 11 4 1 19 Exception Information,Implementation Advice
14035 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-11-5-28-suppression-of-checks}@anchor{21d}
14036 @section RM 11.5(28): Suppression of Checks
14041 "The implementation should minimize the code executed for checks that
14042 have been suppressed."
14047 @geindex Representation clauses
14049 @node RM 13 1 21-24 Representation Clauses,RM 13 2 6-8 Packed Types,RM 11 5 28 Suppression of Checks,Implementation Advice
14050 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-13-1-21-24-representation-clauses}@anchor{21e}
14051 @section RM 13.1 (21-24): Representation Clauses
14056 "The recommended level of support for all representation items is
14057 qualified as follows:
14059 An implementation need not support representation items containing
14060 nonstatic expressions, except that an implementation should support a
14061 representation item for a given entity if each nonstatic expression in
14062 the representation item is a name that statically denotes a constant
14063 declared before the entity."
14066 Followed. In fact, GNAT goes beyond the recommended level of support
14067 by allowing nonstatic expressions in some representation clauses even
14068 without the need to declare constants initialized with the values of
14075 for Y'Address use X'Address;>>
14078 "An implementation need not support a specification for the `@w{`}Size`@w{`}
14079 for a given composite subtype, nor the size or storage place for an
14080 object (including a component) of a given composite subtype, unless the
14081 constraints on the subtype and its composite subcomponents (if any) are
14082 all static constraints."
14085 Followed. Size Clauses are not permitted on nonstatic components, as
14090 "An aliased component, or a component whose type is by-reference, should
14091 always be allocated at an addressable location."
14096 @geindex Packed types
14098 @node RM 13 2 6-8 Packed Types,RM 13 3 14-19 Address Clauses,RM 13 1 21-24 Representation Clauses,Implementation Advice
14099 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-13-2-6-8-packed-types}@anchor{21f}
14100 @section RM 13.2(6-8): Packed Types
14105 "If a type is packed, then the implementation should try to minimize
14106 storage allocated to objects of the type, possibly at the expense of
14107 speed of accessing components, subject to reasonable complexity in
14108 addressing calculations.
14110 The recommended level of support pragma @code{Pack} is:
14112 For a packed record type, the components should be packed as tightly as
14113 possible subject to the Sizes of the component subtypes, and subject to
14114 any @emph{record_representation_clause} that applies to the type; the
14115 implementation may, but need not, reorder components or cross aligned
14116 word boundaries to improve the packing. A component whose @code{Size} is
14117 greater than the word size may be allocated an integral number of words."
14120 Followed. Tight packing of arrays is supported for all component sizes
14121 up to 64-bits. If the array component size is 1 (that is to say, if
14122 the component is a boolean type or an enumeration type with two values)
14123 then values of the type are implicitly initialized to zero. This
14124 happens both for objects of the packed type, and for objects that have a
14125 subcomponent of the packed type.
14129 "An implementation should support Address clauses for imported
14135 @geindex Address clauses
14137 @node RM 13 3 14-19 Address Clauses,RM 13 3 29-35 Alignment Clauses,RM 13 2 6-8 Packed Types,Implementation Advice
14138 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-13-3-14-19-address-clauses}@anchor{220}
14139 @section RM 13.3(14-19): Address Clauses
14144 "For an array @code{X}, @code{X'Address} should point at the first
14145 component of the array, and not at the array bounds."
14152 "The recommended level of support for the @code{Address} attribute is:
14154 @code{X'Address} should produce a useful result if @code{X} is an
14155 object that is aliased or of a by-reference type, or is an entity whose
14156 @code{Address} has been specified."
14159 Followed. A valid address will be produced even if none of those
14160 conditions have been met. If necessary, the object is forced into
14161 memory to ensure the address is valid.
14165 "An implementation should support @code{Address} clauses for imported
14173 "Objects (including subcomponents) that are aliased or of a by-reference
14174 type should be allocated on storage element boundaries."
14181 "If the @code{Address} of an object is specified, or it is imported or exported,
14182 then the implementation should not perform optimizations based on
14183 assumptions of no aliases."
14188 @geindex Alignment clauses
14190 @node RM 13 3 29-35 Alignment Clauses,RM 13 3 42-43 Size Clauses,RM 13 3 14-19 Address Clauses,Implementation Advice
14191 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-13-3-29-35-alignment-clauses}@anchor{221}
14192 @section RM 13.3(29-35): Alignment Clauses
14197 "The recommended level of support for the @code{Alignment} attribute for
14200 An implementation should support specified Alignments that are factors
14201 and multiples of the number of storage elements per word, subject to the
14209 "An implementation need not support specified Alignments for
14210 combinations of Sizes and Alignments that cannot be easily
14211 loaded and stored by available machine instructions."
14218 "An implementation need not support specified Alignments that are
14219 greater than the maximum @code{Alignment} the implementation ever returns by
14227 "The recommended level of support for the @code{Alignment} attribute for
14230 Same as above, for subtypes, but in addition:"
14237 "For stand-alone library-level objects of statically constrained
14238 subtypes, the implementation should support all alignments
14239 supported by the target linker. For example, page alignment is likely to
14240 be supported for such objects, but not for subtypes."
14245 @geindex Size clauses
14247 @node RM 13 3 42-43 Size Clauses,RM 13 3 50-56 Size Clauses,RM 13 3 29-35 Alignment Clauses,Implementation Advice
14248 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-13-3-42-43-size-clauses}@anchor{222}
14249 @section RM 13.3(42-43): Size Clauses
14254 "The recommended level of support for the @code{Size} attribute of
14257 A @code{Size} clause should be supported for an object if the specified
14258 @code{Size} is at least as large as its subtype's @code{Size}, and
14259 corresponds to a size in storage elements that is a multiple of the
14260 object's @code{Alignment} (if the @code{Alignment} is nonzero)."
14265 @node RM 13 3 50-56 Size Clauses,RM 13 3 71-73 Component Size Clauses,RM 13 3 42-43 Size Clauses,Implementation Advice
14266 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-13-3-50-56-size-clauses}@anchor{223}
14267 @section RM 13.3(50-56): Size Clauses
14272 "If the @code{Size} of a subtype is specified, and allows for efficient
14273 independent addressability (see 9.10) on the target architecture, then
14274 the @code{Size} of the following objects of the subtype should equal the
14275 @code{Size} of the subtype:
14277 Aliased objects (including components)."
14284 "@cite{Size} clause on a composite subtype should not affect the
14285 internal layout of components."
14288 Followed. But note that this can be overridden by use of the implementation
14289 pragma Implicit_Packing in the case of packed arrays.
14293 "The recommended level of support for the @code{Size} attribute of subtypes is:
14295 The @code{Size} (if not specified) of a static discrete or fixed point
14296 subtype should be the number of bits needed to represent each value
14297 belonging to the subtype using an unbiased representation, leaving space
14298 for a sign bit only if the subtype contains negative values. If such a
14299 subtype is a first subtype, then an implementation should support a
14300 specified @code{Size} for it that reflects this representation."
14307 "For a subtype implemented with levels of indirection, the @code{Size}
14308 should include the size of the pointers, but not the size of what they
14314 @geindex Component_Size clauses
14316 @node RM 13 3 71-73 Component Size Clauses,RM 13 4 9-10 Enumeration Representation Clauses,RM 13 3 50-56 Size Clauses,Implementation Advice
14317 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-13-3-71-73-component-size-clauses}@anchor{224}
14318 @section RM 13.3(71-73): Component Size Clauses
14323 "The recommended level of support for the @code{Component_Size}
14326 An implementation need not support specified @code{Component_Sizes} that are
14327 less than the @code{Size} of the component subtype."
14334 "An implementation should support specified Component_Sizes that
14335 are factors and multiples of the word size. For such
14336 Component_Sizes, the array should contain no gaps between
14337 components. For other Component_Sizes (if supported), the array
14338 should contain no gaps between components when packing is also
14339 specified; the implementation should forbid this combination in cases
14340 where it cannot support a no-gaps representation."
14345 @geindex Enumeration representation clauses
14347 @geindex Representation clauses
14348 @geindex enumeration
14350 @node RM 13 4 9-10 Enumeration Representation Clauses,RM 13 5 1 17-22 Record Representation Clauses,RM 13 3 71-73 Component Size Clauses,Implementation Advice
14351 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-13-4-9-10-enumeration-representation-clauses}@anchor{225}
14352 @section RM 13.4(9-10): Enumeration Representation Clauses
14357 "The recommended level of support for enumeration representation clauses
14360 An implementation need not support enumeration representation clauses
14361 for boolean types, but should at minimum support the internal codes in
14362 the range @code{System.Min_Int .. System.Max_Int}."
14367 @geindex Record representation clauses
14369 @geindex Representation clauses
14372 @node RM 13 5 1 17-22 Record Representation Clauses,RM 13 5 2 5 Storage Place Attributes,RM 13 4 9-10 Enumeration Representation Clauses,Implementation Advice
14373 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-13-5-1-17-22-record-representation-clauses}@anchor{226}
14374 @section RM 13.5.1(17-22): Record Representation Clauses
14379 "The recommended level of support for
14380 @emph{record_representation_clause}s is:
14382 An implementation should support storage places that can be extracted
14383 with a load, mask, shift sequence of machine code, and set with a load,
14384 shift, mask, store sequence, given the available machine instructions
14385 and run-time model."
14392 "A storage place should be supported if its size is equal to the
14393 @code{Size} of the component subtype, and it starts and ends on a
14394 boundary that obeys the @code{Alignment} of the component subtype."
14401 "If the default bit ordering applies to the declaration of a given type,
14402 then for a component whose subtype's @code{Size} is less than the word
14403 size, any storage place that does not cross an aligned word boundary
14404 should be supported."
14411 "An implementation may reserve a storage place for the tag field of a
14412 tagged type, and disallow other components from overlapping that place."
14415 Followed. The storage place for the tag field is the beginning of the tagged
14416 record, and its size is Address'Size. GNAT will reject an explicit component
14417 clause for the tag field.
14421 "An implementation need not support a @emph{component_clause} for a
14422 component of an extension part if the storage place is not after the
14423 storage places of all components of the parent type, whether or not
14424 those storage places had been specified."
14427 Followed. The above advice on record representation clauses is followed,
14428 and all mentioned features are implemented.
14430 @geindex Storage place attributes
14432 @node RM 13 5 2 5 Storage Place Attributes,RM 13 5 3 7-8 Bit Ordering,RM 13 5 1 17-22 Record Representation Clauses,Implementation Advice
14433 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-13-5-2-5-storage-place-attributes}@anchor{227}
14434 @section RM 13.5.2(5): Storage Place Attributes
14439 "If a component is represented using some form of pointer (such as an
14440 offset) to the actual data of the component, and this data is contiguous
14441 with the rest of the object, then the storage place attributes should
14442 reflect the place of the actual data, not the pointer. If a component is
14443 allocated discontinuously from the rest of the object, then a warning
14444 should be generated upon reference to one of its storage place
14448 Followed. There are no such components in GNAT.
14450 @geindex Bit ordering
14452 @node RM 13 5 3 7-8 Bit Ordering,RM 13 7 37 Address as Private,RM 13 5 2 5 Storage Place Attributes,Implementation Advice
14453 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-13-5-3-7-8-bit-ordering}@anchor{228}
14454 @section RM 13.5.3(7-8): Bit Ordering
14459 "The recommended level of support for the non-default bit ordering is:
14461 If @code{Word_Size} = @code{Storage_Unit}, then the implementation
14462 should support the non-default bit ordering in addition to the default
14466 Followed. Word size does not equal storage size in this implementation.
14467 Thus non-default bit ordering is not supported.
14470 @geindex as private type
14472 @node RM 13 7 37 Address as Private,RM 13 7 1 16 Address Operations,RM 13 5 3 7-8 Bit Ordering,Implementation Advice
14473 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-13-7-37-address-as-private}@anchor{229}
14474 @section RM 13.7(37): Address as Private
14479 "@cite{Address} should be of a private type."
14484 @geindex Operations
14485 @geindex on `@w{`}Address`@w{`}
14488 @geindex operations of
14490 @node RM 13 7 1 16 Address Operations,RM 13 9 14-17 Unchecked Conversion,RM 13 7 37 Address as Private,Implementation Advice
14491 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-13-7-1-16-address-operations}@anchor{22a}
14492 @section RM 13.7.1(16): Address Operations
14497 "Operations in @code{System} and its children should reflect the target
14498 environment semantics as closely as is reasonable. For example, on most
14499 machines, it makes sense for address arithmetic to 'wrap around'.
14500 Operations that do not make sense should raise @code{Program_Error}."
14503 Followed. Address arithmetic is modular arithmetic that wraps around. No
14504 operation raises @code{Program_Error}, since all operations make sense.
14506 @geindex Unchecked conversion
14508 @node RM 13 9 14-17 Unchecked Conversion,RM 13 11 23-25 Implicit Heap Usage,RM 13 7 1 16 Address Operations,Implementation Advice
14509 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-13-9-14-17-unchecked-conversion}@anchor{22b}
14510 @section RM 13.9(14-17): Unchecked Conversion
14515 "The @code{Size} of an array object should not include its bounds; hence,
14516 the bounds should not be part of the converted data."
14523 "The implementation should not generate unnecessary run-time checks to
14524 ensure that the representation of @code{S} is a representation of the
14525 target type. It should take advantage of the permission to return by
14526 reference when possible. Restrictions on unchecked conversions should be
14527 avoided unless required by the target environment."
14530 Followed. There are no restrictions on unchecked conversion. A warning is
14531 generated if the source and target types do not have the same size since
14532 the semantics in this case may be target dependent.
14536 "The recommended level of support for unchecked conversions is:
14538 Unchecked conversions should be supported and should be reversible in
14539 the cases where this clause defines the result. To enable meaningful use
14540 of unchecked conversion, a contiguous representation should be used for
14541 elementary subtypes, for statically constrained array subtypes whose
14542 component subtype is one of the subtypes described in this paragraph,
14543 and for record subtypes without discriminants whose component subtypes
14544 are described in this paragraph."
14549 @geindex Heap usage
14552 @node RM 13 11 23-25 Implicit Heap Usage,RM 13 11 2 17 Unchecked Deallocation,RM 13 9 14-17 Unchecked Conversion,Implementation Advice
14553 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-13-11-23-25-implicit-heap-usage}@anchor{22c}
14554 @section RM 13.11(23-25): Implicit Heap Usage
14559 "An implementation should document any cases in which it dynamically
14560 allocates heap storage for a purpose other than the evaluation of an
14564 Followed, the only other points at which heap storage is dynamically
14565 allocated are as follows:
14571 At initial elaboration time, to allocate dynamically sized global
14575 To allocate space for a task when a task is created.
14578 To extend the secondary stack dynamically when needed. The secondary
14579 stack is used for returning variable length results.
14585 "A default (implementation-provided) storage pool for an
14586 access-to-constant type should not have overhead to support deallocation of
14587 individual objects."
14594 "A storage pool for an anonymous access type should be created at the
14595 point of an allocator for the type, and be reclaimed when the designated
14596 object becomes inaccessible."
14601 @geindex Unchecked deallocation
14603 @node RM 13 11 2 17 Unchecked Deallocation,RM 13 13 2 17 Stream Oriented Attributes,RM 13 11 23-25 Implicit Heap Usage,Implementation Advice
14604 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-13-11-2-17-unchecked-deallocation}@anchor{22d}
14605 @section RM 13.11.2(17): Unchecked Deallocation
14610 "For a standard storage pool, @code{Free} should actually reclaim the
14616 @geindex Stream oriented attributes
14618 @node RM 13 13 2 17 Stream Oriented Attributes,RM A 1 52 Names of Predefined Numeric Types,RM 13 11 2 17 Unchecked Deallocation,Implementation Advice
14619 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-13-13-2-17-stream-oriented-attributes}@anchor{22e}
14620 @section RM 13.13.2(17): Stream Oriented Attributes
14625 "If a stream element is the same size as a storage element, then the
14626 normal in-memory representation should be used by @code{Read} and
14627 @code{Write} for scalar objects. Otherwise, @code{Read} and @code{Write}
14628 should use the smallest number of stream elements needed to represent
14629 all values in the base range of the scalar type."
14632 Followed. By default, GNAT uses the interpretation suggested by AI-195,
14633 which specifies using the size of the first subtype.
14634 However, such an implementation is based on direct binary
14635 representations and is therefore target- and endianness-dependent.
14636 To address this issue, GNAT also supplies an alternate implementation
14637 of the stream attributes @code{Read} and @code{Write},
14638 which uses the target-independent XDR standard representation
14641 @geindex XDR representation
14643 @geindex Read attribute
14645 @geindex Write attribute
14647 @geindex Stream oriented attributes
14649 The XDR implementation is provided as an alternative body of the
14650 @code{System.Stream_Attributes} package, in the file
14651 @code{s-stratt-xdr.adb} in the GNAT library.
14652 There is no @code{s-stratt-xdr.ads} file.
14653 In order to install the XDR implementation, do the following:
14659 Replace the default implementation of the
14660 @code{System.Stream_Attributes} package with the XDR implementation.
14661 For example on a Unix platform issue the commands:
14664 $ mv s-stratt.adb s-stratt-default.adb
14665 $ mv s-stratt-xdr.adb s-stratt.adb
14669 Rebuild the GNAT run-time library as documented in
14670 the @emph{GNAT and Libraries} section of the @cite{GNAT User's Guide}.
14673 @node RM A 1 52 Names of Predefined Numeric Types,RM A 3 2 49 Ada Characters Handling,RM 13 13 2 17 Stream Oriented Attributes,Implementation Advice
14674 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-a-1-52-names-of-predefined-numeric-types}@anchor{22f}
14675 @section RM A.1(52): Names of Predefined Numeric Types
14680 "If an implementation provides additional named predefined integer types,
14681 then the names should end with @code{Integer} as in
14682 @code{Long_Integer}. If an implementation provides additional named
14683 predefined floating point types, then the names should end with
14684 @code{Float} as in @code{Long_Float}."
14689 @geindex Ada.Characters.Handling
14691 @node RM A 3 2 49 Ada Characters Handling,RM A 4 4 106 Bounded-Length String Handling,RM A 1 52 Names of Predefined Numeric Types,Implementation Advice
14692 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-a-3-2-49-ada-characters-handling}@anchor{230}
14693 @section RM A.3.2(49): @code{Ada.Characters.Handling}
14698 "If an implementation provides a localized definition of @code{Character}
14699 or @code{Wide_Character}, then the effects of the subprograms in
14700 @code{Characters.Handling} should reflect the localizations.
14704 Followed. GNAT provides no such localized definitions.
14706 @geindex Bounded-length strings
14708 @node RM A 4 4 106 Bounded-Length String Handling,RM A 5 2 46-47 Random Number Generation,RM A 3 2 49 Ada Characters Handling,Implementation Advice
14709 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-a-4-4-106-bounded-length-string-handling}@anchor{231}
14710 @section RM A.4.4(106): Bounded-Length String Handling
14715 "Bounded string objects should not be implemented by implicit pointers
14716 and dynamic allocation."
14719 Followed. No implicit pointers or dynamic allocation are used.
14721 @geindex Random number generation
14723 @node RM A 5 2 46-47 Random Number Generation,RM A 10 7 23 Get_Immediate,RM A 4 4 106 Bounded-Length String Handling,Implementation Advice
14724 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-a-5-2-46-47-random-number-generation}@anchor{232}
14725 @section RM A.5.2(46-47): Random Number Generation
14730 "Any storage associated with an object of type @code{Generator} should be
14731 reclaimed on exit from the scope of the object."
14738 "If the generator period is sufficiently long in relation to the number
14739 of distinct initiator values, then each possible value of
14740 @code{Initiator} passed to @code{Reset} should initiate a sequence of
14741 random numbers that does not, in a practical sense, overlap the sequence
14742 initiated by any other value. If this is not possible, then the mapping
14743 between initiator values and generator states should be a rapidly
14744 varying function of the initiator value."
14747 Followed. The generator period is sufficiently long for the first
14748 condition here to hold true.
14750 @geindex Get_Immediate
14752 @node RM A 10 7 23 Get_Immediate,RM B 1 39-41 Pragma Export,RM A 5 2 46-47 Random Number Generation,Implementation Advice
14753 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-a-10-7-23-get-immediate}@anchor{233}
14754 @section RM A.10.7(23): @code{Get_Immediate}
14759 "The @code{Get_Immediate} procedures should be implemented with
14760 unbuffered input. For a device such as a keyboard, input should be
14761 available if a key has already been typed, whereas for a disk
14762 file, input should always be available except at end of file. For a file
14763 associated with a keyboard-like device, any line-editing features of the
14764 underlying operating system should be disabled during the execution of
14765 @code{Get_Immediate}."
14768 Followed on all targets except VxWorks. For VxWorks, there is no way to
14769 provide this functionality that does not result in the input buffer being
14770 flushed before the @code{Get_Immediate} call. A special unit
14771 @code{Interfaces.Vxworks.IO} is provided that contains routines to enable
14772 this functionality.
14776 @node RM B 1 39-41 Pragma Export,RM B 2 12-13 Package Interfaces,RM A 10 7 23 Get_Immediate,Implementation Advice
14777 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-b-1-39-41-pragma-export}@anchor{234}
14778 @section RM B.1(39-41): Pragma @code{Export}
14783 "If an implementation supports pragma @code{Export} to a given language,
14784 then it should also allow the main subprogram to be written in that
14785 language. It should support some mechanism for invoking the elaboration
14786 of the Ada library units included in the system, and for invoking the
14787 finalization of the environment task. On typical systems, the
14788 recommended mechanism is to provide two subprograms whose link names are
14789 @code{adainit} and @code{adafinal}. @code{adainit} should contain the
14790 elaboration code for library units. @code{adafinal} should contain the
14791 finalization code. These subprograms should have no effect the second
14792 and subsequent time they are called."
14799 "Automatic elaboration of pre-elaborated packages should be
14800 provided when pragma @code{Export} is supported."
14803 Followed when the main program is in Ada. If the main program is in a
14804 foreign language, then
14805 @code{adainit} must be called to elaborate pre-elaborated
14810 "For each supported convention @emph{L} other than @code{Intrinsic}, an
14811 implementation should support @code{Import} and @code{Export} pragmas
14812 for objects of @emph{L}-compatible types and for subprograms, and pragma
14813 @cite{Convention} for @emph{L}-eligible types and for subprograms,
14814 presuming the other language has corresponding features. Pragma
14815 @code{Convention} need not be supported for scalar types."
14820 @geindex Package Interfaces
14822 @geindex Interfaces
14824 @node RM B 2 12-13 Package Interfaces,RM B 3 63-71 Interfacing with C,RM B 1 39-41 Pragma Export,Implementation Advice
14825 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-b-2-12-13-package-interfaces}@anchor{235}
14826 @section RM B.2(12-13): Package @code{Interfaces}
14831 "For each implementation-defined convention identifier, there should be a
14832 child package of package Interfaces with the corresponding name. This
14833 package should contain any declarations that would be useful for
14834 interfacing to the language (implementation) represented by the
14835 convention. Any declarations useful for interfacing to any language on
14836 the given hardware architecture should be provided directly in
14837 @code{Interfaces}."
14844 "An implementation supporting an interface to C, COBOL, or Fortran should
14845 provide the corresponding package or packages described in the following
14849 Followed. GNAT provides all the packages described in this section.
14852 @geindex interfacing with
14854 @node RM B 3 63-71 Interfacing with C,RM B 4 95-98 Interfacing with COBOL,RM B 2 12-13 Package Interfaces,Implementation Advice
14855 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-b-3-63-71-interfacing-with-c}@anchor{236}
14856 @section RM B.3(63-71): Interfacing with C
14861 "An implementation should support the following interface correspondences
14862 between Ada and C."
14869 "An Ada procedure corresponds to a void-returning C function."
14876 "An Ada function corresponds to a non-void C function."
14883 "An Ada @code{in} scalar parameter is passed as a scalar argument to a C
14891 "An Ada @code{in} parameter of an access-to-object type with designated
14892 type @code{T} is passed as a @code{t*} argument to a C function,
14893 where @code{t} is the C type corresponding to the Ada type @code{T}."
14900 "An Ada access @code{T} parameter, or an Ada @code{out} or @code{in out}
14901 parameter of an elementary type @code{T}, is passed as a @code{t*}
14902 argument to a C function, where @code{t} is the C type corresponding to
14903 the Ada type @code{T}. In the case of an elementary @code{out} or
14904 @code{in out} parameter, a pointer to a temporary copy is used to
14905 preserve by-copy semantics."
14912 "An Ada parameter of a record type @code{T}, of any mode, is passed as a
14913 @code{t*} argument to a C function, where @code{t} is the C
14914 structure corresponding to the Ada type @code{T}."
14917 Followed. This convention may be overridden by the use of the C_Pass_By_Copy
14918 pragma, or Convention, or by explicitly specifying the mechanism for a given
14919 call using an extended import or export pragma.
14923 "An Ada parameter of an array type with component type @code{T}, of any
14924 mode, is passed as a @code{t*} argument to a C function, where
14925 @code{t} is the C type corresponding to the Ada type @code{T}."
14932 "An Ada parameter of an access-to-subprogram type is passed as a pointer
14933 to a C function whose prototype corresponds to the designated
14934 subprogram's specification."
14940 @geindex interfacing with
14942 @node RM B 4 95-98 Interfacing with COBOL,RM B 5 22-26 Interfacing with Fortran,RM B 3 63-71 Interfacing with C,Implementation Advice
14943 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-b-4-95-98-interfacing-with-cobol}@anchor{237}
14944 @section RM B.4(95-98): Interfacing with COBOL
14949 "An Ada implementation should support the following interface
14950 correspondences between Ada and COBOL."
14957 "An Ada access @code{T} parameter is passed as a @code{BY REFERENCE} data item of
14958 the COBOL type corresponding to @code{T}."
14965 "An Ada in scalar parameter is passed as a @code{BY CONTENT} data item of
14966 the corresponding COBOL type."
14973 "Any other Ada parameter is passed as a @code{BY REFERENCE} data item of the
14974 COBOL type corresponding to the Ada parameter type; for scalars, a local
14975 copy is used if necessary to ensure by-copy semantics."
14981 @geindex interfacing with
14983 @node RM B 5 22-26 Interfacing with Fortran,RM C 1 3-5 Access to Machine Operations,RM B 4 95-98 Interfacing with COBOL,Implementation Advice
14984 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-b-5-22-26-interfacing-with-fortran}@anchor{238}
14985 @section RM B.5(22-26): Interfacing with Fortran
14990 "An Ada implementation should support the following interface
14991 correspondences between Ada and Fortran:"
14998 "An Ada procedure corresponds to a Fortran subroutine."
15005 "An Ada function corresponds to a Fortran function."
15012 "An Ada parameter of an elementary, array, or record type @code{T} is
15013 passed as a @code{T} argument to a Fortran procedure, where @code{T} is
15014 the Fortran type corresponding to the Ada type @code{T}, and where the
15015 INTENT attribute of the corresponding dummy argument matches the Ada
15016 formal parameter mode; the Fortran implementation's parameter passing
15017 conventions are used. For elementary types, a local copy is used if
15018 necessary to ensure by-copy semantics."
15025 "An Ada parameter of an access-to-subprogram type is passed as a
15026 reference to a Fortran procedure whose interface corresponds to the
15027 designated subprogram's specification."
15032 @geindex Machine operations
15034 @node RM C 1 3-5 Access to Machine Operations,RM C 1 10-16 Access to Machine Operations,RM B 5 22-26 Interfacing with Fortran,Implementation Advice
15035 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-c-1-3-5-access-to-machine-operations}@anchor{239}
15036 @section RM C.1(3-5): Access to Machine Operations
15041 "The machine code or intrinsic support should allow access to all
15042 operations normally available to assembly language programmers for the
15043 target environment, including privileged instructions, if any."
15050 "The interfacing pragmas (see Annex B) should support interface to
15051 assembler; the default assembler should be associated with the
15052 convention identifier @code{Assembler}."
15059 "If an entity is exported to assembly language, then the implementation
15060 should allocate it at an addressable location, and should ensure that it
15061 is retained by the linking process, even if not otherwise referenced
15062 from the Ada code. The implementation should assume that any call to a
15063 machine code or assembler subprogram is allowed to read or update every
15064 object that is specified as exported."
15069 @node RM C 1 10-16 Access to Machine Operations,RM C 3 28 Interrupt Support,RM C 1 3-5 Access to Machine Operations,Implementation Advice
15070 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-c-1-10-16-access-to-machine-operations}@anchor{23a}
15071 @section RM C.1(10-16): Access to Machine Operations
15076 "The implementation should ensure that little or no overhead is
15077 associated with calling intrinsic and machine-code subprograms."
15080 Followed for both intrinsics and machine-code subprograms.
15084 "It is recommended that intrinsic subprograms be provided for convenient
15085 access to any machine operations that provide special capabilities or
15086 efficiency and that are not otherwise available through the language
15090 Followed. A full set of machine operation intrinsic subprograms is provided.
15094 "Atomic read-modify-write operations---e.g., test and set, compare and
15095 swap, decrement and test, enqueue/dequeue."
15098 Followed on any target supporting such operations.
15102 "Standard numeric functions---e.g.:, sin, log."
15105 Followed on any target supporting such operations.
15109 "String manipulation operations---e.g.:, translate and test."
15112 Followed on any target supporting such operations.
15116 "Vector operations---e.g.:, compare vector against thresholds."
15119 Followed on any target supporting such operations.
15123 "Direct operations on I/O ports."
15126 Followed on any target supporting such operations.
15128 @geindex Interrupt support
15130 @node RM C 3 28 Interrupt Support,RM C 3 1 20-21 Protected Procedure Handlers,RM C 1 10-16 Access to Machine Operations,Implementation Advice
15131 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-c-3-28-interrupt-support}@anchor{23b}
15132 @section RM C.3(28): Interrupt Support
15137 "If the @code{Ceiling_Locking} policy is not in effect, the
15138 implementation should provide means for the application to specify which
15139 interrupts are to be blocked during protected actions, if the underlying
15140 system allows for a finer-grain control of interrupt blocking."
15143 Followed. The underlying system does not allow for finer-grain control
15144 of interrupt blocking.
15146 @geindex Protected procedure handlers
15148 @node RM C 3 1 20-21 Protected Procedure Handlers,RM C 3 2 25 Package Interrupts,RM C 3 28 Interrupt Support,Implementation Advice
15149 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-c-3-1-20-21-protected-procedure-handlers}@anchor{23c}
15150 @section RM C.3.1(20-21): Protected Procedure Handlers
15155 "Whenever possible, the implementation should allow interrupt handlers to
15156 be called directly by the hardware."
15159 Followed on any target where the underlying operating system permits
15164 "Whenever practical, violations of any
15165 implementation-defined restrictions should be detected before run time."
15168 Followed. Compile time warnings are given when possible.
15170 @geindex Package `@w{`}Interrupts`@w{`}
15172 @geindex Interrupts
15174 @node RM C 3 2 25 Package Interrupts,RM C 4 14 Pre-elaboration Requirements,RM C 3 1 20-21 Protected Procedure Handlers,Implementation Advice
15175 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-c-3-2-25-package-interrupts}@anchor{23d}
15176 @section RM C.3.2(25): Package @code{Interrupts}
15181 "If implementation-defined forms of interrupt handler procedures are
15182 supported, such as protected procedures with parameters, then for each
15183 such form of a handler, a type analogous to @code{Parameterless_Handler}
15184 should be specified in a child package of @code{Interrupts}, with the
15185 same operations as in the predefined package Interrupts."
15190 @geindex Pre-elaboration requirements
15192 @node RM C 4 14 Pre-elaboration Requirements,RM C 5 8 Pragma Discard_Names,RM C 3 2 25 Package Interrupts,Implementation Advice
15193 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-c-4-14-pre-elaboration-requirements}@anchor{23e}
15194 @section RM C.4(14): Pre-elaboration Requirements
15199 "It is recommended that pre-elaborated packages be implemented in such a
15200 way that there should be little or no code executed at run time for the
15201 elaboration of entities not already covered by the Implementation
15205 Followed. Executable code is generated in some cases, e.g., loops
15206 to initialize large arrays.
15208 @node RM C 5 8 Pragma Discard_Names,RM C 7 2 30 The Package Task_Attributes,RM C 4 14 Pre-elaboration Requirements,Implementation Advice
15209 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-c-5-8-pragma-discard-names}@anchor{23f}
15210 @section RM C.5(8): Pragma @code{Discard_Names}
15215 "If the pragma applies to an entity, then the implementation should
15216 reduce the amount of storage used for storing names associated with that
15222 @geindex Package Task_Attributes
15224 @geindex Task_Attributes
15226 @node RM C 7 2 30 The Package Task_Attributes,RM D 3 17 Locking Policies,RM C 5 8 Pragma Discard_Names,Implementation Advice
15227 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-c-7-2-30-the-package-task-attributes}@anchor{240}
15228 @section RM C.7.2(30): The Package Task_Attributes
15233 "Some implementations are targeted to domains in which memory use at run
15234 time must be completely deterministic. For such implementations, it is
15235 recommended that the storage for task attributes will be pre-allocated
15236 statically and not from the heap. This can be accomplished by either
15237 placing restrictions on the number and the size of the task's
15238 attributes, or by using the pre-allocated storage for the first @code{N}
15239 attribute objects, and the heap for the others. In the latter case,
15240 @code{N} should be documented."
15243 Not followed. This implementation is not targeted to such a domain.
15245 @geindex Locking Policies
15247 @node RM D 3 17 Locking Policies,RM D 4 16 Entry Queuing Policies,RM C 7 2 30 The Package Task_Attributes,Implementation Advice
15248 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-d-3-17-locking-policies}@anchor{241}
15249 @section RM D.3(17): Locking Policies
15254 "The implementation should use names that end with @code{_Locking} for
15255 locking policies defined by the implementation."
15258 Followed. Two implementation-defined locking policies are defined,
15259 whose names (@code{Inheritance_Locking} and
15260 @code{Concurrent_Readers_Locking}) follow this suggestion.
15262 @geindex Entry queuing policies
15264 @node RM D 4 16 Entry Queuing Policies,RM D 6 9-10 Preemptive Abort,RM D 3 17 Locking Policies,Implementation Advice
15265 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-d-4-16-entry-queuing-policies}@anchor{242}
15266 @section RM D.4(16): Entry Queuing Policies
15271 "Names that end with @code{_Queuing} should be used
15272 for all implementation-defined queuing policies."
15275 Followed. No such implementation-defined queuing policies exist.
15277 @geindex Preemptive abort
15279 @node RM D 6 9-10 Preemptive Abort,RM D 7 21 Tasking Restrictions,RM D 4 16 Entry Queuing Policies,Implementation Advice
15280 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-d-6-9-10-preemptive-abort}@anchor{243}
15281 @section RM D.6(9-10): Preemptive Abort
15286 "Even though the @emph{abort_statement} is included in the list of
15287 potentially blocking operations (see 9.5.1), it is recommended that this
15288 statement be implemented in a way that never requires the task executing
15289 the @emph{abort_statement} to block."
15296 "On a multi-processor, the delay associated with aborting a task on
15297 another processor should be bounded; the implementation should use
15298 periodic polling, if necessary, to achieve this."
15303 @geindex Tasking restrictions
15305 @node RM D 7 21 Tasking Restrictions,RM D 8 47-49 Monotonic Time,RM D 6 9-10 Preemptive Abort,Implementation Advice
15306 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-d-7-21-tasking-restrictions}@anchor{244}
15307 @section RM D.7(21): Tasking Restrictions
15312 "When feasible, the implementation should take advantage of the specified
15313 restrictions to produce a more efficient implementation."
15316 GNAT currently takes advantage of these restrictions by providing an optimized
15317 run time when the Ravenscar profile and the GNAT restricted run time set
15318 of restrictions are specified. See pragma @code{Profile (Ravenscar)} and
15319 pragma @code{Profile (Restricted)} for more details.
15324 @node RM D 8 47-49 Monotonic Time,RM E 5 28-29 Partition Communication Subsystem,RM D 7 21 Tasking Restrictions,Implementation Advice
15325 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-d-8-47-49-monotonic-time}@anchor{245}
15326 @section RM D.8(47-49): Monotonic Time
15331 "When appropriate, implementations should provide configuration
15332 mechanisms to change the value of @code{Tick}."
15335 Such configuration mechanisms are not appropriate to this implementation
15336 and are thus not supported.
15340 "It is recommended that @code{Calendar.Clock} and @code{Real_Time.Clock}
15341 be implemented as transformations of the same time base."
15348 "It is recommended that the best time base which exists in
15349 the underlying system be available to the application through
15350 @code{Clock}. @cite{Best} may mean highest accuracy or largest range."
15355 @geindex Partition communication subsystem
15359 @node RM E 5 28-29 Partition Communication Subsystem,RM F 7 COBOL Support,RM D 8 47-49 Monotonic Time,Implementation Advice
15360 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-e-5-28-29-partition-communication-subsystem}@anchor{246}
15361 @section RM E.5(28-29): Partition Communication Subsystem
15366 "Whenever possible, the PCS on the called partition should allow for
15367 multiple tasks to call the RPC-receiver with different messages and
15368 should allow them to block until the corresponding subprogram body
15372 Followed by GLADE, a separately supplied PCS that can be used with
15377 "The @code{Write} operation on a stream of type @code{Params_Stream_Type}
15378 should raise @code{Storage_Error} if it runs out of space trying to
15379 write the @code{Item} into the stream."
15382 Followed by GLADE, a separately supplied PCS that can be used with
15385 @geindex COBOL support
15387 @node RM F 7 COBOL Support,RM F 1 2 Decimal Radix Support,RM E 5 28-29 Partition Communication Subsystem,Implementation Advice
15388 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-f-7-cobol-support}@anchor{247}
15389 @section RM F(7): COBOL Support
15394 "If COBOL (respectively, C) is widely supported in the target
15395 environment, implementations supporting the Information Systems Annex
15396 should provide the child package @code{Interfaces.COBOL} (respectively,
15397 @code{Interfaces.C}) specified in Annex B and should support a
15398 @code{convention_identifier} of COBOL (respectively, C) in the interfacing
15399 pragmas (see Annex B), thus allowing Ada programs to interface with
15400 programs written in that language."
15405 @geindex Decimal radix support
15407 @node RM F 1 2 Decimal Radix Support,RM G Numerics,RM F 7 COBOL Support,Implementation Advice
15408 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-f-1-2-decimal-radix-support}@anchor{248}
15409 @section RM F.1(2): Decimal Radix Support
15414 "Packed decimal should be used as the internal representation for objects
15415 of subtype @code{S} when @code{S}'Machine_Radix = 10."
15418 Not followed. GNAT ignores @code{S}'Machine_Radix and always uses binary
15423 @node RM G Numerics,RM G 1 1 56-58 Complex Types,RM F 1 2 Decimal Radix Support,Implementation Advice
15424 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-g-numerics}@anchor{249}
15425 @section RM G: Numerics
15430 "If Fortran (respectively, C) is widely supported in the target
15431 environment, implementations supporting the Numerics Annex
15432 should provide the child package @code{Interfaces.Fortran} (respectively,
15433 @code{Interfaces.C}) specified in Annex B and should support a
15434 @code{convention_identifier} of Fortran (respectively, C) in the interfacing
15435 pragmas (see Annex B), thus allowing Ada programs to interface with
15436 programs written in that language."
15441 @geindex Complex types
15443 @node RM G 1 1 56-58 Complex Types,RM G 1 2 49 Complex Elementary Functions,RM G Numerics,Implementation Advice
15444 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-g-1-1-56-58-complex-types}@anchor{24a}
15445 @section RM G.1.1(56-58): Complex Types
15450 "Because the usual mathematical meaning of multiplication of a complex
15451 operand and a real operand is that of the scaling of both components of
15452 the former by the latter, an implementation should not perform this
15453 operation by first promoting the real operand to complex type and then
15454 performing a full complex multiplication. In systems that, in the
15455 future, support an Ada binding to IEC 559:1989, the latter technique
15456 will not generate the required result when one of the components of the
15457 complex operand is infinite. (Explicit multiplication of the infinite
15458 component by the zero component obtained during promotion yields a NaN
15459 that propagates into the final result.) Analogous advice applies in the
15460 case of multiplication of a complex operand and a pure-imaginary
15461 operand, and in the case of division of a complex operand by a real or
15462 pure-imaginary operand."
15469 "Similarly, because the usual mathematical meaning of addition of a
15470 complex operand and a real operand is that the imaginary operand remains
15471 unchanged, an implementation should not perform this operation by first
15472 promoting the real operand to complex type and then performing a full
15473 complex addition. In implementations in which the @code{Signed_Zeros}
15474 attribute of the component type is @code{True} (and which therefore
15475 conform to IEC 559:1989 in regard to the handling of the sign of zero in
15476 predefined arithmetic operations), the latter technique will not
15477 generate the required result when the imaginary component of the complex
15478 operand is a negatively signed zero. (Explicit addition of the negative
15479 zero to the zero obtained during promotion yields a positive zero.)
15480 Analogous advice applies in the case of addition of a complex operand
15481 and a pure-imaginary operand, and in the case of subtraction of a
15482 complex operand and a real or pure-imaginary operand."
15489 "Implementations in which @code{Real'Signed_Zeros} is @code{True} should
15490 attempt to provide a rational treatment of the signs of zero results and
15491 result components. As one example, the result of the @code{Argument}
15492 function should have the sign of the imaginary component of the
15493 parameter @code{X} when the point represented by that parameter lies on
15494 the positive real axis; as another, the sign of the imaginary component
15495 of the @code{Compose_From_Polar} function should be the same as
15496 (respectively, the opposite of) that of the @code{Argument} parameter when that
15497 parameter has a value of zero and the @code{Modulus} parameter has a
15498 nonnegative (respectively, negative) value."
15503 @geindex Complex elementary functions
15505 @node RM G 1 2 49 Complex Elementary Functions,RM G 2 4 19 Accuracy Requirements,RM G 1 1 56-58 Complex Types,Implementation Advice
15506 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-g-1-2-49-complex-elementary-functions}@anchor{24b}
15507 @section RM G.1.2(49): Complex Elementary Functions
15512 "Implementations in which @code{Complex_Types.Real'Signed_Zeros} is
15513 @code{True} should attempt to provide a rational treatment of the signs
15514 of zero results and result components. For example, many of the complex
15515 elementary functions have components that are odd functions of one of
15516 the parameter components; in these cases, the result component should
15517 have the sign of the parameter component at the origin. Other complex
15518 elementary functions have zero components whose sign is opposite that of
15519 a parameter component at the origin, or is always positive or always
15525 @geindex Accuracy requirements
15527 @node RM G 2 4 19 Accuracy Requirements,RM G 2 6 15 Complex Arithmetic Accuracy,RM G 1 2 49 Complex Elementary Functions,Implementation Advice
15528 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-g-2-4-19-accuracy-requirements}@anchor{24c}
15529 @section RM G.2.4(19): Accuracy Requirements
15534 "The versions of the forward trigonometric functions without a
15535 @code{Cycle} parameter should not be implemented by calling the
15536 corresponding version with a @code{Cycle} parameter of
15537 @code{2.0*Numerics.Pi}, since this will not provide the required
15538 accuracy in some portions of the domain. For the same reason, the
15539 version of @code{Log} without a @code{Base} parameter should not be
15540 implemented by calling the corresponding version with a @code{Base}
15541 parameter of @code{Numerics.e}."
15546 @geindex Complex arithmetic accuracy
15549 @geindex complex arithmetic
15551 @node RM G 2 6 15 Complex Arithmetic Accuracy,RM H 6 15/2 Pragma Partition_Elaboration_Policy,RM G 2 4 19 Accuracy Requirements,Implementation Advice
15552 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-g-2-6-15-complex-arithmetic-accuracy}@anchor{24d}
15553 @section RM G.2.6(15): Complex Arithmetic Accuracy
15558 "The version of the @code{Compose_From_Polar} function without a
15559 @code{Cycle} parameter should not be implemented by calling the
15560 corresponding version with a @code{Cycle} parameter of
15561 @code{2.0*Numerics.Pi}, since this will not provide the required
15562 accuracy in some portions of the domain."
15567 @geindex Sequential elaboration policy
15569 @node RM H 6 15/2 Pragma Partition_Elaboration_Policy,,RM G 2 6 15 Complex Arithmetic Accuracy,Implementation Advice
15570 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_advice rm-h-6-15-2-pragma-partition-elaboration-policy}@anchor{24e}
15571 @section RM H.6(15/2): Pragma Partition_Elaboration_Policy
15576 "If the partition elaboration policy is @code{Sequential} and the
15577 Environment task becomes permanently blocked during elaboration then the
15578 partition is deadlocked and it is recommended that the partition be
15579 immediately terminated."
15584 @node Implementation Defined Characteristics,Intrinsic Subprograms,Implementation Advice,Top
15585 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_characteristics implementation-defined-characteristics}@anchor{b}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_characteristics doc}@anchor{24f}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_defined_characteristics id1}@anchor{250}
15586 @chapter Implementation Defined Characteristics
15589 In addition to the implementation dependent pragmas and attributes, and the
15590 implementation advice, there are a number of other Ada features that are
15591 potentially implementation dependent and are designated as
15592 implementation-defined. These are mentioned throughout the Ada Reference
15593 Manual, and are summarized in Annex M.
15595 A requirement for conforming Ada compilers is that they provide
15596 documentation describing how the implementation deals with each of these
15597 issues. In this chapter you will find each point in Annex M listed,
15598 followed by a description of how GNAT
15599 handles the implementation dependence.
15601 You can use this chapter as a guide to minimizing implementation
15602 dependent features in your programs if portability to other compilers
15603 and other operating systems is an important consideration. The numbers
15604 in each entry below correspond to the paragraph numbers in the Ada
15611 "Whether or not each recommendation given in Implementation
15612 Advice is followed. See 1.1.2(37)."
15615 See @ref{a,,Implementation Advice}.
15621 "Capacity limitations of the implementation. See 1.1.3(3)."
15624 The complexity of programs that can be processed is limited only by the
15625 total amount of available virtual memory, and disk space for the
15626 generated object files.
15632 "Variations from the standard that are impractical to avoid
15633 given the implementation's execution environment. See 1.1.3(6)."
15636 There are no variations from the standard.
15642 "Which code_statements cause external
15643 interactions. See 1.1.3(10)."
15646 Any @emph{code_statement} can potentially cause external interactions.
15652 "The coded representation for the text of an Ada
15653 program. See 2.1(4)."
15656 See separate section on source representation.
15662 "The control functions allowed in comments. See 2.1(14)."
15665 See separate section on source representation.
15671 "The representation for an end of line. See 2.2(2)."
15674 See separate section on source representation.
15680 "Maximum supported line length and lexical element
15681 length. See 2.2(15)."
15684 The maximum line length is 255 characters and the maximum length of
15685 a lexical element is also 255 characters. This is the default setting
15686 if not overridden by the use of compiler switch @emph{-gnaty} (which
15687 sets the maximum to 79) or @emph{-gnatyMnn} which allows the maximum
15688 line length to be specified to be any value up to 32767. The maximum
15689 length of a lexical element is the same as the maximum line length.
15695 "Implementation defined pragmas. See 2.8(14)."
15698 See @ref{7,,Implementation Defined Pragmas}.
15704 "Effect of pragma @code{Optimize}. See 2.8(27)."
15707 Pragma @code{Optimize}, if given with a @code{Time} or @code{Space}
15708 parameter, checks that the optimization flag is set, and aborts if it is
15715 "The sequence of characters of the value returned by
15716 @code{S'Image} when some of the graphic characters of
15717 @code{S'Wide_Image} are not defined in @code{Character}. See
15721 The sequence of characters is as defined by the wide character encoding
15722 method used for the source. See section on source representation for
15729 "The predefined integer types declared in
15730 @code{Standard}. See 3.5.4(25)."
15734 @multitable {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx} {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx}
15745 @emph{Short_Short_Integer}
15753 @emph{Short_Integer}
15757 (Short) 16 bit signed
15769 @emph{Long_Integer}
15773 64 bit signed (on most 64 bit targets,
15774 depending on the C definition of long).
15775 32 bit signed (all other targets)
15779 @emph{Long_Long_Integer}
15792 "Any nonstandard integer types and the operators defined
15793 for them. See 3.5.4(26)."
15796 There are no nonstandard integer types.
15802 "Any nonstandard real types and the operators defined for
15803 them. See 3.5.6(8)."
15806 There are no nonstandard real types.
15812 "What combinations of requested decimal precision and range
15813 are supported for floating point types. See 3.5.7(7)."
15816 The precision and range is as defined by the IEEE standard.
15822 "The predefined floating point types declared in
15823 @code{Standard}. See 3.5.7(16)."
15827 @multitable {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx} {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx}
15850 (Short) 32 bit IEEE short
15862 @emph{Long_Long_Float}
15866 64 bit IEEE long (80 bit IEEE long on x86 processors)
15875 "The small of an ordinary fixed point type. See 3.5.9(8)."
15878 @code{Fine_Delta} is 2**(-63)
15884 "What combinations of small, range, and digits are
15885 supported for fixed point types. See 3.5.9(10)."
15888 Any combinations are permitted that do not result in a small less than
15889 @code{Fine_Delta} and do not result in a mantissa larger than 63 bits.
15890 If the mantissa is larger than 53 bits on machines where Long_Long_Float
15891 is 64 bits (true of all architectures except ia32), then the output from
15892 Text_IO is accurate to only 53 bits, rather than the full mantissa. This
15893 is because floating-point conversions are used to convert fixed point.
15899 "The result of @code{Tags.Expanded_Name} for types declared
15900 within an unnamed @emph{block_statement}. See 3.9(10)."
15903 Block numbers of the form @code{B@emph{nnn}}, where @emph{nnn} is a
15904 decimal integer are allocated.
15910 "Implementation-defined attributes. See 4.1.4(12)."
15913 See @ref{8,,Implementation Defined Attributes}.
15919 "Any implementation-defined time types. See 9.6(6)."
15922 There are no implementation-defined time types.
15928 "The time base associated with relative delays."
15931 See 9.6(20). The time base used is that provided by the C library
15932 function @code{gettimeofday}.
15938 "The time base of the type @code{Calendar.Time}. See
15942 The time base used is that provided by the C library function
15943 @code{gettimeofday}.
15949 "The time zone used for package @code{Calendar}
15950 operations. See 9.6(24)."
15953 The time zone used by package @code{Calendar} is the current system time zone
15954 setting for local time, as accessed by the C library function
15961 "Any limit on @emph{delay_until_statements} of
15962 @emph{select_statements}. See 9.6(29)."
15965 There are no such limits.
15971 "Whether or not two non-overlapping parts of a composite
15972 object are independently addressable, in the case where packing, record
15973 layout, or @code{Component_Size} is specified for the object. See
15977 Separate components are independently addressable if they do not share
15978 overlapping storage units.
15984 "The representation for a compilation. See 10.1(2)."
15987 A compilation is represented by a sequence of files presented to the
15988 compiler in a single invocation of the @emph{gcc} command.
15994 "Any restrictions on compilations that contain multiple
15995 compilation_units. See 10.1(4)."
15998 No single file can contain more than one compilation unit, but any
15999 sequence of files can be presented to the compiler as a single
16006 "The mechanisms for creating an environment and for adding
16007 and replacing compilation units. See 10.1.4(3)."
16010 See separate section on compilation model.
16016 "The manner of explicitly assigning library units to a
16017 partition. See 10.2(2)."
16020 If a unit contains an Ada main program, then the Ada units for the partition
16021 are determined by recursive application of the rules in the Ada Reference
16022 Manual section 10.2(2-6). In other words, the Ada units will be those that
16023 are needed by the main program, and then this definition of need is applied
16024 recursively to those units, and the partition contains the transitive
16025 closure determined by this relationship. In short, all the necessary units
16026 are included, with no need to explicitly specify the list. If additional
16027 units are required, e.g., by foreign language units, then all units must be
16028 mentioned in the context clause of one of the needed Ada units.
16030 If the partition contains no main program, or if the main program is in
16031 a language other than Ada, then GNAT
16032 provides the binder options @emph{-z} and @emph{-n} respectively, and in
16033 this case a list of units can be explicitly supplied to the binder for
16034 inclusion in the partition (all units needed by these units will also
16035 be included automatically). For full details on the use of these
16036 options, refer to @emph{GNAT Make Program gnatmake} in the
16037 @cite{GNAT User's Guide}.
16043 "The implementation-defined means, if any, of specifying
16044 which compilation units are needed by a given compilation unit. See
16048 The units needed by a given compilation unit are as defined in
16049 the Ada Reference Manual section 10.2(2-6). There are no
16050 implementation-defined pragmas or other implementation-defined
16051 means for specifying needed units.
16057 "The manner of designating the main subprogram of a
16058 partition. See 10.2(7)."
16061 The main program is designated by providing the name of the
16062 corresponding @code{ALI} file as the input parameter to the binder.
16068 "The order of elaboration of @emph{library_items}. See
16072 The first constraint on ordering is that it meets the requirements of
16073 Chapter 10 of the Ada Reference Manual. This still leaves some
16074 implementation dependent choices, which are resolved by first
16075 elaborating bodies as early as possible (i.e., in preference to specs
16076 where there is a choice), and second by evaluating the immediate with
16077 clauses of a unit to determine the probably best choice, and
16078 third by elaborating in alphabetical order of unit names
16079 where a choice still remains.
16085 "Parameter passing and function return for the main
16086 subprogram. See 10.2(21)."
16089 The main program has no parameters. It may be a procedure, or a function
16090 returning an integer type. In the latter case, the returned integer
16091 value is the return code of the program (overriding any value that
16092 may have been set by a call to @code{Ada.Command_Line.Set_Exit_Status}).
16098 "The mechanisms for building and running partitions. See
16102 GNAT itself supports programs with only a single partition. The GNATDIST
16103 tool provided with the GLADE package (which also includes an implementation
16104 of the PCS) provides a completely flexible method for building and running
16105 programs consisting of multiple partitions. See the separate GLADE manual
16112 "The details of program execution, including program
16113 termination. See 10.2(25)."
16116 See separate section on compilation model.
16122 "The semantics of any non-active partitions supported by the
16123 implementation. See 10.2(28)."
16126 Passive partitions are supported on targets where shared memory is
16127 provided by the operating system. See the GLADE reference manual for
16134 "The information returned by @code{Exception_Message}. See
16138 Exception message returns the null string unless a specific message has
16139 been passed by the program.
16145 "The result of @code{Exceptions.Exception_Name} for types
16146 declared within an unnamed @emph{block_statement}. See 11.4.1(12)."
16149 Blocks have implementation defined names of the form @code{B@emph{nnn}}
16150 where @emph{nnn} is an integer.
16156 "The information returned by
16157 @code{Exception_Information}. See 11.4.1(13)."
16160 @code{Exception_Information} returns a string in the following format:
16163 *Exception_Name:* nnnnn
16166 *Load address:* 0xhhhh
16167 *Call stack traceback locations:*
16168 0xhhhh 0xhhhh 0xhhhh ... 0xhhh
16179 @code{nnnn} is the fully qualified name of the exception in all upper
16180 case letters. This line is always present.
16183 @code{mmmm} is the message (this line present only if message is non-null)
16186 @code{ppp} is the Process Id value as a decimal integer (this line is
16187 present only if the Process Id is nonzero). Currently we are
16188 not making use of this field.
16191 The Load address line, the Call stack traceback locations line and the
16192 following values are present only if at least one traceback location was
16193 recorded. The Load address indicates the address at which the main executable
16194 was loaded; this line may not be present if operating system hasn't relocated
16195 the main executable. The values are given in C style format, with lower case
16196 letters for a-f, and only as many digits present as are necessary.
16197 The line terminator sequence at the end of each line, including
16198 the last line is a single @code{LF} character (@code{16#0A#}).
16206 "Implementation-defined check names. See 11.5(27)."
16209 The implementation defined check names include Alignment_Check,
16210 Atomic_Synchronization, Duplicated_Tag_Check, Container_Checks,
16211 Tampering_Check, Predicate_Check, and Validity_Check. In addition, a user
16212 program can add implementation-defined check names by means of the pragma
16213 Check_Name. See the description of pragma @code{Suppress} for full details.
16219 "The interpretation of each aspect of representation. See
16223 See separate section on data representations.
16229 "Any restrictions placed upon representation items. See
16233 See separate section on data representations.
16239 "The meaning of @code{Size} for indefinite subtypes. See
16243 Size for an indefinite subtype is the maximum possible size, except that
16244 for the case of a subprogram parameter, the size of the parameter object
16245 is the actual size.
16251 "The default external representation for a type tag. See
16255 The default external representation for a type tag is the fully expanded
16256 name of the type in upper case letters.
16262 "What determines whether a compilation unit is the same in
16263 two different partitions. See 13.3(76)."
16266 A compilation unit is the same in two different partitions if and only
16267 if it derives from the same source file.
16273 "Implementation-defined components. See 13.5.1(15)."
16276 The only implementation defined component is the tag for a tagged type,
16277 which contains a pointer to the dispatching table.
16283 "If @code{Word_Size} = @code{Storage_Unit}, the default bit
16284 ordering. See 13.5.3(5)."
16287 @code{Word_Size} (32) is not the same as @code{Storage_Unit} (8) for this
16288 implementation, so no non-default bit ordering is supported. The default
16289 bit ordering corresponds to the natural endianness of the target architecture.
16295 "The contents of the visible part of package @code{System}
16296 and its language-defined children. See 13.7(2)."
16299 See the definition of these packages in files @code{system.ads} and
16300 @code{s-stoele.ads}. Note that two declarations are added to package
16304 Max_Priority : constant Positive := Priority'Last;
16305 Max_Interrupt_Priority : constant Positive := Interrupt_Priority'Last;
16312 "The contents of the visible part of package
16313 @code{System.Machine_Code}, and the meaning of
16314 @emph{code_statements}. See 13.8(7)."
16317 See the definition and documentation in file @code{s-maccod.ads}.
16323 "The effect of unchecked conversion. See 13.9(11)."
16326 Unchecked conversion between types of the same size
16327 results in an uninterpreted transmission of the bits from one type
16328 to the other. If the types are of unequal sizes, then in the case of
16329 discrete types, a shorter source is first zero or sign extended as
16330 necessary, and a shorter target is simply truncated on the left.
16331 For all non-discrete types, the source is first copied if necessary
16332 to ensure that the alignment requirements of the target are met, then
16333 a pointer is constructed to the source value, and the result is obtained
16334 by dereferencing this pointer after converting it to be a pointer to the
16335 target type. Unchecked conversions where the target subtype is an
16336 unconstrained array are not permitted. If the target alignment is
16337 greater than the source alignment, then a copy of the result is
16338 made with appropriate alignment
16344 "The semantics of operations on invalid representations.
16345 See 13.9.2(10-11)."
16348 For assignments and other operations where the use of invalid values cannot
16349 result in erroneous behavior, the compiler ignores the possibility of invalid
16350 values. An exception is raised at the point where an invalid value would
16351 result in erroneous behavior. For example executing:
16354 procedure invalidvals is
16356 Y : Natural range 1 .. 10;
16357 for Y'Address use X'Address;
16358 Z : Natural range 1 .. 10;
16359 A : array (Natural range 1 .. 10) of Integer;
16361 Z := Y; -- no exception
16362 A (Z) := 3; -- exception raised;
16366 As indicated, an exception is raised on the array assignment, but not
16367 on the simple assignment of the invalid negative value from Y to Z.
16373 "The manner of choosing a storage pool for an access type
16374 when @code{Storage_Pool} is not specified for the type. See 13.11(17)."
16377 There are 3 different standard pools used by the compiler when
16378 @code{Storage_Pool} is not specified depending whether the type is local
16379 to a subprogram or defined at the library level and whether
16380 @code{Storage_Size`@w{`}is specified or not. See documentation in the runtime
16381 library units `@w{`}System.Pool_Global}, @code{System.Pool_Size} and
16382 @code{System.Pool_Local} in files @code{s-poosiz.ads},
16383 @code{s-pooglo.ads} and @code{s-pooloc.ads} for full details on the
16384 default pools used.
16390 "Whether or not the implementation provides user-accessible
16391 names for the standard pool type(s). See 13.11(17)."
16394 See documentation in the sources of the run time mentioned in the previous
16395 paragraph. All these pools are accessible by means of @cite{with}ing
16402 "The meaning of @code{Storage_Size}. See 13.11(18)."
16405 @code{Storage_Size} is measured in storage units, and refers to the
16406 total space available for an access type collection, or to the primary
16407 stack space for a task.
16413 "Implementation-defined aspects of storage pools. See
16417 See documentation in the sources of the run time mentioned in the
16418 paragraph about standard storage pools above
16419 for details on GNAT-defined aspects of storage pools.
16425 "The set of restrictions allowed in a pragma
16426 @code{Restrictions}. See 13.12(7)."
16429 See @ref{9,,Standard and Implementation Defined Restrictions}.
16435 "The consequences of violating limitations on
16436 @code{Restrictions} pragmas. See 13.12(9)."
16439 Restrictions that can be checked at compile time result in illegalities
16440 if violated. Currently there are no other consequences of violating
16447 "The representation used by the @code{Read} and
16448 @code{Write} attributes of elementary types in terms of stream
16449 elements. See 13.13.2(9)."
16452 The representation is the in-memory representation of the base type of
16453 the type, using the number of bits corresponding to the
16454 @code{type'Size} value, and the natural ordering of the machine.
16460 "The names and characteristics of the numeric subtypes
16461 declared in the visible part of package @code{Standard}. See A.1(3)."
16464 See items describing the integer and floating-point types supported.
16470 "The string returned by @code{Character_Set_Version}.
16474 @code{Ada.Wide_Characters.Handling.Character_Set_Version} returns
16475 the string "Unicode 4.0", referring to version 4.0 of the
16476 Unicode specification.
16482 "The accuracy actually achieved by the elementary
16483 functions. See A.5.1(1)."
16486 The elementary functions correspond to the functions available in the C
16487 library. Only fast math mode is implemented.
16493 "The sign of a zero result from some of the operators or
16494 functions in @code{Numerics.Generic_Elementary_Functions}, when
16495 @code{Float_Type'Signed_Zeros} is @code{True}. See A.5.1(46)."
16498 The sign of zeroes follows the requirements of the IEEE 754 standard on
16506 @code{Numerics.Float_Random.Max_Image_Width}. See A.5.2(27)."
16509 Maximum image width is 6864, see library file @code{s-rannum.ads}.
16516 @code{Numerics.Discrete_Random.Max_Image_Width}. See A.5.2(27)."
16519 Maximum image width is 6864, see library file @code{s-rannum.ads}.
16525 "The algorithms for random number generation. See
16529 The algorithm is the Mersenne Twister, as documented in the source file
16530 @code{s-rannum.adb}. This version of the algorithm has a period of
16537 "The string representation of a random number generator's
16538 state. See A.5.2(38)."
16541 The value returned by the Image function is the concatenation of
16542 the fixed-width decimal representations of the 624 32-bit integers
16543 of the state vector.
16549 "The minimum time interval between calls to the
16550 time-dependent Reset procedure that are guaranteed to initiate different
16551 random number sequences. See A.5.2(45)."
16554 The minimum period between reset calls to guarantee distinct series of
16555 random numbers is one microsecond.
16561 "The values of the @code{Model_Mantissa},
16562 @code{Model_Emin}, @code{Model_Epsilon}, @code{Model},
16563 @code{Safe_First}, and @code{Safe_Last} attributes, if the Numerics
16564 Annex is not supported. See A.5.3(72)."
16567 Run the compiler with @emph{-gnatS} to produce a listing of package
16568 @code{Standard}, has the values of all numeric attributes.
16574 "Any implementation-defined characteristics of the
16575 input-output packages. See A.7(14)."
16578 There are no special implementation defined characteristics for these
16585 "The value of @code{Buffer_Size} in @code{Storage_IO}. See
16589 All type representations are contiguous, and the @code{Buffer_Size} is
16590 the value of @code{type'Size} rounded up to the next storage unit
16597 "External files for standard input, standard output, and
16598 standard error See A.10(5)."
16601 These files are mapped onto the files provided by the C streams
16602 libraries. See source file @code{i-cstrea.ads} for further details.
16608 "The accuracy of the value produced by @code{Put}. See
16612 If more digits are requested in the output than are represented by the
16613 precision of the value, zeroes are output in the corresponding least
16614 significant digit positions.
16620 "The meaning of @code{Argument_Count}, @code{Argument}, and
16621 @code{Command_Name}. See A.15(1)."
16624 These are mapped onto the @code{argv} and @code{argc} parameters of the
16625 main program in the natural manner.
16631 "The interpretation of the @code{Form} parameter in procedure
16632 @code{Create_Directory}. See A.16(56)."
16635 The @code{Form} parameter is not used.
16641 "The interpretation of the @code{Form} parameter in procedure
16642 @code{Create_Path}. See A.16(60)."
16645 The @code{Form} parameter is not used.
16651 "The interpretation of the @code{Form} parameter in procedure
16652 @code{Copy_File}. See A.16(68)."
16655 The @code{Form} parameter is case-insensitive.
16656 Two fields are recognized in the @code{Form} parameter:
16663 <value> starts immediately after the character '=' and ends with the
16664 character immediately preceding the next comma (',') or with the last
16665 character of the parameter.
16667 The only possible values for preserve= are:
16670 @multitable {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx} {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx}
16681 @emph{no_attributes}
16685 Do not try to preserve any file attributes. This is the
16686 default if no preserve= is found in Form.
16690 @emph{all_attributes}
16694 Try to preserve all file attributes (timestamps, access rights).
16702 Preserve the timestamp of the copied file, but not the other
16708 The only possible values for mode= are:
16711 @multitable {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx} {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx}
16726 Only do the copy if the destination file does not already exist.
16727 If it already exists, Copy_File fails.
16735 Copy the file in all cases. Overwrite an already existing destination file.
16743 Append the original file to the destination file. If the destination file
16744 does not exist, the destination file is a copy of the source file.
16745 When mode=append, the field preserve=, if it exists, is not taken into account.
16750 If the Form parameter includes one or both of the fields and the value or
16751 values are incorrect, Copy_file fails with Use_Error.
16753 Examples of correct Forms:
16756 Form => "preserve=no_attributes,mode=overwrite" (the default)
16757 Form => "mode=append"
16758 Form => "mode=copy, preserve=all_attributes"
16761 Examples of incorrect Forms:
16764 Form => "preserve=junk"
16765 Form => "mode=internal, preserve=timestamps"
16772 "The interpretation of the @code{Pattern} parameter, when not the null string,
16773 in the @code{Start_Search} and @code{Search} procedures.
16774 See A.16(104) and A.16(112)."
16777 When the @code{Pattern} parameter is not the null string, it is interpreted
16778 according to the syntax of regular expressions as defined in the
16779 @code{GNAT.Regexp} package.
16781 See @ref{251,,GNAT.Regexp (g-regexp.ads)}.
16787 "Implementation-defined convention names. See B.1(11)."
16790 The following convention names are supported
16793 @multitable {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx} {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx}
16812 @emph{Ada_Pass_By_Copy}
16816 Allowed for any types except by-reference types such as limited
16817 records. Compatible with convention Ada, but causes any parameters
16818 with this convention to be passed by copy.
16822 @emph{Ada_Pass_By_Reference}
16826 Allowed for any types except by-copy types such as scalars.
16827 Compatible with convention Ada, but causes any parameters
16828 with this convention to be passed by reference.
16844 Synonym for Assembler
16852 Synonym for Assembler
16864 @emph{C_Pass_By_Copy}
16868 Allowed only for record types, like C, but also notes that record
16869 is to be passed by copy rather than reference.
16881 @emph{C_Plus_Plus (or CPP)}
16893 Treated the same as C
16901 Treated the same as C
16917 For support of pragma @code{Import} with convention Intrinsic, see
16918 separate section on Intrinsic Subprograms.
16926 Stdcall (used for Windows implementations only). This convention correspond
16927 to the WINAPI (previously called Pascal convention) C/C++ convention under
16928 Windows. A routine with this convention cleans the stack before
16929 exit. This pragma cannot be applied to a dispatching call.
16937 Synonym for Stdcall
16945 Synonym for Stdcall
16953 Stubbed is a special convention used to indicate that the body of the
16954 subprogram will be entirely ignored. Any call to the subprogram
16955 is converted into a raise of the @code{Program_Error} exception. If a
16956 pragma @code{Import} specifies convention @code{stubbed} then no body need
16957 be present at all. This convention is useful during development for the
16958 inclusion of subprograms whose body has not yet been written.
16959 In addition, all otherwise unrecognized convention names are also
16960 treated as being synonymous with convention C. In all implementations
16961 except for VMS, use of such other names results in a warning. In VMS
16962 implementations, these names are accepted silently.
16971 "The meaning of link names. See B.1(36)."
16974 Link names are the actual names used by the linker.
16980 "The manner of choosing link names when neither the link
16981 name nor the address of an imported or exported entity is specified. See
16985 The default linker name is that which would be assigned by the relevant
16986 external language, interpreting the Ada name as being in all lower case
16993 "The effect of pragma @code{Linker_Options}. See B.1(37)."
16996 The string passed to @code{Linker_Options} is presented uninterpreted as
16997 an argument to the link command, unless it contains ASCII.NUL characters.
16998 NUL characters if they appear act as argument separators, so for example
17001 pragma Linker_Options ("-labc" & ASCII.NUL & "-ldef");
17004 causes two separate arguments @code{-labc} and @code{-ldef} to be passed to the
17005 linker. The order of linker options is preserved for a given unit. The final
17006 list of options passed to the linker is in reverse order of the elaboration
17007 order. For example, linker options for a body always appear before the options
17008 from the corresponding package spec.
17014 "The contents of the visible part of package
17015 @code{Interfaces} and its language-defined descendants. See B.2(1)."
17018 See files with prefix @code{i-} in the distributed library.
17024 "Implementation-defined children of package
17025 @code{Interfaces}. The contents of the visible part of package
17026 @code{Interfaces}. See B.2(11)."
17029 See files with prefix @code{i-} in the distributed library.
17035 "The types @code{Floating}, @code{Long_Floating},
17036 @code{Binary}, @code{Long_Binary}, @code{Decimal_ Element}, and
17037 @code{COBOL_Character}; and the initialization of the variables
17038 @code{Ada_To_COBOL} and @code{COBOL_To_Ada}, in
17039 @code{Interfaces.COBOL}. See B.4(50)."
17043 @multitable {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx} {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx}
17062 @emph{Long_Floating}
17066 (Floating) Long_Float
17086 @emph{Decimal_Element}
17094 @emph{COBOL_Character}
17103 For initialization, see the file @code{i-cobol.ads} in the distributed library.
17109 "Support for access to machine instructions. See C.1(1)."
17112 See documentation in file @code{s-maccod.ads} in the distributed library.
17118 "Implementation-defined aspects of access to machine
17119 operations. See C.1(9)."
17122 See documentation in file @code{s-maccod.ads} in the distributed library.
17128 "Implementation-defined aspects of interrupts. See C.3(2)."
17131 Interrupts are mapped to signals or conditions as appropriate. See
17133 @code{Ada.Interrupt_Names} in source file @code{a-intnam.ads} for details
17134 on the interrupts supported on a particular target.
17140 "Implementation-defined aspects of pre-elaboration. See
17144 GNAT does not permit a partition to be restarted without reloading,
17145 except under control of the debugger.
17151 "The semantics of pragma @code{Discard_Names}. See C.5(7)."
17154 Pragma @code{Discard_Names} causes names of enumeration literals to
17155 be suppressed. In the presence of this pragma, the Image attribute
17156 provides the image of the Pos of the literal, and Value accepts
17159 For tagged types, when pragmas @code{Discard_Names} and @code{No_Tagged_Streams}
17160 simultaneously apply, their Expanded_Name and External_Tag are initialized
17161 with empty strings. This is useful to avoid exposing entity names at binary
17168 "The result of the @code{Task_Identification.Image}
17169 attribute. See C.7.1(7)."
17172 The result of this attribute is a string that identifies
17173 the object or component that denotes a given task. If a variable @code{Var}
17174 has a task type, the image for this task will have the form @code{Var_@emph{XXXXXXXX}},
17175 where the suffix @emph{XXXXXXXX}
17176 is the hexadecimal representation of the virtual address of the corresponding
17177 task control block. If the variable is an array of tasks, the image of each
17178 task will have the form of an indexed component indicating the position of a
17179 given task in the array, e.g., @code{Group(5)_@emph{XXXXXXX}}. If the task is a
17180 component of a record, the image of the task will have the form of a selected
17181 component. These rules are fully recursive, so that the image of a task that
17182 is a subcomponent of a composite object corresponds to the expression that
17183 designates this task.
17185 If a task is created by an allocator, its image depends on the context. If the
17186 allocator is part of an object declaration, the rules described above are used
17187 to construct its image, and this image is not affected by subsequent
17188 assignments. If the allocator appears within an expression, the image
17189 includes only the name of the task type.
17191 If the configuration pragma Discard_Names is present, or if the restriction
17192 No_Implicit_Heap_Allocation is in effect, the image reduces to
17193 the numeric suffix, that is to say the hexadecimal representation of the
17194 virtual address of the control block of the task.
17200 "The value of @code{Current_Task} when in a protected entry
17201 or interrupt handler. See C.7.1(17)."
17204 Protected entries or interrupt handlers can be executed by any
17205 convenient thread, so the value of @code{Current_Task} is undefined.
17211 "The effect of calling @code{Current_Task} from an entry
17212 body or interrupt handler. See C.7.1(19)."
17215 When GNAT can determine statically that @code{Current_Task} is called directly in
17216 the body of an entry (or barrier) then a warning is emitted and @code{Program_Error}
17217 is raised at run time. Otherwise, the effect of calling @code{Current_Task} from an
17218 entry body or interrupt handler is to return the identification of the task
17219 currently executing the code.
17225 "Implementation-defined aspects of
17226 @code{Task_Attributes}. See C.7.2(19)."
17229 There are no implementation-defined aspects of @code{Task_Attributes}.
17235 "Values of all @code{Metrics}. See D(2)."
17238 The metrics information for GNAT depends on the performance of the
17239 underlying operating system. The sources of the run-time for tasking
17240 implementation, together with the output from @emph{-gnatG} can be
17241 used to determine the exact sequence of operating systems calls made
17242 to implement various tasking constructs. Together with appropriate
17243 information on the performance of the underlying operating system,
17244 on the exact target in use, this information can be used to determine
17245 the required metrics.
17251 "The declarations of @code{Any_Priority} and
17252 @code{Priority}. See D.1(11)."
17255 See declarations in file @code{system.ads}.
17261 "Implementation-defined execution resources. See D.1(15)."
17264 There are no implementation-defined execution resources.
17270 "Whether, on a multiprocessor, a task that is waiting for
17271 access to a protected object keeps its processor busy. See D.2.1(3)."
17274 On a multi-processor, a task that is waiting for access to a protected
17275 object does not keep its processor busy.
17281 "The affect of implementation defined execution resources
17282 on task dispatching. See D.2.1(9)."
17285 Tasks map to threads in the threads package used by GNAT. Where possible
17286 and appropriate, these threads correspond to native threads of the
17287 underlying operating system.
17293 "Implementation-defined @emph{policy_identifiers} allowed
17294 in a pragma @code{Task_Dispatching_Policy}. See D.2.2(3)."
17297 There are no implementation-defined policy-identifiers allowed in this
17304 "Implementation-defined aspects of priority inversion. See
17308 Execution of a task cannot be preempted by the implementation processing
17309 of delay expirations for lower priority tasks.
17315 "Implementation-defined task dispatching. See D.2.2(18)."
17318 The policy is the same as that of the underlying threads implementation.
17324 "Implementation-defined @emph{policy_identifiers} allowed
17325 in a pragma @code{Locking_Policy}. See D.3(4)."
17328 The two implementation defined policies permitted in GNAT are
17329 @code{Inheritance_Locking} and @code{Concurrent_Readers_Locking}. On
17330 targets that support the @code{Inheritance_Locking} policy, locking is
17331 implemented by inheritance, i.e., the task owning the lock operates
17332 at a priority equal to the highest priority of any task currently
17333 requesting the lock. On targets that support the
17334 @code{Concurrent_Readers_Locking} policy, locking is implemented with a
17335 read/write lock allowing multiple protected object functions to enter
17342 "Default ceiling priorities. See D.3(10)."
17345 The ceiling priority of protected objects of the type
17346 @code{System.Interrupt_Priority'Last} as described in the Ada
17347 Reference Manual D.3(10),
17353 "The ceiling of any protected object used internally by
17354 the implementation. See D.3(16)."
17357 The ceiling priority of internal protected objects is
17358 @code{System.Priority'Last}.
17364 "Implementation-defined queuing policies. See D.4(1)."
17367 There are no implementation-defined queuing policies.
17373 "On a multiprocessor, any conditions that cause the
17374 completion of an aborted construct to be delayed later than what is
17375 specified for a single processor. See D.6(3)."
17378 The semantics for abort on a multi-processor is the same as on a single
17379 processor, there are no further delays.
17385 "Any operations that implicitly require heap storage
17386 allocation. See D.7(8)."
17389 The only operation that implicitly requires heap storage allocation is
17396 "What happens when a task terminates in the presence of
17397 pragma @code{No_Task_Termination}. See D.7(15)."
17400 Execution is erroneous in that case.
17406 "Implementation-defined aspects of pragma
17407 @code{Restrictions}. See D.7(20)."
17410 There are no such implementation-defined aspects.
17416 "Implementation-defined aspects of package
17417 @code{Real_Time}. See D.8(17)."
17420 There are no implementation defined aspects of package @code{Real_Time}.
17426 "Implementation-defined aspects of
17427 @emph{delay_statements}. See D.9(8)."
17430 Any difference greater than one microsecond will cause the task to be
17431 delayed (see D.9(7)).
17437 "The upper bound on the duration of interrupt blocking
17438 caused by the implementation. See D.12(5)."
17441 The upper bound is determined by the underlying operating system. In
17442 no cases is it more than 10 milliseconds.
17448 "The means for creating and executing distributed
17449 programs. See E(5)."
17452 The GLADE package provides a utility GNATDIST for creating and executing
17453 distributed programs. See the GLADE reference manual for further details.
17459 "Any events that can result in a partition becoming
17460 inaccessible. See E.1(7)."
17463 See the GLADE reference manual for full details on such events.
17469 "The scheduling policies, treatment of priorities, and
17470 management of shared resources between partitions in certain cases. See
17474 See the GLADE reference manual for full details on these aspects of
17475 multi-partition execution.
17481 "Events that cause the version of a compilation unit to
17482 change. See E.3(5)."
17485 Editing the source file of a compilation unit, or the source files of
17486 any units on which it is dependent in a significant way cause the version
17487 to change. No other actions cause the version number to change. All changes
17488 are significant except those which affect only layout, capitalization or
17495 "Whether the execution of the remote subprogram is
17496 immediately aborted as a result of cancellation. See E.4(13)."
17499 See the GLADE reference manual for details on the effect of abort in
17500 a distributed application.
17506 "Implementation-defined aspects of the PCS. See E.5(25)."
17509 See the GLADE reference manual for a full description of all implementation
17510 defined aspects of the PCS.
17516 "Implementation-defined interfaces in the PCS. See
17520 See the GLADE reference manual for a full description of all
17521 implementation defined interfaces.
17527 "The values of named numbers in the package
17528 @code{Decimal}. See F.2(7)."
17532 @multitable {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx} {xxxxxxxxxxxx}
17575 @emph{Max_Decimal_Digits}
17588 "The value of @code{Max_Picture_Length} in the package
17589 @code{Text_IO.Editing}. See F.3.3(16)."
17598 "The value of @code{Max_Picture_Length} in the package
17599 @code{Wide_Text_IO.Editing}. See F.3.4(5)."
17608 "The accuracy actually achieved by the complex elementary
17609 functions and by other complex arithmetic operations. See G.1(1)."
17612 Standard library functions are used for the complex arithmetic
17613 operations. Only fast math mode is currently supported.
17619 "The sign of a zero result (or a component thereof) from
17620 any operator or function in @code{Numerics.Generic_Complex_Types}, when
17621 @code{Real'Signed_Zeros} is True. See G.1.1(53)."
17624 The signs of zero values are as recommended by the relevant
17625 implementation advice.
17631 "The sign of a zero result (or a component thereof) from
17632 any operator or function in
17633 @code{Numerics.Generic_Complex_Elementary_Functions}, when
17634 @code{Real'Signed_Zeros} is @code{True}. See G.1.2(45)."
17637 The signs of zero values are as recommended by the relevant
17638 implementation advice.
17644 "Whether the strict mode or the relaxed mode is the
17645 default. See G.2(2)."
17648 The strict mode is the default. There is no separate relaxed mode. GNAT
17649 provides a highly efficient implementation of strict mode.
17655 "The result interval in certain cases of fixed-to-float
17656 conversion. See G.2.1(10)."
17659 For cases where the result interval is implementation dependent, the
17660 accuracy is that provided by performing all operations in 64-bit IEEE
17661 floating-point format.
17667 "The result of a floating point arithmetic operation in
17668 overflow situations, when the @code{Machine_Overflows} attribute of the
17669 result type is @code{False}. See G.2.1(13)."
17672 Infinite and NaN values are produced as dictated by the IEEE
17673 floating-point standard.
17674 Note that on machines that are not fully compliant with the IEEE
17675 floating-point standard, such as Alpha, the @emph{-mieee} compiler flag
17676 must be used for achieving IEEE conforming behavior (although at the cost
17677 of a significant performance penalty), so infinite and NaN values are
17678 properly generated.
17684 "The result interval for division (or exponentiation by a
17685 negative exponent), when the floating point hardware implements division
17686 as multiplication by a reciprocal. See G.2.1(16)."
17689 Not relevant, division is IEEE exact.
17695 "The definition of close result set, which determines the
17696 accuracy of certain fixed point multiplications and divisions. See
17700 Operations in the close result set are performed using IEEE long format
17701 floating-point arithmetic. The input operands are converted to
17702 floating-point, the operation is done in floating-point, and the result
17703 is converted to the target type.
17709 "Conditions on a @emph{universal_real} operand of a fixed
17710 point multiplication or division for which the result shall be in the
17711 perfect result set. See G.2.3(22)."
17714 The result is only defined to be in the perfect result set if the result
17715 can be computed by a single scaling operation involving a scale factor
17716 representable in 64-bits.
17722 "The result of a fixed point arithmetic operation in
17723 overflow situations, when the @code{Machine_Overflows} attribute of the
17724 result type is @code{False}. See G.2.3(27)."
17727 Not relevant, @code{Machine_Overflows} is @code{True} for fixed-point
17734 "The result of an elementary function reference in
17735 overflow situations, when the @code{Machine_Overflows} attribute of the
17736 result type is @code{False}. See G.2.4(4)."
17739 IEEE infinite and Nan values are produced as appropriate.
17745 "The value of the angle threshold, within which certain
17746 elementary functions, complex arithmetic operations, and complex
17747 elementary functions yield results conforming to a maximum relative
17748 error bound. See G.2.4(10)."
17751 Information on this subject is not yet available.
17757 "The accuracy of certain elementary functions for
17758 parameters beyond the angle threshold. See G.2.4(10)."
17761 Information on this subject is not yet available.
17767 "The result of a complex arithmetic operation or complex
17768 elementary function reference in overflow situations, when the
17769 @code{Machine_Overflows} attribute of the corresponding real type is
17770 @code{False}. See G.2.6(5)."
17773 IEEE infinite and Nan values are produced as appropriate.
17779 "The accuracy of certain complex arithmetic operations and
17780 certain complex elementary functions for parameters (or components
17781 thereof) beyond the angle threshold. See G.2.6(8)."
17784 Information on those subjects is not yet available.
17790 "Information regarding bounded errors and erroneous
17791 execution. See H.2(1)."
17794 Information on this subject is not yet available.
17800 "Implementation-defined aspects of pragma
17801 @code{Inspection_Point}. See H.3.2(8)."
17804 Pragma @code{Inspection_Point} ensures that the variable is live and can
17805 be examined by the debugger at the inspection point.
17811 "Implementation-defined aspects of pragma
17812 @code{Restrictions}. See H.4(25)."
17815 There are no implementation-defined aspects of pragma @code{Restrictions}. The
17816 use of pragma @code{Restrictions [No_Exceptions]} has no effect on the
17817 generated code. Checks must suppressed by use of pragma @code{Suppress}.
17823 "Any restrictions on pragma @code{Restrictions}. See
17827 There are no restrictions on pragma @code{Restrictions}.
17829 @node Intrinsic Subprograms,Representation Clauses and Pragmas,Implementation Defined Characteristics,Top
17830 @anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms doc}@anchor{252}@anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms intrinsic-subprograms}@anchor{c}@anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms id1}@anchor{253}
17831 @chapter Intrinsic Subprograms
17834 @geindex Intrinsic Subprograms
17836 GNAT allows a user application program to write the declaration:
17839 pragma Import (Intrinsic, name);
17842 providing that the name corresponds to one of the implemented intrinsic
17843 subprograms in GNAT, and that the parameter profile of the referenced
17844 subprogram meets the requirements. This chapter describes the set of
17845 implemented intrinsic subprograms, and the requirements on parameter profiles.
17846 Note that no body is supplied; as with other uses of pragma Import, the
17847 body is supplied elsewhere (in this case by the compiler itself). Note
17848 that any use of this feature is potentially non-portable, since the
17849 Ada standard does not require Ada compilers to implement this feature.
17852 * Intrinsic Operators::
17853 * Compilation_ISO_Date::
17854 * Compilation_Date::
17855 * Compilation_Time::
17856 * Enclosing_Entity::
17857 * Exception_Information::
17858 * Exception_Message::
17862 * Shifts and Rotates::
17863 * Source_Location::
17867 @node Intrinsic Operators,Compilation_ISO_Date,,Intrinsic Subprograms
17868 @anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms id2}@anchor{254}@anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms intrinsic-operators}@anchor{255}
17869 @section Intrinsic Operators
17872 @geindex Intrinsic operator
17874 All the predefined numeric operators in package Standard
17875 in @code{pragma Import (Intrinsic,..)}
17876 declarations. In the binary operator case, the operands must have the same
17877 size. The operand or operands must also be appropriate for
17878 the operator. For example, for addition, the operands must
17879 both be floating-point or both be fixed-point, and the
17880 right operand for @code{"**"} must have a root type of
17881 @code{Standard.Integer'Base}.
17882 You can use an intrinsic operator declaration as in the following example:
17885 type Int1 is new Integer;
17886 type Int2 is new Integer;
17888 function "+" (X1 : Int1; X2 : Int2) return Int1;
17889 function "+" (X1 : Int1; X2 : Int2) return Int2;
17890 pragma Import (Intrinsic, "+");
17893 This declaration would permit 'mixed mode' arithmetic on items
17894 of the differing types @code{Int1} and @code{Int2}.
17895 It is also possible to specify such operators for private types, if the
17896 full views are appropriate arithmetic types.
17898 @node Compilation_ISO_Date,Compilation_Date,Intrinsic Operators,Intrinsic Subprograms
17899 @anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms id3}@anchor{256}@anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms compilation-iso-date}@anchor{257}
17900 @section Compilation_ISO_Date
17903 @geindex Compilation_ISO_Date
17905 This intrinsic subprogram is used in the implementation of the
17906 library package @code{GNAT.Source_Info}. The only useful use of the
17907 intrinsic import in this case is the one in this unit, so an
17908 application program should simply call the function
17909 @code{GNAT.Source_Info.Compilation_ISO_Date} to obtain the date of
17910 the current compilation (in local time format YYYY-MM-DD).
17912 @node Compilation_Date,Compilation_Time,Compilation_ISO_Date,Intrinsic Subprograms
17913 @anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms compilation-date}@anchor{258}@anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms id4}@anchor{259}
17914 @section Compilation_Date
17917 @geindex Compilation_Date
17919 Same as Compilation_ISO_Date, except the string is in the form
17922 @node Compilation_Time,Enclosing_Entity,Compilation_Date,Intrinsic Subprograms
17923 @anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms compilation-time}@anchor{25a}@anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms id5}@anchor{25b}
17924 @section Compilation_Time
17927 @geindex Compilation_Time
17929 This intrinsic subprogram is used in the implementation of the
17930 library package @code{GNAT.Source_Info}. The only useful use of the
17931 intrinsic import in this case is the one in this unit, so an
17932 application program should simply call the function
17933 @code{GNAT.Source_Info.Compilation_Time} to obtain the time of
17934 the current compilation (in local time format HH:MM:SS).
17936 @node Enclosing_Entity,Exception_Information,Compilation_Time,Intrinsic Subprograms
17937 @anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms id6}@anchor{25c}@anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms enclosing-entity}@anchor{25d}
17938 @section Enclosing_Entity
17941 @geindex Enclosing_Entity
17943 This intrinsic subprogram is used in the implementation of the
17944 library package @code{GNAT.Source_Info}. The only useful use of the
17945 intrinsic import in this case is the one in this unit, so an
17946 application program should simply call the function
17947 @code{GNAT.Source_Info.Enclosing_Entity} to obtain the name of
17948 the current subprogram, package, task, entry, or protected subprogram.
17950 @node Exception_Information,Exception_Message,Enclosing_Entity,Intrinsic Subprograms
17951 @anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms id7}@anchor{25e}@anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms exception-information}@anchor{25f}
17952 @section Exception_Information
17955 @geindex Exception_Information'
17957 This intrinsic subprogram is used in the implementation of the
17958 library package @code{GNAT.Current_Exception}. The only useful
17959 use of the intrinsic import in this case is the one in this unit,
17960 so an application program should simply call the function
17961 @code{GNAT.Current_Exception.Exception_Information} to obtain
17962 the exception information associated with the current exception.
17964 @node Exception_Message,Exception_Name,Exception_Information,Intrinsic Subprograms
17965 @anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms exception-message}@anchor{260}@anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms id8}@anchor{261}
17966 @section Exception_Message
17969 @geindex Exception_Message
17971 This intrinsic subprogram is used in the implementation of the
17972 library package @code{GNAT.Current_Exception}. The only useful
17973 use of the intrinsic import in this case is the one in this unit,
17974 so an application program should simply call the function
17975 @code{GNAT.Current_Exception.Exception_Message} to obtain
17976 the message associated with the current exception.
17978 @node Exception_Name,File,Exception_Message,Intrinsic Subprograms
17979 @anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms exception-name}@anchor{262}@anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms id9}@anchor{263}
17980 @section Exception_Name
17983 @geindex Exception_Name
17985 This intrinsic subprogram is used in the implementation of the
17986 library package @code{GNAT.Current_Exception}. The only useful
17987 use of the intrinsic import in this case is the one in this unit,
17988 so an application program should simply call the function
17989 @code{GNAT.Current_Exception.Exception_Name} to obtain
17990 the name of the current exception.
17992 @node File,Line,Exception_Name,Intrinsic Subprograms
17993 @anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms id10}@anchor{264}@anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms file}@anchor{265}
17999 This intrinsic subprogram is used in the implementation of the
18000 library package @code{GNAT.Source_Info}. The only useful use of the
18001 intrinsic import in this case is the one in this unit, so an
18002 application program should simply call the function
18003 @code{GNAT.Source_Info.File} to obtain the name of the current
18006 @node Line,Shifts and Rotates,File,Intrinsic Subprograms
18007 @anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms id11}@anchor{266}@anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms line}@anchor{267}
18013 This intrinsic subprogram is used in the implementation of the
18014 library package @code{GNAT.Source_Info}. The only useful use of the
18015 intrinsic import in this case is the one in this unit, so an
18016 application program should simply call the function
18017 @code{GNAT.Source_Info.Line} to obtain the number of the current
18020 @node Shifts and Rotates,Source_Location,Line,Intrinsic Subprograms
18021 @anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms shifts-and-rotates}@anchor{268}@anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms id12}@anchor{269}
18022 @section Shifts and Rotates
18025 @geindex Shift_Left
18027 @geindex Shift_Right
18029 @geindex Shift_Right_Arithmetic
18031 @geindex Rotate_Left
18033 @geindex Rotate_Right
18035 In standard Ada, the shift and rotate functions are available only
18036 for the predefined modular types in package @code{Interfaces}. However, in
18037 GNAT it is possible to define these functions for any integer
18038 type (signed or modular), as in this example:
18041 function Shift_Left
18043 Amount : Natural) return T;
18046 The function name must be one of
18047 Shift_Left, Shift_Right, Shift_Right_Arithmetic, Rotate_Left, or
18048 Rotate_Right. T must be an integer type. T'Size must be
18049 8, 16, 32 or 64 bits; if T is modular, the modulus
18050 must be 2**8, 2**16, 2**32 or 2**64.
18051 The result type must be the same as the type of @code{Value}.
18052 The shift amount must be Natural.
18053 The formal parameter names can be anything.
18055 A more convenient way of providing these shift operators is to use
18056 the Provide_Shift_Operators pragma, which provides the function declarations
18057 and corresponding pragma Import's for all five shift functions.
18059 @node Source_Location,,Shifts and Rotates,Intrinsic Subprograms
18060 @anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms source-location}@anchor{26a}@anchor{gnat_rm/intrinsic_subprograms id13}@anchor{26b}
18061 @section Source_Location
18064 @geindex Source_Location
18066 This intrinsic subprogram is used in the implementation of the
18067 library routine @code{GNAT.Source_Info}. The only useful use of the
18068 intrinsic import in this case is the one in this unit, so an
18069 application program should simply call the function
18070 @code{GNAT.Source_Info.Source_Location} to obtain the current
18071 source file location.
18073 @node Representation Clauses and Pragmas,Standard Library Routines,Intrinsic Subprograms,Top
18074 @anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas representation-clauses-and-pragmas}@anchor{d}@anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas doc}@anchor{26c}@anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas id1}@anchor{26d}
18075 @chapter Representation Clauses and Pragmas
18078 @geindex Representation Clauses
18080 @geindex Representation Clause
18082 @geindex Representation Pragma
18085 @geindex representation
18087 This section describes the representation clauses accepted by GNAT, and
18088 their effect on the representation of corresponding data objects.
18090 GNAT fully implements Annex C (Systems Programming). This means that all
18091 the implementation advice sections in chapter 13 are fully implemented.
18092 However, these sections only require a minimal level of support for
18093 representation clauses. GNAT provides much more extensive capabilities,
18094 and this section describes the additional capabilities provided.
18097 * Alignment Clauses::
18099 * Storage_Size Clauses::
18100 * Size of Variant Record Objects::
18101 * Biased Representation::
18102 * Value_Size and Object_Size Clauses::
18103 * Component_Size Clauses::
18104 * Bit_Order Clauses::
18105 * Effect of Bit_Order on Byte Ordering::
18106 * Pragma Pack for Arrays::
18107 * Pragma Pack for Records::
18108 * Record Representation Clauses::
18109 * Handling of Records with Holes::
18110 * Enumeration Clauses::
18111 * Address Clauses::
18112 * Use of Address Clauses for Memory-Mapped I/O::
18113 * Effect of Convention on Representation::
18114 * Conventions and Anonymous Access Types::
18115 * Determining the Representations chosen by GNAT::
18119 @node Alignment Clauses,Size Clauses,,Representation Clauses and Pragmas
18120 @anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas id2}@anchor{26e}@anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas alignment-clauses}@anchor{26f}
18121 @section Alignment Clauses
18124 @geindex Alignment Clause
18126 GNAT requires that all alignment clauses specify a power of 2, and all
18127 default alignments are always a power of 2. The default alignment
18128 values are as follows:
18134 @emph{Elementary Types}.
18136 For elementary types, the alignment is the minimum of the actual size of
18137 objects of the type divided by @code{Storage_Unit},
18138 and the maximum alignment supported by the target.
18139 (This maximum alignment is given by the GNAT-specific attribute
18140 @code{Standard'Maximum_Alignment}; see @ref{189,,Attribute Maximum_Alignment}.)
18142 @geindex Maximum_Alignment attribute
18144 For example, for type @code{Long_Float}, the object size is 8 bytes, and the
18145 default alignment will be 8 on any target that supports alignments
18146 this large, but on some targets, the maximum alignment may be smaller
18147 than 8, in which case objects of type @code{Long_Float} will be maximally
18153 For arrays, the alignment is equal to the alignment of the component type
18154 for the normal case where no packing or component size is given. If the
18155 array is packed, and the packing is effective (see separate section on
18156 packed arrays), then the alignment will be either 4, 2, or 1 for long packed
18157 arrays or arrays whose length is not known at compile time, depending on
18158 whether the component size is divisible by 4, 2, or is odd. For short packed
18159 arrays, which are handled internally as modular types, the alignment
18160 will be as described for elementary types, e.g. a packed array of length
18161 31 bits will have an object size of four bytes, and an alignment of 4.
18166 For the normal unpacked case, the alignment of a record is equal to
18167 the maximum alignment of any of its components. For tagged records, this
18168 includes the implicit access type used for the tag. If a pragma @code{Pack}
18169 is used and all components are packable (see separate section on pragma
18170 @code{Pack}), then the resulting alignment is 1, unless the layout of the
18171 record makes it profitable to increase it.
18173 A special case is when:
18179 the size of the record is given explicitly, or a
18180 full record representation clause is given, and
18183 the size of the record is 2, 4, or 8 bytes.
18186 In this case, an alignment is chosen to match the
18187 size of the record. For example, if we have:
18190 type Small is record
18193 for Small'Size use 16;
18196 then the default alignment of the record type @code{Small} is 2, not 1. This
18197 leads to more efficient code when the record is treated as a unit, and also
18198 allows the type to specified as @code{Atomic} on architectures requiring
18202 An alignment clause may specify a larger alignment than the default value
18203 up to some maximum value dependent on the target (obtainable by using the
18204 attribute reference @code{Standard'Maximum_Alignment}). It may also specify
18205 a smaller alignment than the default value for enumeration, integer and
18206 fixed point types, as well as for record types, for example
18213 for V'alignment use 1;
18219 The default alignment for the type @code{V} is 4, as a result of the
18220 Integer field in the record, but it is permissible, as shown, to
18221 override the default alignment of the record with a smaller value.
18226 Note that according to the Ada standard, an alignment clause applies only
18227 to the first named subtype. If additional subtypes are declared, then the
18228 compiler is allowed to choose any alignment it likes, and there is no way
18229 to control this choice. Consider:
18232 type R is range 1 .. 10_000;
18233 for R'Alignment use 1;
18234 subtype RS is R range 1 .. 1000;
18237 The alignment clause specifies an alignment of 1 for the first named subtype
18238 @code{R} but this does not necessarily apply to @code{RS}. When writing
18239 portable Ada code, you should avoid writing code that explicitly or
18240 implicitly relies on the alignment of such subtypes.
18242 For the GNAT compiler, if an explicit alignment clause is given, this
18243 value is also used for any subsequent subtypes. So for GNAT, in the
18244 above example, you can count on the alignment of @code{RS} being 1. But this
18245 assumption is non-portable, and other compilers may choose different
18246 alignments for the subtype @code{RS}.
18248 @node Size Clauses,Storage_Size Clauses,Alignment Clauses,Representation Clauses and Pragmas
18249 @anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas id3}@anchor{270}@anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas size-clauses}@anchor{271}
18250 @section Size Clauses
18253 @geindex Size Clause
18255 The default size for a type @code{T} is obtainable through the
18256 language-defined attribute @code{T'Size} and also through the
18257 equivalent GNAT-defined attribute @code{T'Value_Size}.
18258 For objects of type @code{T}, GNAT will generally increase the type size
18259 so that the object size (obtainable through the GNAT-defined attribute
18260 @code{T'Object_Size})
18261 is a multiple of @code{T'Alignment * Storage_Unit}.
18266 type Smallint is range 1 .. 6;
18274 In this example, @code{Smallint'Size} = @code{Smallint'Value_Size} = 3,
18275 as specified by the RM rules,
18276 but objects of this type will have a size of 8
18277 (@code{Smallint'Object_Size} = 8),
18278 since objects by default occupy an integral number
18279 of storage units. On some targets, notably older
18280 versions of the Digital Alpha, the size of stand
18281 alone objects of this type may be 32, reflecting
18282 the inability of the hardware to do byte load/stores.
18284 Similarly, the size of type @code{Rec} is 40 bits
18285 (@code{Rec'Size} = @code{Rec'Value_Size} = 40), but
18286 the alignment is 4, so objects of this type will have
18287 their size increased to 64 bits so that it is a multiple
18288 of the alignment (in bits). This decision is
18289 in accordance with the specific Implementation Advice in RM 13.3(43):
18293 "A @code{Size} clause should be supported for an object if the specified
18294 @code{Size} is at least as large as its subtype's @code{Size}, and corresponds
18295 to a size in storage elements that is a multiple of the object's
18296 @code{Alignment} (if the @code{Alignment} is nonzero)."
18299 An explicit size clause may be used to override the default size by
18300 increasing it. For example, if we have:
18303 type My_Boolean is new Boolean;
18304 for My_Boolean'Size use 32;
18307 then values of this type will always be 32 bits long. In the case of
18308 discrete types, the size can be increased up to 64 bits, with the effect
18309 that the entire specified field is used to hold the value, sign- or
18310 zero-extended as appropriate. If more than 64 bits is specified, then
18311 padding space is allocated after the value, and a warning is issued that
18312 there are unused bits.
18314 Similarly the size of records and arrays may be increased, and the effect
18315 is to add padding bits after the value. This also causes a warning message
18318 The largest Size value permitted in GNAT is 2**31-1. Since this is a
18319 Size in bits, this corresponds to an object of size 256 megabytes (minus
18320 one). This limitation is true on all targets. The reason for this
18321 limitation is that it improves the quality of the code in many cases
18322 if it is known that a Size value can be accommodated in an object of
18325 @node Storage_Size Clauses,Size of Variant Record Objects,Size Clauses,Representation Clauses and Pragmas
18326 @anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas storage-size-clauses}@anchor{272}@anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas id4}@anchor{273}
18327 @section Storage_Size Clauses
18330 @geindex Storage_Size Clause
18332 For tasks, the @code{Storage_Size} clause specifies the amount of space
18333 to be allocated for the task stack. This cannot be extended, and if the
18334 stack is exhausted, then @code{Storage_Error} will be raised (if stack
18335 checking is enabled). Use a @code{Storage_Size} attribute definition clause,
18336 or a @code{Storage_Size} pragma in the task definition to set the
18337 appropriate required size. A useful technique is to include in every
18338 task definition a pragma of the form:
18341 pragma Storage_Size (Default_Stack_Size);
18344 Then @code{Default_Stack_Size} can be defined in a global package, and
18345 modified as required. Any tasks requiring stack sizes different from the
18346 default can have an appropriate alternative reference in the pragma.
18348 You can also use the @emph{-d} binder switch to modify the default stack
18351 For access types, the @code{Storage_Size} clause specifies the maximum
18352 space available for allocation of objects of the type. If this space is
18353 exceeded then @code{Storage_Error} will be raised by an allocation attempt.
18354 In the case where the access type is declared local to a subprogram, the
18355 use of a @code{Storage_Size} clause triggers automatic use of a special
18356 predefined storage pool (@code{System.Pool_Size}) that ensures that all
18357 space for the pool is automatically reclaimed on exit from the scope in
18358 which the type is declared.
18360 A special case recognized by the compiler is the specification of a
18361 @code{Storage_Size} of zero for an access type. This means that no
18362 items can be allocated from the pool, and this is recognized at compile
18363 time, and all the overhead normally associated with maintaining a fixed
18364 size storage pool is eliminated. Consider the following example:
18368 type R is array (Natural) of Character;
18369 type P is access all R;
18370 for P'Storage_Size use 0;
18371 -- Above access type intended only for interfacing purposes
18375 procedure g (m : P);
18376 pragma Import (C, g);
18386 As indicated in this example, these dummy storage pools are often useful in
18387 connection with interfacing where no object will ever be allocated. If you
18388 compile the above example, you get the warning:
18391 p.adb:16:09: warning: allocation from empty storage pool
18392 p.adb:16:09: warning: Storage_Error will be raised at run time
18395 Of course in practice, there will not be any explicit allocators in the
18396 case of such an access declaration.
18398 @node Size of Variant Record Objects,Biased Representation,Storage_Size Clauses,Representation Clauses and Pragmas
18399 @anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas id5}@anchor{274}@anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas size-of-variant-record-objects}@anchor{275}
18400 @section Size of Variant Record Objects
18404 @geindex variant record objects
18406 @geindex Variant record objects
18409 In the case of variant record objects, there is a question whether Size gives
18410 information about a particular variant, or the maximum size required
18411 for any variant. Consider the following program
18414 with Text_IO; use Text_IO;
18416 type R1 (A : Boolean := False) is record
18418 when True => X : Character;
18419 when False => null;
18427 Put_Line (Integer'Image (V1'Size));
18428 Put_Line (Integer'Image (V2'Size));
18432 Here we are dealing with a variant record, where the True variant
18433 requires 16 bits, and the False variant requires 8 bits.
18434 In the above example, both V1 and V2 contain the False variant,
18435 which is only 8 bits long. However, the result of running the
18443 The reason for the difference here is that the discriminant value of
18444 V1 is fixed, and will always be False. It is not possible to assign
18445 a True variant value to V1, therefore 8 bits is sufficient. On the
18446 other hand, in the case of V2, the initial discriminant value is
18447 False (from the default), but it is possible to assign a True
18448 variant value to V2, therefore 16 bits must be allocated for V2
18449 in the general case, even fewer bits may be needed at any particular
18450 point during the program execution.
18452 As can be seen from the output of this program, the @code{'Size}
18453 attribute applied to such an object in GNAT gives the actual allocated
18454 size of the variable, which is the largest size of any of the variants.
18455 The Ada Reference Manual is not completely clear on what choice should
18456 be made here, but the GNAT behavior seems most consistent with the
18457 language in the RM.
18459 In some cases, it may be desirable to obtain the size of the current
18460 variant, rather than the size of the largest variant. This can be
18461 achieved in GNAT by making use of the fact that in the case of a
18462 subprogram parameter, GNAT does indeed return the size of the current
18463 variant (because a subprogram has no way of knowing how much space
18464 is actually allocated for the actual).
18466 Consider the following modified version of the above program:
18469 with Text_IO; use Text_IO;
18471 type R1 (A : Boolean := False) is record
18473 when True => X : Character;
18474 when False => null;
18480 function Size (V : R1) return Integer is
18486 Put_Line (Integer'Image (V2'Size));
18487 Put_Line (Integer'Image (Size (V2)));
18489 Put_Line (Integer'Image (V2'Size));
18490 Put_Line (Integer'Image (Size (V2)));
18494 The output from this program is
18503 Here we see that while the @code{'Size} attribute always returns
18504 the maximum size, regardless of the current variant value, the
18505 @code{Size} function does indeed return the size of the current
18508 @node Biased Representation,Value_Size and Object_Size Clauses,Size of Variant Record Objects,Representation Clauses and Pragmas
18509 @anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas id6}@anchor{276}@anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas biased-representation}@anchor{277}
18510 @section Biased Representation
18513 @geindex Size for biased representation
18515 @geindex Biased representation
18517 In the case of scalars with a range starting at other than zero, it is
18518 possible in some cases to specify a size smaller than the default minimum
18519 value, and in such cases, GNAT uses an unsigned biased representation,
18520 in which zero is used to represent the lower bound, and successive values
18521 represent successive values of the type.
18523 For example, suppose we have the declaration:
18526 type Small is range -7 .. -4;
18527 for Small'Size use 2;
18530 Although the default size of type @code{Small} is 4, the @code{Size}
18531 clause is accepted by GNAT and results in the following representation
18535 -7 is represented as 2#00#
18536 -6 is represented as 2#01#
18537 -5 is represented as 2#10#
18538 -4 is represented as 2#11#
18541 Biased representation is only used if the specified @code{Size} clause
18542 cannot be accepted in any other manner. These reduced sizes that force
18543 biased representation can be used for all discrete types except for
18544 enumeration types for which a representation clause is given.
18546 @node Value_Size and Object_Size Clauses,Component_Size Clauses,Biased Representation,Representation Clauses and Pragmas
18547 @anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas id7}@anchor{278}@anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas value-size-and-object-size-clauses}@anchor{279}
18548 @section Value_Size and Object_Size Clauses
18551 @geindex Value_Size
18553 @geindex Object_Size
18556 @geindex of objects
18558 In Ada 95 and Ada 2005, @code{T'Size} for a type @code{T} is the minimum
18559 number of bits required to hold values of type @code{T}.
18560 Although this interpretation was allowed in Ada 83, it was not required,
18561 and this requirement in practice can cause some significant difficulties.
18562 For example, in most Ada 83 compilers, @code{Natural'Size} was 32.
18563 However, in Ada 95 and Ada 2005,
18564 @code{Natural'Size} is
18565 typically 31. This means that code may change in behavior when moving
18566 from Ada 83 to Ada 95 or Ada 2005. For example, consider:
18569 type Rec is record;
18575 at 0 range 0 .. Natural'Size - 1;
18576 at 0 range Natural'Size .. 2 * Natural'Size - 1;
18580 In the above code, since the typical size of @code{Natural} objects
18581 is 32 bits and @code{Natural'Size} is 31, the above code can cause
18582 unexpected inefficient packing in Ada 95 and Ada 2005, and in general
18583 there are cases where the fact that the object size can exceed the
18584 size of the type causes surprises.
18586 To help get around this problem GNAT provides two implementation
18587 defined attributes, @code{Value_Size} and @code{Object_Size}. When
18588 applied to a type, these attributes yield the size of the type
18589 (corresponding to the RM defined size attribute), and the size of
18590 objects of the type respectively.
18592 The @code{Object_Size} is used for determining the default size of
18593 objects and components. This size value can be referred to using the
18594 @code{Object_Size} attribute. The phrase 'is used' here means that it is
18595 the basis of the determination of the size. The backend is free to
18596 pad this up if necessary for efficiency, e.g., an 8-bit stand-alone
18597 character might be stored in 32 bits on a machine with no efficient
18598 byte access instructions such as the Alpha.
18600 The default rules for the value of @code{Object_Size} for
18601 discrete types are as follows:
18607 The @code{Object_Size} for base subtypes reflect the natural hardware
18608 size in bits (run the compiler with @emph{-gnatS} to find those values
18609 for numeric types). Enumeration types and fixed-point base subtypes have
18610 8, 16, 32, or 64 bits for this size, depending on the range of values
18614 The @code{Object_Size} of a subtype is the same as the
18615 @code{Object_Size} of
18616 the type from which it is obtained.
18619 The @code{Object_Size} of a derived base type is copied from the parent
18620 base type, and the @code{Object_Size} of a derived first subtype is copied
18621 from the parent first subtype.
18624 The @code{Value_Size} attribute
18625 is the (minimum) number of bits required to store a value
18627 This value is used to determine how tightly to pack
18628 records or arrays with components of this type, and also affects
18629 the semantics of unchecked conversion (unchecked conversions where
18630 the @code{Value_Size} values differ generate a warning, and are potentially
18633 The default rules for the value of @code{Value_Size} are as follows:
18639 The @code{Value_Size} for a base subtype is the minimum number of bits
18640 required to store all values of the type (including the sign bit
18641 only if negative values are possible).
18644 If a subtype statically matches the first subtype of a given type, then it has
18645 by default the same @code{Value_Size} as the first subtype. This is a
18646 consequence of RM 13.1(14): "if two subtypes statically match,
18647 then their subtype-specific aspects are the same".)
18650 All other subtypes have a @code{Value_Size} corresponding to the minimum
18651 number of bits required to store all values of the subtype. For
18652 dynamic bounds, it is assumed that the value can range down or up
18653 to the corresponding bound of the ancestor
18656 The RM defined attribute @code{Size} corresponds to the
18657 @code{Value_Size} attribute.
18659 The @code{Size} attribute may be defined for a first-named subtype. This sets
18660 the @code{Value_Size} of
18661 the first-named subtype to the given value, and the
18662 @code{Object_Size} of this first-named subtype to the given value padded up
18663 to an appropriate boundary. It is a consequence of the default rules
18664 above that this @code{Object_Size} will apply to all further subtypes. On the
18665 other hand, @code{Value_Size} is affected only for the first subtype, any
18666 dynamic subtypes obtained from it directly, and any statically matching
18667 subtypes. The @code{Value_Size} of any other static subtypes is not affected.
18669 @code{Value_Size} and
18670 @code{Object_Size} may be explicitly set for any subtype using
18671 an attribute definition clause. Note that the use of these attributes
18672 can cause the RM 13.1(14) rule to be violated. If two access types
18673 reference aliased objects whose subtypes have differing @code{Object_Size}
18674 values as a result of explicit attribute definition clauses, then it
18675 is illegal to convert from one access subtype to the other. For a more
18676 complete description of this additional legality rule, see the
18677 description of the @code{Object_Size} attribute.
18679 To get a feel for the difference, consider the following examples (note
18680 that in each case the base is @code{Short_Short_Integer} with a size of 8):
18683 @multitable {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx} {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx} {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx}
18686 Type or subtype declaration
18698 @code{type x1 is range 0 .. 5;}
18710 @code{type x2 is range 0 .. 5;}
18711 @code{for x2'size use 12;}
18723 @code{subtype x3 is x2 range 0 .. 3;}
18735 @code{subtype x4 is x2'base range 0 .. 10;}
18747 @code{dynamic : x2'Base range -64 .. +63;}
18755 @code{subtype x5 is x2 range 0 .. dynamic;}
18767 @code{subtype x6 is x2'base range 0 .. dynamic;}
18780 Note: the entries marked '*' are not actually specified by the Ada
18781 Reference Manual, which has nothing to say about size in the dynamic
18782 case. What GNAT does is to allocate sufficient bits to accomodate any
18783 possible dynamic values for the bounds at run-time.
18785 So far, so good, but GNAT has to obey the RM rules, so the question is
18786 under what conditions must the RM @code{Size} be used.
18787 The following is a list
18788 of the occasions on which the RM @code{Size} must be used:
18794 Component size for packed arrays or records
18797 Value of the attribute @code{Size} for a type
18800 Warning about sizes not matching for unchecked conversion
18803 For record types, the @code{Object_Size} is always a multiple of the
18804 alignment of the type (this is true for all types). In some cases the
18805 @code{Value_Size} can be smaller. Consider:
18814 On a typical 32-bit architecture, the X component will be four bytes, and
18815 require four-byte alignment, and the Y component will be one byte. In this
18816 case @code{R'Value_Size} will be 40 (bits) since this is the minimum size
18817 required to store a value of this type, and for example, it is permissible
18818 to have a component of type R in an outer array whose component size is
18819 specified to be 48 bits. However, @code{R'Object_Size} will be 64 (bits),
18820 since it must be rounded up so that this value is a multiple of the
18821 alignment (4 bytes = 32 bits).
18823 For all other types, the @code{Object_Size}
18824 and @code{Value_Size} are the same (and equivalent to the RM attribute @code{Size}).
18825 Only @code{Size} may be specified for such types.
18827 Note that @code{Value_Size} can be used to force biased representation
18828 for a particular subtype. Consider this example:
18831 type R is (A, B, C, D, E, F);
18832 subtype RAB is R range A .. B;
18833 subtype REF is R range E .. F;
18836 By default, @code{RAB}
18837 has a size of 1 (sufficient to accommodate the representation
18838 of @code{A} and @code{B}, 0 and 1), and @code{REF}
18839 has a size of 3 (sufficient to accommodate the representation
18840 of @code{E} and @code{F}, 4 and 5). But if we add the
18841 following @code{Value_Size} attribute definition clause:
18844 for REF'Value_Size use 1;
18847 then biased representation is forced for @code{REF},
18848 and 0 will represent @code{E} and 1 will represent @code{F}.
18849 A warning is issued when a @code{Value_Size} attribute
18850 definition clause forces biased representation. This
18851 warning can be turned off using @code{-gnatw.B}.
18853 @node Component_Size Clauses,Bit_Order Clauses,Value_Size and Object_Size Clauses,Representation Clauses and Pragmas
18854 @anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas id8}@anchor{27a}@anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas component-size-clauses}@anchor{27b}
18855 @section Component_Size Clauses
18858 @geindex Component_Size Clause
18860 Normally, the value specified in a component size clause must be consistent
18861 with the subtype of the array component with regard to size and alignment.
18862 In other words, the value specified must be at least equal to the size
18863 of this subtype, and must be a multiple of the alignment value.
18865 In addition, component size clauses are allowed which cause the array
18866 to be packed, by specifying a smaller value. A first case is for
18867 component size values in the range 1 through 63. The value specified
18868 must not be smaller than the Size of the subtype. GNAT will accurately
18869 honor all packing requests in this range. For example, if we have:
18872 type r is array (1 .. 8) of Natural;
18873 for r'Component_Size use 31;
18876 then the resulting array has a length of 31 bytes (248 bits = 8 * 31).
18877 Of course access to the components of such an array is considerably
18878 less efficient than if the natural component size of 32 is used.
18879 A second case is when the subtype of the component is a record type
18880 padded because of its default alignment. For example, if we have:
18889 type a is array (1 .. 8) of r;
18890 for a'Component_Size use 72;
18893 then the resulting array has a length of 72 bytes, instead of 96 bytes
18894 if the alignment of the record (4) was obeyed.
18896 Note that there is no point in giving both a component size clause
18897 and a pragma Pack for the same array type. if such duplicate
18898 clauses are given, the pragma Pack will be ignored.
18900 @node Bit_Order Clauses,Effect of Bit_Order on Byte Ordering,Component_Size Clauses,Representation Clauses and Pragmas
18901 @anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas bit-order-clauses}@anchor{27c}@anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas id9}@anchor{27d}
18902 @section Bit_Order Clauses
18905 @geindex Bit_Order Clause
18907 @geindex bit ordering
18912 For record subtypes, GNAT permits the specification of the @code{Bit_Order}
18913 attribute. The specification may either correspond to the default bit
18914 order for the target, in which case the specification has no effect and
18915 places no additional restrictions, or it may be for the non-standard
18916 setting (that is the opposite of the default).
18918 In the case where the non-standard value is specified, the effect is
18919 to renumber bits within each byte, but the ordering of bytes is not
18920 affected. There are certain
18921 restrictions placed on component clauses as follows:
18927 Components fitting within a single storage unit.
18929 These are unrestricted, and the effect is merely to renumber bits. For
18930 example if we are on a little-endian machine with @code{Low_Order_First}
18931 being the default, then the following two declarations have exactly
18937 B : Integer range 1 .. 120;
18941 A at 0 range 0 .. 0;
18942 B at 0 range 1 .. 7;
18947 B : Integer range 1 .. 120;
18950 for R2'Bit_Order use High_Order_First;
18953 A at 0 range 7 .. 7;
18954 B at 0 range 0 .. 6;
18958 The useful application here is to write the second declaration with the
18959 @code{Bit_Order} attribute definition clause, and know that it will be treated
18960 the same, regardless of whether the target is little-endian or big-endian.
18963 Components occupying an integral number of bytes.
18965 These are components that exactly fit in two or more bytes. Such component
18966 declarations are allowed, but have no effect, since it is important to realize
18967 that the @code{Bit_Order} specification does not affect the ordering of bytes.
18968 In particular, the following attempt at getting an endian-independent integer
18976 for R2'Bit_Order use High_Order_First;
18979 A at 0 range 0 .. 31;
18983 This declaration will result in a little-endian integer on a
18984 little-endian machine, and a big-endian integer on a big-endian machine.
18985 If byte flipping is required for interoperability between big- and
18986 little-endian machines, this must be explicitly programmed. This capability
18987 is not provided by @code{Bit_Order}.
18990 Components that are positioned across byte boundaries.
18992 but do not occupy an integral number of bytes. Given that bytes are not
18993 reordered, such fields would occupy a non-contiguous sequence of bits
18994 in memory, requiring non-trivial code to reassemble. They are for this
18995 reason not permitted, and any component clause specifying such a layout
18996 will be flagged as illegal by GNAT.
18999 Since the misconception that Bit_Order automatically deals with all
19000 endian-related incompatibilities is a common one, the specification of
19001 a component field that is an integral number of bytes will always
19002 generate a warning. This warning may be suppressed using @code{pragma Warnings (Off)}
19003 if desired. The following section contains additional
19004 details regarding the issue of byte ordering.
19006 @node Effect of Bit_Order on Byte Ordering,Pragma Pack for Arrays,Bit_Order Clauses,Representation Clauses and Pragmas
19007 @anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas id10}@anchor{27e}@anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas effect-of-bit-order-on-byte-ordering}@anchor{27f}
19008 @section Effect of Bit_Order on Byte Ordering
19011 @geindex byte ordering
19016 In this section we will review the effect of the @code{Bit_Order} attribute
19017 definition clause on byte ordering. Briefly, it has no effect at all, but
19018 a detailed example will be helpful. Before giving this
19019 example, let us review the precise
19020 definition of the effect of defining @code{Bit_Order}. The effect of a
19021 non-standard bit order is described in section 13.5.3 of the Ada
19026 "2 A bit ordering is a method of interpreting the meaning of
19027 the storage place attributes."
19030 To understand the precise definition of storage place attributes in
19031 this context, we visit section 13.5.1 of the manual:
19035 "13 A record_representation_clause (without the mod_clause)
19036 specifies the layout. The storage place attributes (see 13.5.2)
19037 are taken from the values of the position, first_bit, and last_bit
19038 expressions after normalizing those values so that first_bit is
19039 less than Storage_Unit."
19042 The critical point here is that storage places are taken from
19043 the values after normalization, not before. So the @code{Bit_Order}
19044 interpretation applies to normalized values. The interpretation
19045 is described in the later part of the 13.5.3 paragraph:
19049 "2 A bit ordering is a method of interpreting the meaning of
19050 the storage place attributes. High_Order_First (known in the
19051 vernacular as 'big endian') means that the first bit of a
19052 storage element (bit 0) is the most significant bit (interpreting
19053 the sequence of bits that represent a component as an unsigned
19054 integer value). Low_Order_First (known in the vernacular as
19055 'little endian') means the opposite: the first bit is the
19056 least significant."
19059 Note that the numbering is with respect to the bits of a storage
19060 unit. In other words, the specification affects only the numbering
19061 of bits within a single storage unit.
19063 We can make the effect clearer by giving an example.
19065 Suppose that we have an external device which presents two bytes, the first
19066 byte presented, which is the first (low addressed byte) of the two byte
19067 record is called Master, and the second byte is called Slave.
19069 The left most (most significant bit is called Control for each byte, and
19070 the remaining 7 bits are called V1, V2, ... V7, where V7 is the rightmost
19071 (least significant) bit.
19073 On a big-endian machine, we can write the following representation clause
19076 type Data is record
19077 Master_Control : Bit;
19085 Slave_Control : Bit;
19095 for Data use record
19096 Master_Control at 0 range 0 .. 0;
19097 Master_V1 at 0 range 1 .. 1;
19098 Master_V2 at 0 range 2 .. 2;
19099 Master_V3 at 0 range 3 .. 3;
19100 Master_V4 at 0 range 4 .. 4;
19101 Master_V5 at 0 range 5 .. 5;
19102 Master_V6 at 0 range 6 .. 6;
19103 Master_V7 at 0 range 7 .. 7;
19104 Slave_Control at 1 range 0 .. 0;
19105 Slave_V1 at 1 range 1 .. 1;
19106 Slave_V2 at 1 range 2 .. 2;
19107 Slave_V3 at 1 range 3 .. 3;
19108 Slave_V4 at 1 range 4 .. 4;
19109 Slave_V5 at 1 range 5 .. 5;
19110 Slave_V6 at 1 range 6 .. 6;
19111 Slave_V7 at 1 range 7 .. 7;
19115 Now if we move this to a little endian machine, then the bit ordering within
19116 the byte is backwards, so we have to rewrite the record rep clause as:
19119 for Data use record
19120 Master_Control at 0 range 7 .. 7;
19121 Master_V1 at 0 range 6 .. 6;
19122 Master_V2 at 0 range 5 .. 5;
19123 Master_V3 at 0 range 4 .. 4;
19124 Master_V4 at 0 range 3 .. 3;
19125 Master_V5 at 0 range 2 .. 2;
19126 Master_V6 at 0 range 1 .. 1;
19127 Master_V7 at 0 range 0 .. 0;
19128 Slave_Control at 1 range 7 .. 7;
19129 Slave_V1 at 1 range 6 .. 6;
19130 Slave_V2 at 1 range 5 .. 5;
19131 Slave_V3 at 1 range 4 .. 4;
19132 Slave_V4 at 1 range 3 .. 3;
19133 Slave_V5 at 1 range 2 .. 2;
19134 Slave_V6 at 1 range 1 .. 1;
19135 Slave_V7 at 1 range 0 .. 0;
19139 It is a nuisance to have to rewrite the clause, especially if
19140 the code has to be maintained on both machines. However,
19141 this is a case that we can handle with the
19142 @code{Bit_Order} attribute if it is implemented.
19143 Note that the implementation is not required on byte addressed
19144 machines, but it is indeed implemented in GNAT.
19145 This means that we can simply use the
19146 first record clause, together with the declaration
19149 for Data'Bit_Order use High_Order_First;
19152 and the effect is what is desired, namely the layout is exactly the same,
19153 independent of whether the code is compiled on a big-endian or little-endian
19156 The important point to understand is that byte ordering is not affected.
19157 A @code{Bit_Order} attribute definition never affects which byte a field
19158 ends up in, only where it ends up in that byte.
19159 To make this clear, let us rewrite the record rep clause of the previous
19163 for Data'Bit_Order use High_Order_First;
19164 for Data use record
19165 Master_Control at 0 range 0 .. 0;
19166 Master_V1 at 0 range 1 .. 1;
19167 Master_V2 at 0 range 2 .. 2;
19168 Master_V3 at 0 range 3 .. 3;
19169 Master_V4 at 0 range 4 .. 4;
19170 Master_V5 at 0 range 5 .. 5;
19171 Master_V6 at 0 range 6 .. 6;
19172 Master_V7 at 0 range 7 .. 7;
19173 Slave_Control at 0 range 8 .. 8;
19174 Slave_V1 at 0 range 9 .. 9;
19175 Slave_V2 at 0 range 10 .. 10;
19176 Slave_V3 at 0 range 11 .. 11;
19177 Slave_V4 at 0 range 12 .. 12;
19178 Slave_V5 at 0 range 13 .. 13;
19179 Slave_V6 at 0 range 14 .. 14;
19180 Slave_V7 at 0 range 15 .. 15;
19184 This is exactly equivalent to saying (a repeat of the first example):
19187 for Data'Bit_Order use High_Order_First;
19188 for Data use record
19189 Master_Control at 0 range 0 .. 0;
19190 Master_V1 at 0 range 1 .. 1;
19191 Master_V2 at 0 range 2 .. 2;
19192 Master_V3 at 0 range 3 .. 3;
19193 Master_V4 at 0 range 4 .. 4;
19194 Master_V5 at 0 range 5 .. 5;
19195 Master_V6 at 0 range 6 .. 6;
19196 Master_V7 at 0 range 7 .. 7;
19197 Slave_Control at 1 range 0 .. 0;
19198 Slave_V1 at 1 range 1 .. 1;
19199 Slave_V2 at 1 range 2 .. 2;
19200 Slave_V3 at 1 range 3 .. 3;
19201 Slave_V4 at 1 range 4 .. 4;
19202 Slave_V5 at 1 range 5 .. 5;
19203 Slave_V6 at 1 range 6 .. 6;
19204 Slave_V7 at 1 range 7 .. 7;
19208 Why are they equivalent? Well take a specific field, the @code{Slave_V2}
19209 field. The storage place attributes are obtained by normalizing the
19210 values given so that the @code{First_Bit} value is less than 8. After
19211 normalizing the values (0,10,10) we get (1,2,2) which is exactly what
19212 we specified in the other case.
19214 Now one might expect that the @code{Bit_Order} attribute might affect
19215 bit numbering within the entire record component (two bytes in this
19216 case, thus affecting which byte fields end up in), but that is not
19217 the way this feature is defined, it only affects numbering of bits,
19218 not which byte they end up in.
19220 Consequently it never makes sense to specify a starting bit number
19221 greater than 7 (for a byte addressable field) if an attribute
19222 definition for @code{Bit_Order} has been given, and indeed it
19223 may be actively confusing to specify such a value, so the compiler
19224 generates a warning for such usage.
19226 If you do need to control byte ordering then appropriate conditional
19227 values must be used. If in our example, the slave byte came first on
19228 some machines we might write:
19231 Master_Byte_First constant Boolean := ...;
19233 Master_Byte : constant Natural :=
19234 1 - Boolean'Pos (Master_Byte_First);
19235 Slave_Byte : constant Natural :=
19236 Boolean'Pos (Master_Byte_First);
19238 for Data'Bit_Order use High_Order_First;
19239 for Data use record
19240 Master_Control at Master_Byte range 0 .. 0;
19241 Master_V1 at Master_Byte range 1 .. 1;
19242 Master_V2 at Master_Byte range 2 .. 2;
19243 Master_V3 at Master_Byte range 3 .. 3;
19244 Master_V4 at Master_Byte range 4 .. 4;
19245 Master_V5 at Master_Byte range 5 .. 5;
19246 Master_V6 at Master_Byte range 6 .. 6;
19247 Master_V7 at Master_Byte range 7 .. 7;
19248 Slave_Control at Slave_Byte range 0 .. 0;
19249 Slave_V1 at Slave_Byte range 1 .. 1;
19250 Slave_V2 at Slave_Byte range 2 .. 2;
19251 Slave_V3 at Slave_Byte range 3 .. 3;
19252 Slave_V4 at Slave_Byte range 4 .. 4;
19253 Slave_V5 at Slave_Byte range 5 .. 5;
19254 Slave_V6 at Slave_Byte range 6 .. 6;
19255 Slave_V7 at Slave_Byte range 7 .. 7;
19259 Now to switch between machines, all that is necessary is
19260 to set the boolean constant @code{Master_Byte_First} in
19261 an appropriate manner.
19263 @node Pragma Pack for Arrays,Pragma Pack for Records,Effect of Bit_Order on Byte Ordering,Representation Clauses and Pragmas
19264 @anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas pragma-pack-for-arrays}@anchor{280}@anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas id11}@anchor{281}
19265 @section Pragma Pack for Arrays
19268 @geindex Pragma Pack (for arrays)
19270 Pragma @code{Pack} applied to an array has an effect that depends upon whether the
19271 component type is @emph{packable}. For a component type to be @emph{packable}, it must
19272 be one of the following cases:
19278 Any elementary type.
19281 Any small packed array type with a static size.
19284 Any small simple record type with a static size.
19287 For all these cases, if the component subtype size is in the range
19288 1 through 64, then the effect of the pragma @code{Pack} is exactly as though a
19289 component size were specified giving the component subtype size.
19291 All other types are non-packable, they occupy an integral number of storage
19292 units and the only effect of pragma Pack is to remove alignment gaps.
19294 For example if we have:
19297 type r is range 0 .. 17;
19299 type ar is array (1 .. 8) of r;
19303 Then the component size of @code{ar} will be set to 5 (i.e., to @code{r'size},
19304 and the size of the array @code{ar} will be exactly 40 bits).
19306 Note that in some cases this rather fierce approach to packing can produce
19307 unexpected effects. For example, in Ada 95 and Ada 2005,
19308 subtype @code{Natural} typically has a size of 31, meaning that if you
19309 pack an array of @code{Natural}, you get 31-bit
19310 close packing, which saves a few bits, but results in far less efficient
19311 access. Since many other Ada compilers will ignore such a packing request,
19312 GNAT will generate a warning on some uses of pragma @code{Pack} that it guesses
19313 might not be what is intended. You can easily remove this warning by
19314 using an explicit @code{Component_Size} setting instead, which never generates
19315 a warning, since the intention of the programmer is clear in this case.
19317 GNAT treats packed arrays in one of two ways. If the size of the array is
19318 known at compile time and is less than 64 bits, then internally the array
19319 is represented as a single modular type, of exactly the appropriate number
19320 of bits. If the length is greater than 63 bits, or is not known at compile
19321 time, then the packed array is represented as an array of bytes, and the
19322 length is always a multiple of 8 bits.
19324 Note that to represent a packed array as a modular type, the alignment must
19325 be suitable for the modular type involved. For example, on typical machines
19326 a 32-bit packed array will be represented by a 32-bit modular integer with
19327 an alignment of four bytes. If you explicitly override the default alignment
19328 with an alignment clause that is too small, the modular representation
19329 cannot be used. For example, consider the following set of declarations:
19332 type R is range 1 .. 3;
19333 type S is array (1 .. 31) of R;
19334 for S'Component_Size use 2;
19336 for S'Alignment use 1;
19339 If the alignment clause were not present, then a 62-bit modular
19340 representation would be chosen (typically with an alignment of 4 or 8
19341 bytes depending on the target). But the default alignment is overridden
19342 with the explicit alignment clause. This means that the modular
19343 representation cannot be used, and instead the array of bytes
19344 representation must be used, meaning that the length must be a multiple
19345 of 8. Thus the above set of declarations will result in a diagnostic
19346 rejecting the size clause and noting that the minimum size allowed is 64.
19348 @geindex Pragma Pack (for type Natural)
19350 @geindex Pragma Pack warning
19352 One special case that is worth noting occurs when the base type of the
19353 component size is 8/16/32 and the subtype is one bit less. Notably this
19354 occurs with subtype @code{Natural}. Consider:
19357 type Arr is array (1 .. 32) of Natural;
19361 In all commonly used Ada 83 compilers, this pragma Pack would be ignored,
19362 since typically @code{Natural'Size} is 32 in Ada 83, and in any case most
19363 Ada 83 compilers did not attempt 31 bit packing.
19365 In Ada 95 and Ada 2005, @code{Natural'Size} is required to be 31. Furthermore,
19366 GNAT really does pack 31-bit subtype to 31 bits. This may result in a
19367 substantial unintended performance penalty when porting legacy Ada 83 code.
19368 To help prevent this, GNAT generates a warning in such cases. If you really
19369 want 31 bit packing in a case like this, you can set the component size
19373 type Arr is array (1 .. 32) of Natural;
19374 for Arr'Component_Size use 31;
19377 Here 31-bit packing is achieved as required, and no warning is generated,
19378 since in this case the programmer intention is clear.
19380 @node Pragma Pack for Records,Record Representation Clauses,Pragma Pack for Arrays,Representation Clauses and Pragmas
19381 @anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas pragma-pack-for-records}@anchor{282}@anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas id12}@anchor{283}
19382 @section Pragma Pack for Records
19385 @geindex Pragma Pack (for records)
19387 Pragma @code{Pack} applied to a record will pack the components to reduce
19388 wasted space from alignment gaps and by reducing the amount of space
19389 taken by components. We distinguish between @emph{packable} components and
19390 @emph{non-packable} components.
19391 Components of the following types are considered packable:
19397 Components of an elementary type are packable unless they are aliased,
19398 independent, or of an atomic type.
19401 Small packed arrays, where the size is statically known, are represented
19402 internally as modular integers, and so they are also packable.
19405 Small simple records, where the size is statically known, are also packable.
19408 For all these cases, if the @code{'Size} value is in the range 1 through 64, the
19409 components occupy the exact number of bits corresponding to this value
19410 and are packed with no padding bits, i.e. they can start on an arbitrary
19413 All other types are non-packable, they occupy an integral number of storage
19414 units and the only effect of pragma @code{Pack} is to remove alignment gaps.
19416 For example, consider the record
19419 type Rb1 is array (1 .. 13) of Boolean;
19422 type Rb2 is array (1 .. 65) of Boolean;
19425 type AF is new Float with Atomic;
19438 The representation for the record @code{X2} is as follows:
19441 for X2'Size use 224;
19443 L1 at 0 range 0 .. 0;
19444 L2 at 0 range 1 .. 64;
19445 L3 at 12 range 0 .. 31;
19446 L4 at 16 range 0 .. 0;
19447 L5 at 16 range 1 .. 13;
19448 L6 at 18 range 0 .. 71;
19452 Studying this example, we see that the packable fields @code{L1}
19454 of length equal to their sizes, and placed at specific bit boundaries (and
19455 not byte boundaries) to
19456 eliminate padding. But @code{L3} is of a non-packable float type (because
19457 it is aliased), so it is on the next appropriate alignment boundary.
19459 The next two fields are fully packable, so @code{L4} and @code{L5} are
19460 minimally packed with no gaps. However, type @code{Rb2} is a packed
19461 array that is longer than 64 bits, so it is itself non-packable. Thus
19462 the @code{L6} field is aligned to the next byte boundary, and takes an
19463 integral number of bytes, i.e., 72 bits.
19465 @node Record Representation Clauses,Handling of Records with Holes,Pragma Pack for Records,Representation Clauses and Pragmas
19466 @anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas id13}@anchor{284}@anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas record-representation-clauses}@anchor{285}
19467 @section Record Representation Clauses
19470 @geindex Record Representation Clause
19472 Record representation clauses may be given for all record types, including
19473 types obtained by record extension. Component clauses are allowed for any
19474 static component. The restrictions on component clauses depend on the type
19477 @geindex Component Clause
19479 For all components of an elementary type, the only restriction on component
19480 clauses is that the size must be at least the @code{'Size} value of the type
19481 (actually the Value_Size). There are no restrictions due to alignment,
19482 and such components may freely cross storage boundaries.
19484 Packed arrays with a size up to and including 64 bits are represented
19485 internally using a modular type with the appropriate number of bits, and
19486 thus the same lack of restriction applies. For example, if you declare:
19489 type R is array (1 .. 49) of Boolean;
19494 then a component clause for a component of type @code{R} may start on any
19495 specified bit boundary, and may specify a value of 49 bits or greater.
19497 For packed bit arrays that are longer than 64 bits, there are two
19498 cases. If the component size is a power of 2 (1,2,4,8,16,32 bits),
19499 including the important case of single bits or boolean values, then
19500 there are no limitations on placement of such components, and they
19501 may start and end at arbitrary bit boundaries.
19503 If the component size is not a power of 2 (e.g., 3 or 5), then
19504 an array of this type longer than 64 bits must always be placed on
19505 on a storage unit (byte) boundary and occupy an integral number
19506 of storage units (bytes). Any component clause that does not
19507 meet this requirement will be rejected.
19509 Any aliased component, or component of an aliased type, must
19510 have its normal alignment and size. A component clause that
19511 does not meet this requirement will be rejected.
19513 The tag field of a tagged type always occupies an address sized field at
19514 the start of the record. No component clause may attempt to overlay this
19515 tag. When a tagged type appears as a component, the tag field must have
19518 In the case of a record extension @code{T1}, of a type @code{T}, no component clause applied
19519 to the type @code{T1} can specify a storage location that would overlap the first
19520 @code{T'Size} bytes of the record.
19522 For all other component types, including non-bit-packed arrays,
19523 the component can be placed at an arbitrary bit boundary,
19524 so for example, the following is permitted:
19527 type R is array (1 .. 10) of Boolean;
19536 G at 0 range 0 .. 0;
19537 H at 0 range 1 .. 1;
19538 L at 0 range 2 .. 81;
19539 R at 0 range 82 .. 161;
19543 @node Handling of Records with Holes,Enumeration Clauses,Record Representation Clauses,Representation Clauses and Pragmas
19544 @anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas handling-of-records-with-holes}@anchor{286}@anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas id14}@anchor{287}
19545 @section Handling of Records with Holes
19548 @geindex Handling of Records with Holes
19550 As a result of alignment considerations, records may contain "holes"
19552 which do not correspond to the data bits of any of the components.
19553 Record representation clauses can also result in holes in records.
19555 GNAT does not attempt to clear these holes, so in record objects,
19556 they should be considered to hold undefined rubbish. The generated
19557 equality routine just tests components so does not access these
19558 undefined bits, and assignment and copy operations may or may not
19559 preserve the contents of these holes (for assignments, the holes
19560 in the target will in practice contain either the bits that are
19561 present in the holes in the source, or the bits that were present
19562 in the target before the assignment).
19564 If it is necessary to ensure that holes in records have all zero
19565 bits, then record objects for which this initialization is desired
19566 should be explicitly set to all zero values using Unchecked_Conversion
19567 or address overlays. For example
19570 type HRec is record
19576 On typical machines, integers need to be aligned on a four-byte
19577 boundary, resulting in three bytes of undefined rubbish following
19578 the 8-bit field for C. To ensure that the hole in a variable of
19579 type HRec is set to all zero bits,
19580 you could for example do:
19583 type Base is record
19584 Dummy1, Dummy2 : Integer := 0;
19589 for RealVar'Address use BaseVar'Address;
19592 Now the 8-bytes of the value of RealVar start out containing all zero
19593 bits. A safer approach is to just define dummy fields, avoiding the
19597 type HRec is record
19599 Dummy1 : Short_Short_Integer := 0;
19600 Dummy2 : Short_Short_Integer := 0;
19601 Dummy3 : Short_Short_Integer := 0;
19606 And to make absolutely sure that the intent of this is followed, you
19607 can use representation clauses:
19610 for Hrec use record
19611 C at 0 range 0 .. 7;
19612 Dummy1 at 1 range 0 .. 7;
19613 Dummy2 at 2 range 0 .. 7;
19614 Dummy3 at 3 range 0 .. 7;
19615 I at 4 range 0 .. 31;
19617 for Hrec'Size use 64;
19620 @node Enumeration Clauses,Address Clauses,Handling of Records with Holes,Representation Clauses and Pragmas
19621 @anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas enumeration-clauses}@anchor{288}@anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas id15}@anchor{289}
19622 @section Enumeration Clauses
19625 The only restriction on enumeration clauses is that the range of values
19626 must be representable. For the signed case, if one or more of the
19627 representation values are negative, all values must be in the range:
19630 System.Min_Int .. System.Max_Int
19633 For the unsigned case, where all values are nonnegative, the values must
19637 0 .. System.Max_Binary_Modulus;
19640 A @emph{confirming} representation clause is one in which the values range
19641 from 0 in sequence, i.e., a clause that confirms the default representation
19642 for an enumeration type.
19643 Such a confirming representation
19644 is permitted by these rules, and is specially recognized by the compiler so
19645 that no extra overhead results from the use of such a clause.
19647 If an array has an index type which is an enumeration type to which an
19648 enumeration clause has been applied, then the array is stored in a compact
19649 manner. Consider the declarations:
19652 type r is (A, B, C);
19653 for r use (A => 1, B => 5, C => 10);
19654 type t is array (r) of Character;
19657 The array type t corresponds to a vector with exactly three elements and
19658 has a default size equal to @code{3*Character'Size}. This ensures efficient
19659 use of space, but means that accesses to elements of the array will incur
19660 the overhead of converting representation values to the corresponding
19661 positional values, (i.e., the value delivered by the @code{Pos} attribute).
19663 @node Address Clauses,Use of Address Clauses for Memory-Mapped I/O,Enumeration Clauses,Representation Clauses and Pragmas
19664 @anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas id16}@anchor{28a}@anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas address-clauses}@anchor{28b}
19665 @section Address Clauses
19668 @geindex Address Clause
19670 The reference manual allows a general restriction on representation clauses,
19671 as found in RM 13.1(22):
19675 "An implementation need not support representation
19676 items containing nonstatic expressions, except that
19677 an implementation should support a representation item
19678 for a given entity if each nonstatic expression in the
19679 representation item is a name that statically denotes
19680 a constant declared before the entity."
19683 In practice this is applicable only to address clauses, since this is the
19684 only case in which a nonstatic expression is permitted by the syntax. As
19685 the AARM notes in sections 13.1 (22.a-22.h):
19689 22.a Reason: This is to avoid the following sort of thing:
19691 22.b X : Integer := F(...);
19692 Y : Address := G(...);
19693 for X'Address use Y;
19695 22.c In the above, we have to evaluate the
19696 initialization expression for X before we
19697 know where to put the result. This seems
19698 like an unreasonable implementation burden.
19700 22.d The above code should instead be written
19703 22.e Y : constant Address := G(...);
19704 X : Integer := F(...);
19705 for X'Address use Y;
19707 22.f This allows the expression 'Y' to be safely
19708 evaluated before X is created.
19710 22.g The constant could be a formal parameter of mode in.
19712 22.h An implementation can support other nonstatic
19713 expressions if it wants to. Expressions of type
19714 Address are hardly ever static, but their value
19715 might be known at compile time anyway in many
19719 GNAT does indeed permit many additional cases of nonstatic expressions. In
19720 particular, if the type involved is elementary there are no restrictions
19721 (since in this case, holding a temporary copy of the initialization value,
19722 if one is present, is inexpensive). In addition, if there is no implicit or
19723 explicit initialization, then there are no restrictions. GNAT will reject
19724 only the case where all three of these conditions hold:
19730 The type of the item is non-elementary (e.g., a record or array).
19733 There is explicit or implicit initialization required for the object.
19734 Note that access values are always implicitly initialized.
19737 The address value is nonstatic. Here GNAT is more permissive than the
19738 RM, and allows the address value to be the address of a previously declared
19739 stand-alone variable, as long as it does not itself have an address clause.
19742 Anchor : Some_Initialized_Type;
19743 Overlay : Some_Initialized_Type;
19744 for Overlay'Address use Anchor'Address;
19747 However, the prefix of the address clause cannot be an array component, or
19748 a component of a discriminated record.
19751 As noted above in section 22.h, address values are typically nonstatic. In
19752 particular the To_Address function, even if applied to a literal value, is
19753 a nonstatic function call. To avoid this minor annoyance, GNAT provides
19754 the implementation defined attribute 'To_Address. The following two
19755 expressions have identical values:
19759 @geindex To_Address
19762 To_Address (16#1234_0000#)
19763 System'To_Address (16#1234_0000#);
19766 except that the second form is considered to be a static expression, and
19767 thus when used as an address clause value is always permitted.
19769 Additionally, GNAT treats as static an address clause that is an
19770 unchecked_conversion of a static integer value. This simplifies the porting
19771 of legacy code, and provides a portable equivalent to the GNAT attribute
19774 Another issue with address clauses is the interaction with alignment
19775 requirements. When an address clause is given for an object, the address
19776 value must be consistent with the alignment of the object (which is usually
19777 the same as the alignment of the type of the object). If an address clause
19778 is given that specifies an inappropriately aligned address value, then the
19779 program execution is erroneous.
19781 Since this source of erroneous behavior can have unfortunate effects on
19782 machines with strict alignment requirements, GNAT
19783 checks (at compile time if possible, generating a warning, or at execution
19784 time with a run-time check) that the alignment is appropriate. If the
19785 run-time check fails, then @code{Program_Error} is raised. This run-time
19786 check is suppressed if range checks are suppressed, or if the special GNAT
19787 check Alignment_Check is suppressed, or if
19788 @code{pragma Restrictions (No_Elaboration_Code)} is in effect. It is also
19789 suppressed by default on non-strict alignment machines (such as the x86).
19791 Finally, GNAT does not permit overlaying of objects of class-wide types. In
19792 most cases, the compiler can detect an attempt at such overlays and will
19793 generate a warning at compile time and a Program_Error exception at run time.
19797 An address clause cannot be given for an exported object. More
19798 understandably the real restriction is that objects with an address
19799 clause cannot be exported. This is because such variables are not
19800 defined by the Ada program, so there is no external object to export.
19804 It is permissible to give an address clause and a pragma Import for the
19805 same object. In this case, the variable is not really defined by the
19806 Ada program, so there is no external symbol to be linked. The link name
19807 and the external name are ignored in this case. The reason that we allow this
19808 combination is that it provides a useful idiom to avoid unwanted
19809 initializations on objects with address clauses.
19811 When an address clause is given for an object that has implicit or
19812 explicit initialization, then by default initialization takes place. This
19813 means that the effect of the object declaration is to overwrite the
19814 memory at the specified address. This is almost always not what the
19815 programmer wants, so GNAT will output a warning:
19825 for Ext'Address use System'To_Address (16#1234_1234#);
19827 >>> warning: implicit initialization of "Ext" may
19828 modify overlaid storage
19829 >>> warning: use pragma Import for "Ext" to suppress
19830 initialization (RM B(24))
19835 As indicated by the warning message, the solution is to use a (dummy) pragma
19836 Import to suppress this initialization. The pragma tell the compiler that the
19837 object is declared and initialized elsewhere. The following package compiles
19838 without warnings (and the initialization is suppressed):
19848 for Ext'Address use System'To_Address (16#1234_1234#);
19849 pragma Import (Ada, Ext);
19853 A final issue with address clauses involves their use for overlaying
19854 variables, as in the following example:
19856 @geindex Overlaying of objects
19861 for B'Address use A'Address;
19864 or alternatively, using the form recommended by the RM:
19868 Addr : constant Address := A'Address;
19870 for B'Address use Addr;
19873 In both of these cases, @code{A} and @code{B} become aliased to one another
19874 via the address clause. This use of address clauses to overlay
19875 variables, achieving an effect similar to unchecked conversion
19876 was erroneous in Ada 83, but in Ada 95 and Ada 2005
19877 the effect is implementation defined. Furthermore, the
19878 Ada RM specifically recommends that in a situation
19879 like this, @code{B} should be subject to the following
19880 implementation advice (RM 13.3(19)):
19884 "19 If the Address of an object is specified, or it is imported
19885 or exported, then the implementation should not perform
19886 optimizations based on assumptions of no aliases."
19889 GNAT follows this recommendation, and goes further by also applying
19890 this recommendation to the overlaid variable (@code{A} in the above example)
19891 in this case. This means that the overlay works "as expected", in that
19892 a modification to one of the variables will affect the value of the other.
19894 More generally, GNAT interprets this recommendation conservatively for
19895 address clauses: in the cases other than overlays, it considers that the
19896 object is effectively subject to pragma @code{Volatile} and implements the
19897 associated semantics.
19899 Note that when address clause overlays are used in this way, there is an
19900 issue of unintentional initialization, as shown by this example:
19903 package Overwrite_Record is
19905 A : Character := 'C';
19906 B : Character := 'A';
19908 X : Short_Integer := 3;
19910 for Y'Address use X'Address;
19912 >>> warning: default initialization of "Y" may
19913 modify "X", use pragma Import for "Y" to
19914 suppress initialization (RM B.1(24))
19916 end Overwrite_Record;
19919 Here the default initialization of @code{Y} will clobber the value
19920 of @code{X}, which justifies the warning. The warning notes that
19921 this effect can be eliminated by adding a @code{pragma Import}
19922 which suppresses the initialization:
19925 package Overwrite_Record is
19927 A : Character := 'C';
19928 B : Character := 'A';
19930 X : Short_Integer := 3;
19932 for Y'Address use X'Address;
19933 pragma Import (Ada, Y);
19934 end Overwrite_Record;
19937 Note that the use of @code{pragma Initialize_Scalars} may cause variables to
19938 be initialized when they would not otherwise have been in the absence
19939 of the use of this pragma. This may cause an overlay to have this
19940 unintended clobbering effect. The compiler avoids this for scalar
19941 types, but not for composite objects (where in general the effect
19942 of @code{Initialize_Scalars} is part of the initialization routine
19943 for the composite object:
19946 pragma Initialize_Scalars;
19947 with Ada.Text_IO; use Ada.Text_IO;
19948 procedure Overwrite_Array is
19949 type Arr is array (1 .. 5) of Integer;
19950 X : Arr := (others => 1);
19952 for A'Address use X'Address;
19954 >>> warning: default initialization of "A" may
19955 modify "X", use pragma Import for "A" to
19956 suppress initialization (RM B.1(24))
19959 if X /= Arr'(others => 1) then
19960 Put_Line ("X was clobbered");
19962 Put_Line ("X was not clobbered");
19964 end Overwrite_Array;
19967 The above program generates the warning as shown, and at execution
19968 time, prints @code{X was clobbered}. If the @code{pragma Import} is
19969 added as suggested:
19972 pragma Initialize_Scalars;
19973 with Ada.Text_IO; use Ada.Text_IO;
19974 procedure Overwrite_Array is
19975 type Arr is array (1 .. 5) of Integer;
19976 X : Arr := (others => 1);
19978 for A'Address use X'Address;
19979 pragma Import (Ada, A);
19981 if X /= Arr'(others => 1) then
19982 Put_Line ("X was clobbered");
19984 Put_Line ("X was not clobbered");
19986 end Overwrite_Array;
19989 then the program compiles without the warning and when run will generate
19990 the output @code{X was not clobbered}.
19992 @node Use of Address Clauses for Memory-Mapped I/O,Effect of Convention on Representation,Address Clauses,Representation Clauses and Pragmas
19993 @anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas id17}@anchor{28c}@anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas use-of-address-clauses-for-memory-mapped-i-o}@anchor{28d}
19994 @section Use of Address Clauses for Memory-Mapped I/O
19997 @geindex Memory-mapped I/O
19999 A common pattern is to use an address clause to map an atomic variable to
20000 a location in memory that corresponds to a memory-mapped I/O operation or
20001 operations, for example:
20004 type Mem_Word is record
20007 pragma Atomic (Mem_Word);
20008 for Mem_Word_Size use 32;
20011 for Mem'Address use some-address;
20018 For a full access (reference or modification) of the variable (Mem) in this
20019 case, as in the above examples, GNAT guarantees that the entire atomic word
20020 will be accessed, in accordance with the RM C.6(15) clause.
20022 A problem arises with a component access such as:
20028 Note that the component A is not declared as atomic. This means that it is
20029 not clear what this assignment means. It could correspond to full word read
20030 and write as given in the first example, or on architectures that supported
20031 such an operation it might be a single byte store instruction. The RM does
20032 not have anything to say in this situation, and GNAT does not make any
20033 guarantee. The code generated may vary from target to target. GNAT will issue
20034 a warning in such a case:
20039 >>> warning: access to non-atomic component of atomic array,
20040 may cause unexpected accesses to atomic object
20043 It is best to be explicit in this situation, by either declaring the
20044 components to be atomic if you want the byte store, or explicitly writing
20045 the full word access sequence if that is what the hardware requires.
20046 Alternatively, if the full word access sequence is required, GNAT also
20047 provides the pragma @code{Volatile_Full_Access} which can be used in lieu of
20048 pragma @code{Atomic} and will give the additional guarantee.
20050 @node Effect of Convention on Representation,Conventions and Anonymous Access Types,Use of Address Clauses for Memory-Mapped I/O,Representation Clauses and Pragmas
20051 @anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas id18}@anchor{28e}@anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas effect-of-convention-on-representation}@anchor{28f}
20052 @section Effect of Convention on Representation
20055 @geindex Convention
20056 @geindex effect on representation
20058 Normally the specification of a foreign language convention for a type or
20059 an object has no effect on the chosen representation. In particular, the
20060 representation chosen for data in GNAT generally meets the standard system
20061 conventions, and for example records are laid out in a manner that is
20062 consistent with C. This means that specifying convention C (for example)
20065 There are four exceptions to this general rule:
20071 @emph{Convention Fortran and array subtypes}.
20073 If pragma Convention Fortran is specified for an array subtype, then in
20074 accordance with the implementation advice in section 3.6.2(11) of the
20075 Ada Reference Manual, the array will be stored in a Fortran-compatible
20076 column-major manner, instead of the normal default row-major order.
20079 @emph{Convention C and enumeration types}
20081 GNAT normally stores enumeration types in 8, 16, or 32 bits as required
20082 to accommodate all values of the type. For example, for the enumeration
20086 type Color is (Red, Green, Blue);
20089 8 bits is sufficient to store all values of the type, so by default, objects
20090 of type @code{Color} will be represented using 8 bits. However, normal C
20091 convention is to use 32 bits for all enum values in C, since enum values
20092 are essentially of type int. If pragma @code{Convention C} is specified for an
20093 Ada enumeration type, then the size is modified as necessary (usually to
20094 32 bits) to be consistent with the C convention for enum values.
20096 Note that this treatment applies only to types. If Convention C is given for
20097 an enumeration object, where the enumeration type is not Convention C, then
20098 Object_Size bits are allocated. For example, for a normal enumeration type,
20099 with less than 256 elements, only 8 bits will be allocated for the object.
20100 Since this may be a surprise in terms of what C expects, GNAT will issue a
20101 warning in this situation. The warning can be suppressed by giving an explicit
20102 size clause specifying the desired size.
20105 @emph{Convention C/Fortran and Boolean types}
20107 In C, the usual convention for boolean values, that is values used for
20108 conditions, is that zero represents false, and nonzero values represent
20109 true. In Ada, the normal convention is that two specific values, typically
20110 0/1, are used to represent false/true respectively.
20112 Fortran has a similar convention for @code{LOGICAL} values (any nonzero
20113 value represents true).
20115 To accommodate the Fortran and C conventions, if a pragma Convention specifies
20116 C or Fortran convention for a derived Boolean, as in the following example:
20119 type C_Switch is new Boolean;
20120 pragma Convention (C, C_Switch);
20123 then the GNAT generated code will treat any nonzero value as true. For truth
20124 values generated by GNAT, the conventional value 1 will be used for True, but
20125 when one of these values is read, any nonzero value is treated as True.
20128 @node Conventions and Anonymous Access Types,Determining the Representations chosen by GNAT,Effect of Convention on Representation,Representation Clauses and Pragmas
20129 @anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas conventions-and-anonymous-access-types}@anchor{290}@anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas id19}@anchor{291}
20130 @section Conventions and Anonymous Access Types
20133 @geindex Anonymous access types
20135 @geindex Convention for anonymous access types
20137 The RM is not entirely clear on convention handling in a number of cases,
20138 and in particular, it is not clear on the convention to be given to
20139 anonymous access types in general, and in particular what is to be
20140 done for the case of anonymous access-to-subprogram.
20142 In GNAT, we decide that if an explicit Convention is applied
20143 to an object or component, and its type is such an anonymous type,
20144 then the convention will apply to this anonymous type as well. This
20145 seems to make sense since it is anomolous in any case to have a
20146 different convention for an object and its type, and there is clearly
20147 no way to explicitly specify a convention for an anonymous type, since
20148 it doesn't have a name to specify!
20150 Furthermore, we decide that if a convention is applied to a record type,
20151 then this convention is inherited by any of its components that are of an
20152 anonymous access type which do not have an explicitly specified convention.
20154 The following program shows these conventions in action:
20157 package ConvComp is
20158 type Foo is range 1 .. 10;
20160 A : access function (X : Foo) return Integer;
20163 pragma Convention (C, T1);
20166 A : access function (X : Foo) return Integer;
20167 pragma Convention (C, A);
20170 pragma Convention (COBOL, T2);
20173 A : access function (X : Foo) return Integer;
20174 pragma Convention (COBOL, A);
20177 pragma Convention (C, T3);
20180 A : access function (X : Foo) return Integer;
20183 pragma Convention (COBOL, T4);
20185 function F (X : Foo) return Integer;
20186 pragma Convention (C, F);
20188 function F (X : Foo) return Integer is (13);
20190 TV1 : T1 := (F'Access, 12); -- OK
20191 TV2 : T2 := (F'Access, 13); -- OK
20193 TV3 : T3 := (F'Access, 13); -- ERROR
20195 >>> subprogram "F" has wrong convention
20196 >>> does not match access to subprogram declared at line 17
20197 38. TV4 : T4 := (F'Access, 13); -- ERROR
20199 >>> subprogram "F" has wrong convention
20200 >>> does not match access to subprogram declared at line 24
20204 @node Determining the Representations chosen by GNAT,,Conventions and Anonymous Access Types,Representation Clauses and Pragmas
20205 @anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas id20}@anchor{292}@anchor{gnat_rm/representation_clauses_and_pragmas determining-the-representations-chosen-by-gnat}@anchor{293}
20206 @section Determining the Representations chosen by GNAT
20209 @geindex Representation
20210 @geindex determination of
20212 @geindex -gnatR (gcc)
20214 Although the descriptions in this section are intended to be complete, it is
20215 often easier to simply experiment to see what GNAT accepts and what the
20216 effect is on the layout of types and objects.
20218 As required by the Ada RM, if a representation clause is not accepted, then
20219 it must be rejected as illegal by the compiler. However, when a
20220 representation clause or pragma is accepted, there can still be questions
20221 of what the compiler actually does. For example, if a partial record
20222 representation clause specifies the location of some components and not
20223 others, then where are the non-specified components placed? Or if pragma
20224 @code{Pack} is used on a record, then exactly where are the resulting
20225 fields placed? The section on pragma @code{Pack} in this chapter can be
20226 used to answer the second question, but it is often easier to just see
20227 what the compiler does.
20229 For this purpose, GNAT provides the option @emph{-gnatR}. If you compile
20230 with this option, then the compiler will output information on the actual
20231 representations chosen, in a format similar to source representation
20232 clauses. For example, if we compile the package:
20236 type r (x : boolean) is tagged record
20238 when True => S : String (1 .. 100);
20239 when False => null;
20243 type r2 is new r (false) with record
20248 y2 at 16 range 0 .. 31;
20255 type x1 is array (1 .. 10) of x;
20256 for x1'component_size use 11;
20258 type ia is access integer;
20260 type Rb1 is array (1 .. 13) of Boolean;
20263 type Rb2 is array (1 .. 65) of Boolean;
20278 using the switch @emph{-gnatR} we obtain the following output:
20281 Representation information for unit q
20282 -------------------------------------
20285 for r'Alignment use 4;
20287 x at 4 range 0 .. 7;
20288 _tag at 0 range 0 .. 31;
20289 s at 5 range 0 .. 799;
20292 for r2'Size use 160;
20293 for r2'Alignment use 4;
20295 x at 4 range 0 .. 7;
20296 _tag at 0 range 0 .. 31;
20297 _parent at 0 range 0 .. 63;
20298 y2 at 16 range 0 .. 31;
20302 for x'Alignment use 1;
20304 y at 0 range 0 .. 7;
20307 for x1'Size use 112;
20308 for x1'Alignment use 1;
20309 for x1'Component_Size use 11;
20311 for rb1'Size use 13;
20312 for rb1'Alignment use 2;
20313 for rb1'Component_Size use 1;
20315 for rb2'Size use 72;
20316 for rb2'Alignment use 1;
20317 for rb2'Component_Size use 1;
20319 for x2'Size use 224;
20320 for x2'Alignment use 4;
20322 l1 at 0 range 0 .. 0;
20323 l2 at 0 range 1 .. 64;
20324 l3 at 12 range 0 .. 31;
20325 l4 at 16 range 0 .. 0;
20326 l5 at 16 range 1 .. 13;
20327 l6 at 18 range 0 .. 71;
20331 The Size values are actually the Object_Size, i.e., the default size that
20332 will be allocated for objects of the type.
20333 The @code{??} size for type r indicates that we have a variant record, and the
20334 actual size of objects will depend on the discriminant value.
20336 The Alignment values show the actual alignment chosen by the compiler
20337 for each record or array type.
20339 The record representation clause for type r shows where all fields
20340 are placed, including the compiler generated tag field (whose location
20341 cannot be controlled by the programmer).
20343 The record representation clause for the type extension r2 shows all the
20344 fields present, including the parent field, which is a copy of the fields
20345 of the parent type of r2, i.e., r1.
20347 The component size and size clauses for types rb1 and rb2 show
20348 the exact effect of pragma @code{Pack} on these arrays, and the record
20349 representation clause for type x2 shows how pragma @cite{Pack} affects
20352 In some cases, it may be useful to cut and paste the representation clauses
20353 generated by the compiler into the original source to fix and guarantee
20354 the actual representation to be used.
20356 @node Standard Library Routines,The Implementation of Standard I/O,Representation Clauses and Pragmas,Top
20357 @anchor{gnat_rm/standard_library_routines standard-library-routines}@anchor{e}@anchor{gnat_rm/standard_library_routines doc}@anchor{294}@anchor{gnat_rm/standard_library_routines id1}@anchor{295}
20358 @chapter Standard Library Routines
20361 The Ada Reference Manual contains in Annex A a full description of an
20362 extensive set of standard library routines that can be used in any Ada
20363 program, and which must be provided by all Ada compilers. They are
20364 analogous to the standard C library used by C programs.
20366 GNAT implements all of the facilities described in annex A, and for most
20367 purposes the description in the Ada Reference Manual, or appropriate Ada
20368 text book, will be sufficient for making use of these facilities.
20370 In the case of the input-output facilities,
20371 @ref{f,,The Implementation of Standard I/O},
20372 gives details on exactly how GNAT interfaces to the
20373 file system. For the remaining packages, the Ada Reference Manual
20374 should be sufficient. The following is a list of the packages included,
20375 together with a brief description of the functionality that is provided.
20377 For completeness, references are included to other predefined library
20378 routines defined in other sections of the Ada Reference Manual (these are
20379 cross-indexed from Annex A). For further details see the relevant
20380 package declarations in the run-time library. In particular, a few units
20381 are not implemented, as marked by the presence of pragma Unimplemented_Unit,
20382 and in this case the package declaration contains comments explaining why
20383 the unit is not implemented.
20388 @item @code{Ada} @emph{(A.2)}
20390 This is a parent package for all the standard library packages. It is
20391 usually included implicitly in your program, and itself contains no
20392 useful data or routines.
20394 @item @code{Ada.Assertions} @emph{(11.4.2)}
20396 @code{Assertions} provides the @code{Assert} subprograms, and also
20397 the declaration of the @code{Assertion_Error} exception.
20399 @item @code{Ada.Asynchronous_Task_Control} @emph{(D.11)}
20401 @code{Asynchronous_Task_Control} provides low level facilities for task
20402 synchronization. It is typically not implemented. See package spec for details.
20404 @item @code{Ada.Calendar} @emph{(9.6)}
20406 @code{Calendar} provides time of day access, and routines for
20407 manipulating times and durations.
20409 @item @code{Ada.Calendar.Arithmetic} @emph{(9.6.1)}
20411 This package provides additional arithmetic
20412 operations for @code{Calendar}.
20414 @item @code{Ada.Calendar.Formatting} @emph{(9.6.1)}
20416 This package provides formatting operations for @code{Calendar}.
20418 @item @code{Ada.Calendar.Time_Zones} @emph{(9.6.1)}
20420 This package provides additional @code{Calendar} facilities
20421 for handling time zones.
20423 @item @code{Ada.Characters} @emph{(A.3.1)}
20425 This is a dummy parent package that contains no useful entities
20427 @item @code{Ada.Characters.Conversions} @emph{(A.3.2)}
20429 This package provides character conversion functions.
20431 @item @code{Ada.Characters.Handling} @emph{(A.3.2)}
20433 This package provides some basic character handling capabilities,
20434 including classification functions for classes of characters (e.g., test
20435 for letters, or digits).
20437 @item @code{Ada.Characters.Latin_1} @emph{(A.3.3)}
20439 This package includes a complete set of definitions of the characters
20440 that appear in type CHARACTER. It is useful for writing programs that
20441 will run in international environments. For example, if you want an
20442 upper case E with an acute accent in a string, it is often better to use
20443 the definition of @code{UC_E_Acute} in this package. Then your program
20444 will print in an understandable manner even if your environment does not
20445 support these extended characters.
20447 @item @code{Ada.Command_Line} @emph{(A.15)}
20449 This package provides access to the command line parameters and the name
20450 of the current program (analogous to the use of @code{argc} and @code{argv}
20451 in C), and also allows the exit status for the program to be set in a
20452 system-independent manner.
20454 @item @code{Ada.Complex_Text_IO} @emph{(G.1.3)}
20456 This package provides text input and output of complex numbers.
20458 @item @code{Ada.Containers} @emph{(A.18.1)}
20460 A top level package providing a few basic definitions used by all the
20461 following specific child packages that provide specific kinds of
20465 @code{Ada.Containers.Bounded_Priority_Queues} @emph{(A.18.31)}
20467 @code{Ada.Containers.Bounded_Synchronized_Queues} @emph{(A.18.29)}
20469 @code{Ada.Containers.Doubly_Linked_Lists} @emph{(A.18.3)}
20471 @code{Ada.Containers.Generic_Array_Sort} @emph{(A.18.26)}
20473 @code{Ada.Containers.Generic_Constrained_Array_Sort} @emph{(A.18.26)}
20475 @code{Ada.Containers.Generic_Sort} @emph{(A.18.26)}
20477 @code{Ada.Containers.Hashed_Maps} @emph{(A.18.5)}
20479 @code{Ada.Containers.Hashed_Sets} @emph{(A.18.8)}
20481 @code{Ada.Containers.Indefinite_Doubly_Linked_Lists} @emph{(A.18.12)}
20483 @code{Ada.Containers.Indefinite_Hashed_Maps} @emph{(A.18.13)}
20485 @code{Ada.Containers.Indefinite_Hashed_Sets} @emph{(A.18.15)}
20487 @code{Ada.Containers.Indefinite_Holders} @emph{(A.18.18)}
20489 @code{Ada.Containers.Indefinite_Multiway_Trees} @emph{(A.18.17)}
20491 @code{Ada.Containers.Indefinite_Ordered_Maps} @emph{(A.18.14)}
20493 @code{Ada.Containers.Indefinite_Ordered_Sets} @emph{(A.18.16)}
20495 @code{Ada.Containers.Indefinite_Vectors} @emph{(A.18.11)}
20497 @code{Ada.Containers.Multiway_Trees} @emph{(A.18.10)}
20499 @code{Ada.Containers.Ordered_Maps} @emph{(A.18.6)}
20501 @code{Ada.Containers.Ordered_Sets} @emph{(A.18.9)}
20503 @code{Ada.Containers.Synchronized_Queue_Interfaces} @emph{(A.18.27)}
20505 @code{Ada.Containers.Unbounded_Priority_Queues} @emph{(A.18.30)}
20507 @code{Ada.Containers.Unbounded_Synchronized_Queues} @emph{(A.18.28)}
20509 @code{Ada.Containers.Vectors} @emph{(A.18.2)}
20514 @item @code{Ada.Directories} @emph{(A.16)}
20516 This package provides operations on directories.
20518 @item @code{Ada.Directories.Hierarchical_File_Names} @emph{(A.16.1)}
20520 This package provides additional directory operations handling
20521 hiearchical file names.
20523 @item @code{Ada.Directories.Information} @emph{(A.16)}
20525 This is an implementation defined package for additional directory
20526 operations, which is not implemented in GNAT.
20528 @item @code{Ada.Decimal} @emph{(F.2)}
20530 This package provides constants describing the range of decimal numbers
20531 implemented, and also a decimal divide routine (analogous to the COBOL
20532 verb DIVIDE ... GIVING ... REMAINDER ...)
20534 @item @code{Ada.Direct_IO} @emph{(A.8.4)}
20536 This package provides input-output using a model of a set of records of
20537 fixed-length, containing an arbitrary definite Ada type, indexed by an
20538 integer record number.
20540 @item @code{Ada.Dispatching} @emph{(D.2.1)}
20542 A parent package containing definitions for task dispatching operations.
20544 @item @code{Ada.Dispatching.EDF} @emph{(D.2.6)}
20546 Not implemented in GNAT.
20548 @item @code{Ada.Dispatching.Non_Preemptive} @emph{(D.2.4)}
20550 Not implemented in GNAT.
20552 @item @code{Ada.Dispatching.Round_Robin} @emph{(D.2.5)}
20554 Not implemented in GNAT.
20556 @item @code{Ada.Dynamic_Priorities} @emph{(D.5)}
20558 This package allows the priorities of a task to be adjusted dynamically
20559 as the task is running.
20561 @item @code{Ada.Environment_Variables} @emph{(A.17)}
20563 This package provides facilities for accessing environment variables.
20565 @item @code{Ada.Exceptions} @emph{(11.4.1)}
20567 This package provides additional information on exceptions, and also
20568 contains facilities for treating exceptions as data objects, and raising
20569 exceptions with associated messages.
20571 @item @code{Ada.Execution_Time} @emph{(D.14)}
20573 This package provides CPU clock functionalities. It is not implemented on
20574 all targets (see package spec for details).
20576 @item @code{Ada.Execution_Time.Group_Budgets} @emph{(D.14.2)}
20578 Not implemented in GNAT.
20580 @item @code{Ada.Execution_Time.Timers} @emph{(D.14.1)'}
20582 Not implemented in GNAT.
20584 @item @code{Ada.Finalization} @emph{(7.6)}
20586 This package contains the declarations and subprograms to support the
20587 use of controlled types, providing for automatic initialization and
20588 finalization (analogous to the constructors and destructors of C++).
20590 @item @code{Ada.Float_Text_IO} @emph{(A.10.9)}
20592 A library level instantiation of Text_IO.Float_IO for type Float.
20594 @item @code{Ada.Float_Wide_Text_IO} @emph{(A.10.9)}
20596 A library level instantiation of Wide_Text_IO.Float_IO for type Float.
20598 @item @code{Ada.Float_Wide_Wide_Text_IO} @emph{(A.10.9)}
20600 A library level instantiation of Wide_Wide_Text_IO.Float_IO for type Float.
20602 @item @code{Ada.Integer_Text_IO} @emph{(A.10.9)}
20604 A library level instantiation of Text_IO.Integer_IO for type Integer.
20606 @item @code{Ada.Integer_Wide_Text_IO} @emph{(A.10.9)}
20608 A library level instantiation of Wide_Text_IO.Integer_IO for type Integer.
20610 @item @code{Ada.Integer_Wide_Wide_Text_IO} @emph{(A.10.9)}
20612 A library level instantiation of Wide_Wide_Text_IO.Integer_IO for type Integer.
20614 @item @code{Ada.Interrupts} @emph{(C.3.2)}
20616 This package provides facilities for interfacing to interrupts, which
20617 includes the set of signals or conditions that can be raised and
20618 recognized as interrupts.
20620 @item @code{Ada.Interrupts.Names} @emph{(C.3.2)}
20622 This package provides the set of interrupt names (actually signal
20623 or condition names) that can be handled by GNAT.
20625 @item @code{Ada.IO_Exceptions} @emph{(A.13)}
20627 This package defines the set of exceptions that can be raised by use of
20628 the standard IO packages.
20630 @item @code{Ada.Iterator_Interfaces} @emph{(5.5.1)}
20632 This package provides a generic interface to generalized iterators.
20634 @item @code{Ada.Locales} @emph{(A.19)}
20636 This package provides declarations providing information (Language
20637 and Country) about the current locale.
20639 @item @code{Ada.Numerics}
20641 This package contains some standard constants and exceptions used
20642 throughout the numerics packages. Note that the constants pi and e are
20643 defined here, and it is better to use these definitions than rolling
20646 @item @code{Ada.Numerics.Complex_Arrays} @emph{(G.3.2)}
20648 Provides operations on arrays of complex numbers.
20650 @item @code{Ada.Numerics.Complex_Elementary_Functions}
20652 Provides the implementation of standard elementary functions (such as
20653 log and trigonometric functions) operating on complex numbers using the
20654 standard @code{Float} and the @code{Complex} and @code{Imaginary} types
20655 created by the package @code{Numerics.Complex_Types}.
20657 @item @code{Ada.Numerics.Complex_Types}
20659 This is a predefined instantiation of
20660 @code{Numerics.Generic_Complex_Types} using @code{Standard.Float} to
20661 build the type @code{Complex} and @code{Imaginary}.
20663 @item @code{Ada.Numerics.Discrete_Random}
20665 This generic package provides a random number generator suitable for generating
20666 uniformly distributed values of a specified discrete subtype.
20668 @item @code{Ada.Numerics.Float_Random}
20670 This package provides a random number generator suitable for generating
20671 uniformly distributed floating point values in the unit interval.
20673 @item @code{Ada.Numerics.Generic_Complex_Elementary_Functions}
20675 This is a generic version of the package that provides the
20676 implementation of standard elementary functions (such as log and
20677 trigonometric functions) for an arbitrary complex type.
20679 The following predefined instantiations of this package are provided:
20687 @code{Ada.Numerics.Short_Complex_Elementary_Functions}
20692 @code{Ada.Numerics.Complex_Elementary_Functions}
20697 @code{Ada.Numerics.Long_Complex_Elementary_Functions}
20700 @item @code{Ada.Numerics.Generic_Complex_Types}
20702 This is a generic package that allows the creation of complex types,
20703 with associated complex arithmetic operations.
20705 The following predefined instantiations of this package exist
20713 @code{Ada.Numerics.Short_Complex_Complex_Types}
20718 @code{Ada.Numerics.Complex_Complex_Types}
20723 @code{Ada.Numerics.Long_Complex_Complex_Types}
20726 @item @code{Ada.Numerics.Generic_Elementary_Functions}
20728 This is a generic package that provides the implementation of standard
20729 elementary functions (such as log an trigonometric functions) for an
20730 arbitrary float type.
20732 The following predefined instantiations of this package exist
20740 @code{Ada.Numerics.Short_Elementary_Functions}
20745 @code{Ada.Numerics.Elementary_Functions}
20750 @code{Ada.Numerics.Long_Elementary_Functions}
20753 @item @code{Ada.Numerics.Generic_Real_Arrays} @emph{(G.3.1)}
20755 Generic operations on arrays of reals
20757 @item @code{Ada.Numerics.Real_Arrays} @emph{(G.3.1)}
20759 Preinstantiation of Ada.Numerics.Generic_Real_Arrays (Float).
20761 @item @code{Ada.Real_Time} @emph{(D.8)}
20763 This package provides facilities similar to those of @code{Calendar}, but
20764 operating with a finer clock suitable for real time control. Note that
20765 annex D requires that there be no backward clock jumps, and GNAT generally
20766 guarantees this behavior, but of course if the external clock on which
20767 the GNAT runtime depends is deliberately reset by some external event,
20768 then such a backward jump may occur.
20770 @item @code{Ada.Real_Time.Timing_Events} @emph{(D.15)}
20772 Not implemented in GNAT.
20774 @item @code{Ada.Sequential_IO} @emph{(A.8.1)}
20776 This package provides input-output facilities for sequential files,
20777 which can contain a sequence of values of a single type, which can be
20778 any Ada type, including indefinite (unconstrained) types.
20780 @item @code{Ada.Storage_IO} @emph{(A.9)}
20782 This package provides a facility for mapping arbitrary Ada types to and
20783 from a storage buffer. It is primarily intended for the creation of new
20786 @item @code{Ada.Streams} @emph{(13.13.1)}
20788 This is a generic package that provides the basic support for the
20789 concept of streams as used by the stream attributes (@code{Input},
20790 @code{Output}, @code{Read} and @code{Write}).
20792 @item @code{Ada.Streams.Stream_IO} @emph{(A.12.1)}
20794 This package is a specialization of the type @code{Streams} defined in
20795 package @code{Streams} together with a set of operations providing
20796 Stream_IO capability. The Stream_IO model permits both random and
20797 sequential access to a file which can contain an arbitrary set of values
20798 of one or more Ada types.
20800 @item @code{Ada.Strings} @emph{(A.4.1)}
20802 This package provides some basic constants used by the string handling
20805 @item @code{Ada.Strings.Bounded} @emph{(A.4.4)}
20807 This package provides facilities for handling variable length
20808 strings. The bounded model requires a maximum length. It is thus
20809 somewhat more limited than the unbounded model, but avoids the use of
20810 dynamic allocation or finalization.
20812 @item @code{Ada.Strings.Bounded.Equal_Case_Insensitive} @emph{(A.4.10)}
20814 Provides case-insensitive comparisons of bounded strings
20816 @item @code{Ada.Strings.Bounded.Hash} @emph{(A.4.9)}
20818 This package provides a generic hash function for bounded strings
20820 @item @code{Ada.Strings.Bounded.Hash_Case_Insensitive} @emph{(A.4.9)}
20822 This package provides a generic hash function for bounded strings that
20823 converts the string to be hashed to lower case.
20825 @item @code{Ada.Strings.Bounded.Less_Case_Insensitive} @emph{(A.4.10)}
20827 This package provides a comparison function for bounded strings that works
20828 in a case insensitive manner by converting to lower case before the comparison.
20830 @item @code{Ada.Strings.Fixed} @emph{(A.4.3)}
20832 This package provides facilities for handling fixed length strings.
20834 @item @code{Ada.Strings.Fixed.Equal_Case_Insensitive} @emph{(A.4.10)}
20836 This package provides an equality function for fixed strings that compares
20837 the strings after converting both to lower case.
20839 @item @code{Ada.Strings.Fixed.Hash_Case_Insensitive} @emph{(A.4.9)}
20841 This package provides a case insensitive hash function for fixed strings that
20842 converts the string to lower case before computing the hash.
20844 @item @code{Ada.Strings.Fixed.Less_Case_Insensitive} @emph{(A.4.10)}
20846 This package provides a comparison function for fixed strings that works
20847 in a case insensitive manner by converting to lower case before the comparison.
20849 @item @code{Ada.Strings.Hash} @emph{(A.4.9)}
20851 This package provides a hash function for strings.
20853 @item @code{Ada.Strings.Hash_Case_Insensitive} @emph{(A.4.9)}
20855 This package provides a hash function for strings that is case insensitive.
20856 The string is converted to lower case before computing the hash.
20858 @item @code{Ada.Strings.Less_Case_Insensitive} @emph{(A.4.10)}
20860 This package provides a comparison function for\strings that works
20861 in a case insensitive manner by converting to lower case before the comparison.
20863 @item @code{Ada.Strings.Maps} @emph{(A.4.2)}
20865 This package provides facilities for handling character mappings and
20866 arbitrarily defined subsets of characters. For instance it is useful in
20867 defining specialized translation tables.
20869 @item @code{Ada.Strings.Maps.Constants} @emph{(A.4.6)}
20871 This package provides a standard set of predefined mappings and
20872 predefined character sets. For example, the standard upper to lower case
20873 conversion table is found in this package. Note that upper to lower case
20874 conversion is non-trivial if you want to take the entire set of
20875 characters, including extended characters like E with an acute accent,
20876 into account. You should use the mappings in this package (rather than
20877 adding 32 yourself) to do case mappings.
20879 @item @code{Ada.Strings.Unbounded} @emph{(A.4.5)}
20881 This package provides facilities for handling variable length
20882 strings. The unbounded model allows arbitrary length strings, but
20883 requires the use of dynamic allocation and finalization.
20885 @item @code{Ada.Strings.Unbounded.Equal_Case_Insensitive} @emph{(A.4.10)}
20887 Provides case-insensitive comparisons of unbounded strings
20889 @item @code{Ada.Strings.Unbounded.Hash} @emph{(A.4.9)}
20891 This package provides a generic hash function for unbounded strings
20893 @item @code{Ada.Strings.Unbounded.Hash_Case_Insensitive} @emph{(A.4.9)}
20895 This package provides a generic hash function for unbounded strings that
20896 converts the string to be hashed to lower case.
20898 @item @code{Ada.Strings.Unbounded.Less_Case_Insensitive} @emph{(A.4.10)}
20900 This package provides a comparison function for unbounded strings that works
20901 in a case insensitive manner by converting to lower case before the comparison.
20903 @item @code{Ada.Strings.UTF_Encoding} @emph{(A.4.11)}
20905 This package provides basic definitions for dealing with UTF-encoded strings.
20907 @item @code{Ada.Strings.UTF_Encoding.Conversions} @emph{(A.4.11)}
20909 This package provides conversion functions for UTF-encoded strings.
20912 @code{Ada.Strings.UTF_Encoding.Strings} @emph{(A.4.11)}
20914 @code{Ada.Strings.UTF_Encoding.Wide_Strings} @emph{(A.4.11)}
20919 @item @code{Ada.Strings.UTF_Encoding.Wide_Wide_Strings} @emph{(A.4.11)}
20921 These packages provide facilities for handling UTF encodings for
20922 Strings, Wide_Strings and Wide_Wide_Strings.
20925 @code{Ada.Strings.Wide_Bounded} @emph{(A.4.7)}
20927 @code{Ada.Strings.Wide_Fixed} @emph{(A.4.7)}
20929 @code{Ada.Strings.Wide_Maps} @emph{(A.4.7)}
20934 @item @code{Ada.Strings.Wide_Unbounded} @emph{(A.4.7)}
20936 These packages provide analogous capabilities to the corresponding
20937 packages without @code{Wide_} in the name, but operate with the types
20938 @code{Wide_String} and @code{Wide_Character} instead of @code{String}
20939 and @code{Character}. Versions of all the child packages are available.
20942 @code{Ada.Strings.Wide_Wide_Bounded} @emph{(A.4.7)}
20944 @code{Ada.Strings.Wide_Wide_Fixed} @emph{(A.4.7)}
20946 @code{Ada.Strings.Wide_Wide_Maps} @emph{(A.4.7)}
20951 @item @code{Ada.Strings.Wide_Wide_Unbounded} @emph{(A.4.7)}
20953 These packages provide analogous capabilities to the corresponding
20954 packages without @code{Wide_} in the name, but operate with the types
20955 @code{Wide_Wide_String} and @code{Wide_Wide_Character} instead
20956 of @code{String} and @code{Character}.
20958 @item @code{Ada.Synchronous_Barriers} @emph{(D.10.1)}
20960 This package provides facilities for synchronizing tasks at a low level
20963 @item @code{Ada.Synchronous_Task_Control} @emph{(D.10)}
20965 This package provides some standard facilities for controlling task
20966 communication in a synchronous manner.
20968 @item @code{Ada.Synchronous_Task_Control.EDF} @emph{(D.10)}
20970 Not implemented in GNAT.
20972 @item @code{Ada.Tags}
20974 This package contains definitions for manipulation of the tags of tagged
20977 @item @code{Ada.Tags.Generic_Dispatching_Constructor} @emph{(3.9)}
20979 This package provides a way of constructing tagged class-wide values given
20980 only the tag value.
20982 @item @code{Ada.Task_Attributes} @emph{(C.7.2)}
20984 This package provides the capability of associating arbitrary
20985 task-specific data with separate tasks.
20987 @item @code{Ada.Task_Identifification} @emph{(C.7.1)}
20989 This package provides capabilities for task identification.
20991 @item @code{Ada.Task_Termination} @emph{(C.7.3)}
20993 This package provides control over task termination.
20995 @item @code{Ada.Text_IO}
20997 This package provides basic text input-output capabilities for
20998 character, string and numeric data. The subpackages of this
20999 package are listed next. Note that although these are defined
21000 as subpackages in the RM, they are actually transparently
21001 implemented as child packages in GNAT, meaning that they
21002 are only loaded if needed.
21004 @item @code{Ada.Text_IO.Decimal_IO}
21006 Provides input-output facilities for decimal fixed-point types
21008 @item @code{Ada.Text_IO.Enumeration_IO}
21010 Provides input-output facilities for enumeration types.
21012 @item @code{Ada.Text_IO.Fixed_IO}
21014 Provides input-output facilities for ordinary fixed-point types.
21016 @item @code{Ada.Text_IO.Float_IO}
21018 Provides input-output facilities for float types. The following
21019 predefined instantiations of this generic package are available:
21027 @code{Short_Float_Text_IO}
21032 @code{Float_Text_IO}
21037 @code{Long_Float_Text_IO}
21040 @item @code{Ada.Text_IO.Integer_IO}
21042 Provides input-output facilities for integer types. The following
21043 predefined instantiations of this generic package are available:
21049 @code{Short_Short_Integer}
21051 @code{Ada.Short_Short_Integer_Text_IO}
21054 @code{Short_Integer}
21056 @code{Ada.Short_Integer_Text_IO}
21061 @code{Ada.Integer_Text_IO}
21064 @code{Long_Integer}
21066 @code{Ada.Long_Integer_Text_IO}
21069 @code{Long_Long_Integer}
21071 @code{Ada.Long_Long_Integer_Text_IO}
21074 @item @code{Ada.Text_IO.Modular_IO}
21076 Provides input-output facilities for modular (unsigned) types.
21078 @item @code{Ada.Text_IO.Bounded_IO (A.10.11)}
21080 Provides input-output facilities for bounded strings.
21082 @item @code{Ada.Text_IO.Complex_IO (G.1.3)}
21084 This package provides basic text input-output capabilities for complex
21087 @item @code{Ada.Text_IO.Editing (F.3.3)}
21089 This package contains routines for edited output, analogous to the use
21090 of pictures in COBOL. The picture formats used by this package are a
21091 close copy of the facility in COBOL.
21093 @item @code{Ada.Text_IO.Text_Streams (A.12.2)}
21095 This package provides a facility that allows Text_IO files to be treated
21096 as streams, so that the stream attributes can be used for writing
21097 arbitrary data, including binary data, to Text_IO files.
21099 @item @code{Ada.Text_IO.Unbounded_IO (A.10.12)}
21101 This package provides input-output facilities for unbounded strings.
21103 @item @code{Ada.Unchecked_Conversion (13.9)}
21105 This generic package allows arbitrary conversion from one type to
21106 another of the same size, providing for breaking the type safety in
21107 special circumstances.
21109 If the types have the same Size (more accurately the same Value_Size),
21110 then the effect is simply to transfer the bits from the source to the
21111 target type without any modification. This usage is well defined, and
21112 for simple types whose representation is typically the same across
21113 all implementations, gives a portable method of performing such
21116 If the types do not have the same size, then the result is implementation
21117 defined, and thus may be non-portable. The following describes how GNAT
21118 handles such unchecked conversion cases.
21120 If the types are of different sizes, and are both discrete types, then
21121 the effect is of a normal type conversion without any constraint checking.
21122 In particular if the result type has a larger size, the result will be
21123 zero or sign extended. If the result type has a smaller size, the result
21124 will be truncated by ignoring high order bits.
21126 If the types are of different sizes, and are not both discrete types,
21127 then the conversion works as though pointers were created to the source
21128 and target, and the pointer value is converted. The effect is that bits
21129 are copied from successive low order storage units and bits of the source
21130 up to the length of the target type.
21132 A warning is issued if the lengths differ, since the effect in this
21133 case is implementation dependent, and the above behavior may not match
21134 that of some other compiler.
21136 A pointer to one type may be converted to a pointer to another type using
21137 unchecked conversion. The only case in which the effect is undefined is
21138 when one or both pointers are pointers to unconstrained array types. In
21139 this case, the bounds information may get incorrectly transferred, and in
21140 particular, GNAT uses double size pointers for such types, and it is
21141 meaningless to convert between such pointer types. GNAT will issue a
21142 warning if the alignment of the target designated type is more strict
21143 than the alignment of the source designated type (since the result may
21144 be unaligned in this case).
21146 A pointer other than a pointer to an unconstrained array type may be
21147 converted to and from System.Address. Such usage is common in Ada 83
21148 programs, but note that Ada.Address_To_Access_Conversions is the
21149 preferred method of performing such conversions in Ada 95 and Ada 2005.
21151 unchecked conversion nor Ada.Address_To_Access_Conversions should be
21152 used in conjunction with pointers to unconstrained objects, since
21153 the bounds information cannot be handled correctly in this case.
21155 @item @code{Ada.Unchecked_Deallocation} @emph{(13.11.2)}
21157 This generic package allows explicit freeing of storage previously
21158 allocated by use of an allocator.
21160 @item @code{Ada.Wide_Text_IO} @emph{(A.11)}
21162 This package is similar to @code{Ada.Text_IO}, except that the external
21163 file supports wide character representations, and the internal types are
21164 @code{Wide_Character} and @code{Wide_String} instead of @code{Character}
21165 and @code{String}. The corresponding set of nested packages and child
21166 packages are defined.
21168 @item @code{Ada.Wide_Wide_Text_IO} @emph{(A.11)}
21170 This package is similar to @code{Ada.Text_IO}, except that the external
21171 file supports wide character representations, and the internal types are
21172 @code{Wide_Character} and @code{Wide_String} instead of @code{Character}
21173 and @code{String}. The corresponding set of nested packages and child
21174 packages are defined.
21177 For packages in Interfaces and System, all the RM defined packages are
21178 available in GNAT, see the Ada 2012 RM for full details.
21180 @node The Implementation of Standard I/O,The GNAT Library,Standard Library Routines,Top
21181 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o the-implementation-of-standard-i-o}@anchor{f}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o doc}@anchor{296}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id1}@anchor{297}
21182 @chapter The Implementation of Standard I/O
21185 GNAT implements all the required input-output facilities described in
21186 A.6 through A.14. These sections of the Ada Reference Manual describe the
21187 required behavior of these packages from the Ada point of view, and if
21188 you are writing a portable Ada program that does not need to know the
21189 exact manner in which Ada maps to the outside world when it comes to
21190 reading or writing external files, then you do not need to read this
21191 chapter. As long as your files are all regular files (not pipes or
21192 devices), and as long as you write and read the files only from Ada, the
21193 description in the Ada Reference Manual is sufficient.
21195 However, if you want to do input-output to pipes or other devices, such
21196 as the keyboard or screen, or if the files you are dealing with are
21197 either generated by some other language, or to be read by some other
21198 language, then you need to know more about the details of how the GNAT
21199 implementation of these input-output facilities behaves.
21201 In this chapter we give a detailed description of exactly how GNAT
21202 interfaces to the file system. As always, the sources of the system are
21203 available to you for answering questions at an even more detailed level,
21204 but for most purposes the information in this chapter will suffice.
21206 Another reason that you may need to know more about how input-output is
21207 implemented arises when you have a program written in mixed languages
21208 where, for example, files are shared between the C and Ada sections of
21209 the same program. GNAT provides some additional facilities, in the form
21210 of additional child library packages, that facilitate this sharing, and
21211 these additional facilities are also described in this chapter.
21214 * Standard I/O Packages::
21220 * Wide_Wide_Text_IO::
21222 * Text Translation::
21224 * Filenames encoding::
21225 * File content encoding::
21227 * Operations on C Streams::
21228 * Interfacing to C Streams::
21232 @node Standard I/O Packages,FORM Strings,,The Implementation of Standard I/O
21233 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o standard-i-o-packages}@anchor{298}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id2}@anchor{299}
21234 @section Standard I/O Packages
21237 The Standard I/O packages described in Annex A for
21246 Ada.Text_IO.Complex_IO
21249 Ada.Text_IO.Text_Streams
21255 Ada.Wide_Text_IO.Complex_IO
21258 Ada.Wide_Text_IO.Text_Streams
21261 Ada.Wide_Wide_Text_IO
21264 Ada.Wide_Wide_Text_IO.Complex_IO
21267 Ada.Wide_Wide_Text_IO.Text_Streams
21279 are implemented using the C
21280 library streams facility; where
21286 All files are opened using @code{fopen}.
21289 All input/output operations use @code{fread}/@cite{fwrite}.
21292 There is no internal buffering of any kind at the Ada library level. The only
21293 buffering is that provided at the system level in the implementation of the
21294 library routines that support streams. This facilitates shared use of these
21295 streams by mixed language programs. Note though that system level buffering is
21296 explicitly enabled at elaboration of the standard I/O packages and that can
21297 have an impact on mixed language programs, in particular those using I/O before
21298 calling the Ada elaboration routine (e.g., adainit). It is recommended to call
21299 the Ada elaboration routine before performing any I/O or when impractical,
21300 flush the common I/O streams and in particular Standard_Output before
21301 elaborating the Ada code.
21303 @node FORM Strings,Direct_IO,Standard I/O Packages,The Implementation of Standard I/O
21304 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o form-strings}@anchor{29a}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id3}@anchor{29b}
21305 @section FORM Strings
21308 The format of a FORM string in GNAT is:
21311 "keyword=value,keyword=value,...,keyword=value"
21314 where letters may be in upper or lower case, and there are no spaces
21315 between values. The order of the entries is not important. Currently
21316 the following keywords defined.
21319 TEXT_TRANSLATION=[YES|NO|TEXT|BINARY|U8TEXT|WTEXT|U16TEXT]
21321 WCEM=[n|h|u|s|e|8|b]
21322 ENCODING=[UTF8|8BITS]
21325 The use of these parameters is described later in this section. If an
21326 unrecognized keyword appears in a form string, it is silently ignored
21327 and not considered invalid.
21329 @node Direct_IO,Sequential_IO,FORM Strings,The Implementation of Standard I/O
21330 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o direct-io}@anchor{29c}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id4}@anchor{29d}
21334 Direct_IO can only be instantiated for definite types. This is a
21335 restriction of the Ada language, which means that the records are fixed
21336 length (the length being determined by @code{type'Size}, rounded
21337 up to the next storage unit boundary if necessary).
21339 The records of a Direct_IO file are simply written to the file in index
21340 sequence, with the first record starting at offset zero, and subsequent
21341 records following. There is no control information of any kind. For
21342 example, if 32-bit integers are being written, each record takes
21343 4-bytes, so the record at index @code{K} starts at offset
21346 There is no limit on the size of Direct_IO files, they are expanded as
21347 necessary to accommodate whatever records are written to the file.
21349 @node Sequential_IO,Text_IO,Direct_IO,The Implementation of Standard I/O
21350 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o sequential-io}@anchor{29e}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id5}@anchor{29f}
21351 @section Sequential_IO
21354 Sequential_IO may be instantiated with either a definite (constrained)
21355 or indefinite (unconstrained) type.
21357 For the definite type case, the elements written to the file are simply
21358 the memory images of the data values with no control information of any
21359 kind. The resulting file should be read using the same type, no validity
21360 checking is performed on input.
21362 For the indefinite type case, the elements written consist of two
21363 parts. First is the size of the data item, written as the memory image
21364 of a @code{Interfaces.C.size_t} value, followed by the memory image of
21365 the data value. The resulting file can only be read using the same
21366 (unconstrained) type. Normal assignment checks are performed on these
21367 read operations, and if these checks fail, @code{Data_Error} is
21368 raised. In particular, in the array case, the lengths must match, and in
21369 the variant record case, if the variable for a particular read operation
21370 is constrained, the discriminants must match.
21372 Note that it is not possible to use Sequential_IO to write variable
21373 length array items, and then read the data back into different length
21374 arrays. For example, the following will raise @code{Data_Error}:
21377 package IO is new Sequential_IO (String);
21382 IO.Write (F, "hello!")
21383 IO.Reset (F, Mode=>In_File);
21388 On some Ada implementations, this will print @code{hell}, but the program is
21389 clearly incorrect, since there is only one element in the file, and that
21390 element is the string @code{hello!}.
21392 In Ada 95 and Ada 2005, this kind of behavior can be legitimately achieved
21393 using Stream_IO, and this is the preferred mechanism. In particular, the
21394 above program fragment rewritten to use Stream_IO will work correctly.
21396 @node Text_IO,Wide_Text_IO,Sequential_IO,The Implementation of Standard I/O
21397 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id6}@anchor{2a0}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o text-io}@anchor{2a1}
21401 Text_IO files consist of a stream of characters containing the following
21402 special control characters:
21405 LF (line feed, 16#0A#) Line Mark
21406 FF (form feed, 16#0C#) Page Mark
21409 A canonical Text_IO file is defined as one in which the following
21410 conditions are met:
21416 The character @code{LF} is used only as a line mark, i.e., to mark the end
21420 The character @code{FF} is used only as a page mark, i.e., to mark the
21421 end of a page and consequently can appear only immediately following a
21422 @code{LF} (line mark) character.
21425 The file ends with either @code{LF} (line mark) or @code{LF}-@cite{FF}
21426 (line mark, page mark). In the former case, the page mark is implicitly
21427 assumed to be present.
21430 A file written using Text_IO will be in canonical form provided that no
21431 explicit @code{LF} or @code{FF} characters are written using @code{Put}
21432 or @code{Put_Line}. There will be no @code{FF} character at the end of
21433 the file unless an explicit @code{New_Page} operation was performed
21434 before closing the file.
21436 A canonical Text_IO file that is a regular file (i.e., not a device or a
21437 pipe) can be read using any of the routines in Text_IO. The
21438 semantics in this case will be exactly as defined in the Ada Reference
21439 Manual, and all the routines in Text_IO are fully implemented.
21441 A text file that does not meet the requirements for a canonical Text_IO
21442 file has one of the following:
21448 The file contains @code{FF} characters not immediately following a
21449 @code{LF} character.
21452 The file contains @code{LF} or @code{FF} characters written by
21453 @code{Put} or @code{Put_Line}, which are not logically considered to be
21454 line marks or page marks.
21457 The file ends in a character other than @code{LF} or @code{FF},
21458 i.e., there is no explicit line mark or page mark at the end of the file.
21461 Text_IO can be used to read such non-standard text files but subprograms
21462 to do with line or page numbers do not have defined meanings. In
21463 particular, a @code{FF} character that does not follow a @code{LF}
21464 character may or may not be treated as a page mark from the point of
21465 view of page and line numbering. Every @code{LF} character is considered
21466 to end a line, and there is an implied @code{LF} character at the end of
21470 * Stream Pointer Positioning::
21471 * Reading and Writing Non-Regular Files::
21473 * Treating Text_IO Files as Streams::
21474 * Text_IO Extensions::
21475 * Text_IO Facilities for Unbounded Strings::
21479 @node Stream Pointer Positioning,Reading and Writing Non-Regular Files,,Text_IO
21480 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id7}@anchor{2a2}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o stream-pointer-positioning}@anchor{2a3}
21481 @subsection Stream Pointer Positioning
21484 @code{Ada.Text_IO} has a definition of current position for a file that
21485 is being read. No internal buffering occurs in Text_IO, and usually the
21486 physical position in the stream used to implement the file corresponds
21487 to this logical position defined by Text_IO. There are two exceptions:
21493 After a call to @code{End_Of_Page} that returns @code{True}, the stream
21494 is positioned past the @code{LF} (line mark) that precedes the page
21495 mark. Text_IO maintains an internal flag so that subsequent read
21496 operations properly handle the logical position which is unchanged by
21497 the @code{End_Of_Page} call.
21500 After a call to @code{End_Of_File} that returns @code{True}, if the
21501 Text_IO file was positioned before the line mark at the end of file
21502 before the call, then the logical position is unchanged, but the stream
21503 is physically positioned right at the end of file (past the line mark,
21504 and past a possible page mark following the line mark. Again Text_IO
21505 maintains internal flags so that subsequent read operations properly
21506 handle the logical position.
21509 These discrepancies have no effect on the observable behavior of
21510 Text_IO, but if a single Ada stream is shared between a C program and
21511 Ada program, or shared (using @code{shared=yes} in the form string)
21512 between two Ada files, then the difference may be observable in some
21515 @node Reading and Writing Non-Regular Files,Get_Immediate,Stream Pointer Positioning,Text_IO
21516 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o reading-and-writing-non-regular-files}@anchor{2a4}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id8}@anchor{2a5}
21517 @subsection Reading and Writing Non-Regular Files
21520 A non-regular file is a device (such as a keyboard), or a pipe. Text_IO
21521 can be used for reading and writing. Writing is not affected and the
21522 sequence of characters output is identical to the normal file case, but
21523 for reading, the behavior of Text_IO is modified to avoid undesirable
21524 look-ahead as follows:
21526 An input file that is not a regular file is considered to have no page
21527 marks. Any @code{Ascii.FF} characters (the character normally used for a
21528 page mark) appearing in the file are considered to be data
21529 characters. In particular:
21535 @code{Get_Line} and @code{Skip_Line} do not test for a page mark
21536 following a line mark. If a page mark appears, it will be treated as a
21540 This avoids the need to wait for an extra character to be typed or
21541 entered from the pipe to complete one of these operations.
21544 @code{End_Of_Page} always returns @code{False}
21547 @code{End_Of_File} will return @code{False} if there is a page mark at
21548 the end of the file.
21551 Output to non-regular files is the same as for regular files. Page marks
21552 may be written to non-regular files using @code{New_Page}, but as noted
21553 above they will not be treated as page marks on input if the output is
21554 piped to another Ada program.
21556 Another important discrepancy when reading non-regular files is that the end
21557 of file indication is not 'sticky'. If an end of file is entered, e.g., by
21558 pressing the @code{EOT} key,
21560 is signaled once (i.e., the test @code{End_Of_File}
21561 will yield @code{True}, or a read will
21562 raise @code{End_Error}), but then reading can resume
21563 to read data past that end of
21564 file indication, until another end of file indication is entered.
21566 @node Get_Immediate,Treating Text_IO Files as Streams,Reading and Writing Non-Regular Files,Text_IO
21567 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o get-immediate}@anchor{2a6}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id9}@anchor{2a7}
21568 @subsection Get_Immediate
21571 @geindex Get_Immediate
21573 Get_Immediate returns the next character (including control characters)
21574 from the input file. In particular, Get_Immediate will return LF or FF
21575 characters used as line marks or page marks. Such operations leave the
21576 file positioned past the control character, and it is thus not treated
21577 as having its normal function. This means that page, line and column
21578 counts after this kind of Get_Immediate call are set as though the mark
21579 did not occur. In the case where a Get_Immediate leaves the file
21580 positioned between the line mark and page mark (which is not normally
21581 possible), it is undefined whether the FF character will be treated as a
21584 @node Treating Text_IO Files as Streams,Text_IO Extensions,Get_Immediate,Text_IO
21585 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id10}@anchor{2a8}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o treating-text-io-files-as-streams}@anchor{2a9}
21586 @subsection Treating Text_IO Files as Streams
21589 @geindex Stream files
21591 The package @code{Text_IO.Streams} allows a @code{Text_IO} file to be treated
21592 as a stream. Data written to a @code{Text_IO} file in this stream mode is
21593 binary data. If this binary data contains bytes 16#0A# (@code{LF}) or
21594 16#0C# (@code{FF}), the resulting file may have non-standard
21595 format. Similarly if read operations are used to read from a Text_IO
21596 file treated as a stream, then @code{LF} and @code{FF} characters may be
21597 skipped and the effect is similar to that described above for
21598 @code{Get_Immediate}.
21600 @node Text_IO Extensions,Text_IO Facilities for Unbounded Strings,Treating Text_IO Files as Streams,Text_IO
21601 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id11}@anchor{2aa}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o text-io-extensions}@anchor{2ab}
21602 @subsection Text_IO Extensions
21605 @geindex Text_IO extensions
21607 A package GNAT.IO_Aux in the GNAT library provides some useful extensions
21608 to the standard @code{Text_IO} package:
21614 function File_Exists (Name : String) return Boolean;
21615 Determines if a file of the given name exists.
21618 function Get_Line return String;
21619 Reads a string from the standard input file. The value returned is exactly
21620 the length of the line that was read.
21623 function Get_Line (File : Ada.Text_IO.File_Type) return String;
21624 Similar, except that the parameter File specifies the file from which
21625 the string is to be read.
21628 @node Text_IO Facilities for Unbounded Strings,,Text_IO Extensions,Text_IO
21629 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o text-io-facilities-for-unbounded-strings}@anchor{2ac}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id12}@anchor{2ad}
21630 @subsection Text_IO Facilities for Unbounded Strings
21633 @geindex Text_IO for unbounded strings
21635 @geindex Unbounded_String
21636 @geindex Text_IO operations
21638 The package @code{Ada.Strings.Unbounded.Text_IO}
21639 in library files @code{a-suteio.ads/adb} contains some GNAT-specific
21640 subprograms useful for Text_IO operations on unbounded strings:
21646 function Get_Line (File : File_Type) return Unbounded_String;
21647 Reads a line from the specified file
21648 and returns the result as an unbounded string.
21651 procedure Put (File : File_Type; U : Unbounded_String);
21652 Writes the value of the given unbounded string to the specified file
21653 Similar to the effect of
21654 @code{Put (To_String (U))} except that an extra copy is avoided.
21657 procedure Put_Line (File : File_Type; U : Unbounded_String);
21658 Writes the value of the given unbounded string to the specified file,
21659 followed by a @code{New_Line}.
21660 Similar to the effect of @code{Put_Line (To_String (U))} except
21661 that an extra copy is avoided.
21664 In the above procedures, @code{File} is of type @code{Ada.Text_IO.File_Type}
21665 and is optional. If the parameter is omitted, then the standard input or
21666 output file is referenced as appropriate.
21668 The package @code{Ada.Strings.Wide_Unbounded.Wide_Text_IO} in library
21669 files @code{a-swuwti.ads} and @code{a-swuwti.adb} provides similar extended
21670 @code{Wide_Text_IO} functionality for unbounded wide strings.
21672 The package @code{Ada.Strings.Wide_Wide_Unbounded.Wide_Wide_Text_IO} in library
21673 files @code{a-szuzti.ads} and @code{a-szuzti.adb} provides similar extended
21674 @code{Wide_Wide_Text_IO} functionality for unbounded wide wide strings.
21676 @node Wide_Text_IO,Wide_Wide_Text_IO,Text_IO,The Implementation of Standard I/O
21677 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o wide-text-io}@anchor{2ae}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id13}@anchor{2af}
21678 @section Wide_Text_IO
21681 @code{Wide_Text_IO} is similar in most respects to Text_IO, except that
21682 both input and output files may contain special sequences that represent
21683 wide character values. The encoding scheme for a given file may be
21684 specified using a FORM parameter:
21690 as part of the FORM string (WCEM = wide character encoding method),
21691 where @code{x} is one of the following characters
21694 @multitable {xxxxxxxxxxxx} {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx}
21717 Upper half encoding
21754 The encoding methods match those that
21755 can be used in a source
21756 program, but there is no requirement that the encoding method used for
21757 the source program be the same as the encoding method used for files,
21758 and different files may use different encoding methods.
21760 The default encoding method for the standard files, and for opened files
21761 for which no WCEM parameter is given in the FORM string matches the
21762 wide character encoding specified for the main program (the default
21763 being brackets encoding if no coding method was specified with -gnatW).
21768 @item @emph{Hex Coding}
21770 In this encoding, a wide character is represented by a five character
21781 where @code{a}, @code{b}, @code{c}, @code{d} are the four hexadecimal
21782 characters (using upper case letters) of the wide character code. For
21783 example, ESC A345 is used to represent the wide character with code
21784 16#A345#. This scheme is compatible with use of the full
21785 @code{Wide_Character} set.
21791 @item @emph{Upper Half Coding}
21793 The wide character with encoding 16#abcd#, where the upper bit is on
21794 (i.e., a is in the range 8-F) is represented as two bytes 16#ab# and
21795 16#cd#. The second byte may never be a format control character, but is
21796 not required to be in the upper half. This method can be also used for
21797 shift-JIS or EUC where the internal coding matches the external coding.
21799 @item @emph{Shift JIS Coding}
21801 A wide character is represented by a two character sequence 16#ab# and
21802 16#cd#, with the restrictions described for upper half encoding as
21803 described above. The internal character code is the corresponding JIS
21804 character according to the standard algorithm for Shift-JIS
21805 conversion. Only characters defined in the JIS code set table can be
21806 used with this encoding method.
21808 @item @emph{EUC Coding}
21810 A wide character is represented by a two character sequence 16#ab# and
21811 16#cd#, with both characters being in the upper half. The internal
21812 character code is the corresponding JIS character according to the EUC
21813 encoding algorithm. Only characters defined in the JIS code set table
21814 can be used with this encoding method.
21816 @item @emph{UTF-8 Coding}
21818 A wide character is represented using
21819 UCS Transformation Format 8 (UTF-8) as defined in Annex R of ISO
21820 10646-1/Am.2. Depending on the character value, the representation
21821 is a one, two, or three byte sequence:
21825 16#0000#-16#007f#: 2#0xxxxxxx#
21826 16#0080#-16#07ff#: 2#110xxxxx# 2#10xxxxxx#
21827 16#0800#-16#ffff#: 2#1110xxxx# 2#10xxxxxx# 2#10xxxxxx#
21833 where the @code{xxx} bits correspond to the left-padded bits of the
21834 16-bit character value. Note that all lower half ASCII characters
21835 are represented as ASCII bytes and all upper half characters and
21836 other wide characters are represented as sequences of upper-half
21837 (The full UTF-8 scheme allows for encoding 31-bit characters as
21838 6-byte sequences, but in this implementation, all UTF-8 sequences
21839 of four or more bytes length will raise a Constraint_Error, as
21840 will all invalid UTF-8 sequences.)
21846 @item @emph{Brackets Coding}
21848 In this encoding, a wide character is represented by the following eight
21849 character sequence:
21859 where @code{a}, @code{b}, @code{c}, @code{d} are the four hexadecimal
21860 characters (using uppercase letters) of the wide character code. For
21861 example, @code{["A345"]} is used to represent the wide character with code
21863 This scheme is compatible with use of the full Wide_Character set.
21864 On input, brackets coding can also be used for upper half characters,
21865 e.g., @code{["C1"]} for lower case a. However, on output, brackets notation
21866 is only used for wide characters with a code greater than @code{16#FF#}.
21868 Note that brackets coding is not normally used in the context of
21869 Wide_Text_IO or Wide_Wide_Text_IO, since it is really just designed as
21870 a portable way of encoding source files. In the context of Wide_Text_IO
21871 or Wide_Wide_Text_IO, it can only be used if the file does not contain
21872 any instance of the left bracket character other than to encode wide
21873 character values using the brackets encoding method. In practice it is
21874 expected that some standard wide character encoding method such
21875 as UTF-8 will be used for text input output.
21877 If brackets notation is used, then any occurrence of a left bracket
21878 in the input file which is not the start of a valid wide character
21879 sequence will cause Constraint_Error to be raised. It is possible to
21880 encode a left bracket as ["5B"] and Wide_Text_IO and Wide_Wide_Text_IO
21881 input will interpret this as a left bracket.
21883 However, when a left bracket is output, it will be output as a left bracket
21884 and not as ["5B"]. We make this decision because for normal use of
21885 Wide_Text_IO for outputting messages, it is unpleasant to clobber left
21886 brackets. For example, if we write:
21889 Put_Line ("Start of output [first run]");
21892 we really do not want to have the left bracket in this message clobbered so
21893 that the output reads:
21897 Start of output ["5B"]first run]
21903 In practice brackets encoding is reasonably useful for normal Put_Line use
21904 since we won't get confused between left brackets and wide character
21905 sequences in the output. But for input, or when files are written out
21906 and read back in, it really makes better sense to use one of the standard
21907 encoding methods such as UTF-8.
21910 For the coding schemes other than UTF-8, Hex, or Brackets encoding,
21911 not all wide character
21912 values can be represented. An attempt to output a character that cannot
21913 be represented using the encoding scheme for the file causes
21914 Constraint_Error to be raised. An invalid wide character sequence on
21915 input also causes Constraint_Error to be raised.
21918 * Stream Pointer Positioning: Stream Pointer Positioning<2>.
21919 * Reading and Writing Non-Regular Files: Reading and Writing Non-Regular Files<2>.
21923 @node Stream Pointer Positioning<2>,Reading and Writing Non-Regular Files<2>,,Wide_Text_IO
21924 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o stream-pointer-positioning-1}@anchor{2b0}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id14}@anchor{2b1}
21925 @subsection Stream Pointer Positioning
21928 @code{Ada.Wide_Text_IO} is similar to @code{Ada.Text_IO} in its handling
21929 of stream pointer positioning (@ref{2a1,,Text_IO}). There is one additional
21932 If @code{Ada.Wide_Text_IO.Look_Ahead} reads a character outside the
21933 normal lower ASCII set (i.e., a character in the range:
21936 Wide_Character'Val (16#0080#) .. Wide_Character'Val (16#FFFF#)
21939 then although the logical position of the file pointer is unchanged by
21940 the @code{Look_Ahead} call, the stream is physically positioned past the
21941 wide character sequence. Again this is to avoid the need for buffering
21942 or backup, and all @code{Wide_Text_IO} routines check the internal
21943 indication that this situation has occurred so that this is not visible
21944 to a normal program using @code{Wide_Text_IO}. However, this discrepancy
21945 can be observed if the wide text file shares a stream with another file.
21947 @node Reading and Writing Non-Regular Files<2>,,Stream Pointer Positioning<2>,Wide_Text_IO
21948 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o reading-and-writing-non-regular-files-1}@anchor{2b2}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id15}@anchor{2b3}
21949 @subsection Reading and Writing Non-Regular Files
21952 As in the case of Text_IO, when a non-regular file is read, it is
21953 assumed that the file contains no page marks (any form characters are
21954 treated as data characters), and @code{End_Of_Page} always returns
21955 @code{False}. Similarly, the end of file indication is not sticky, so
21956 it is possible to read beyond an end of file.
21958 @node Wide_Wide_Text_IO,Stream_IO,Wide_Text_IO,The Implementation of Standard I/O
21959 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id16}@anchor{2b4}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o wide-wide-text-io}@anchor{2b5}
21960 @section Wide_Wide_Text_IO
21963 @code{Wide_Wide_Text_IO} is similar in most respects to Text_IO, except that
21964 both input and output files may contain special sequences that represent
21965 wide wide character values. The encoding scheme for a given file may be
21966 specified using a FORM parameter:
21972 as part of the FORM string (WCEM = wide character encoding method),
21973 where @code{x} is one of the following characters
21976 @multitable {xxxxxxxxxxxx} {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx}
21999 Upper half encoding
22036 The encoding methods match those that
22037 can be used in a source
22038 program, but there is no requirement that the encoding method used for
22039 the source program be the same as the encoding method used for files,
22040 and different files may use different encoding methods.
22042 The default encoding method for the standard files, and for opened files
22043 for which no WCEM parameter is given in the FORM string matches the
22044 wide character encoding specified for the main program (the default
22045 being brackets encoding if no coding method was specified with -gnatW).
22050 @item @emph{UTF-8 Coding}
22052 A wide character is represented using
22053 UCS Transformation Format 8 (UTF-8) as defined in Annex R of ISO
22054 10646-1/Am.2. Depending on the character value, the representation
22055 is a one, two, three, or four byte sequence:
22059 16#000000#-16#00007f#: 2#0xxxxxxx#
22060 16#000080#-16#0007ff#: 2#110xxxxx# 2#10xxxxxx#
22061 16#000800#-16#00ffff#: 2#1110xxxx# 2#10xxxxxx# 2#10xxxxxx#
22062 16#010000#-16#10ffff#: 2#11110xxx# 2#10xxxxxx# 2#10xxxxxx# 2#10xxxxxx#
22068 where the @code{xxx} bits correspond to the left-padded bits of the
22069 21-bit character value. Note that all lower half ASCII characters
22070 are represented as ASCII bytes and all upper half characters and
22071 other wide characters are represented as sequences of upper-half
22078 @item @emph{Brackets Coding}
22080 In this encoding, a wide wide character is represented by the following eight
22081 character sequence if is in wide character range
22091 and by the following ten character sequence if not
22095 [ " a b c d e f " ]
22101 where @code{a}, @code{b}, @code{c}, @code{d}, @code{e}, and @code{f}
22102 are the four or six hexadecimal
22103 characters (using uppercase letters) of the wide wide character code. For
22104 example, @code{["01A345"]} is used to represent the wide wide character
22105 with code @code{16#01A345#}.
22107 This scheme is compatible with use of the full Wide_Wide_Character set.
22108 On input, brackets coding can also be used for upper half characters,
22109 e.g., @code{["C1"]} for lower case a. However, on output, brackets notation
22110 is only used for wide characters with a code greater than @code{16#FF#}.
22113 If is also possible to use the other Wide_Character encoding methods,
22114 such as Shift-JIS, but the other schemes cannot support the full range
22115 of wide wide characters.
22116 An attempt to output a character that cannot
22117 be represented using the encoding scheme for the file causes
22118 Constraint_Error to be raised. An invalid wide character sequence on
22119 input also causes Constraint_Error to be raised.
22122 * Stream Pointer Positioning: Stream Pointer Positioning<3>.
22123 * Reading and Writing Non-Regular Files: Reading and Writing Non-Regular Files<3>.
22127 @node Stream Pointer Positioning<3>,Reading and Writing Non-Regular Files<3>,,Wide_Wide_Text_IO
22128 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o stream-pointer-positioning-2}@anchor{2b6}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id17}@anchor{2b7}
22129 @subsection Stream Pointer Positioning
22132 @code{Ada.Wide_Wide_Text_IO} is similar to @code{Ada.Text_IO} in its handling
22133 of stream pointer positioning (@ref{2a1,,Text_IO}). There is one additional
22136 If @code{Ada.Wide_Wide_Text_IO.Look_Ahead} reads a character outside the
22137 normal lower ASCII set (i.e., a character in the range:
22140 Wide_Wide_Character'Val (16#0080#) .. Wide_Wide_Character'Val (16#10FFFF#)
22143 then although the logical position of the file pointer is unchanged by
22144 the @code{Look_Ahead} call, the stream is physically positioned past the
22145 wide character sequence. Again this is to avoid the need for buffering
22146 or backup, and all @code{Wide_Wide_Text_IO} routines check the internal
22147 indication that this situation has occurred so that this is not visible
22148 to a normal program using @code{Wide_Wide_Text_IO}. However, this discrepancy
22149 can be observed if the wide text file shares a stream with another file.
22151 @node Reading and Writing Non-Regular Files<3>,,Stream Pointer Positioning<3>,Wide_Wide_Text_IO
22152 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id18}@anchor{2b8}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o reading-and-writing-non-regular-files-2}@anchor{2b9}
22153 @subsection Reading and Writing Non-Regular Files
22156 As in the case of Text_IO, when a non-regular file is read, it is
22157 assumed that the file contains no page marks (any form characters are
22158 treated as data characters), and @code{End_Of_Page} always returns
22159 @code{False}. Similarly, the end of file indication is not sticky, so
22160 it is possible to read beyond an end of file.
22162 @node Stream_IO,Text Translation,Wide_Wide_Text_IO,The Implementation of Standard I/O
22163 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id19}@anchor{2ba}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o stream-io}@anchor{2bb}
22167 A stream file is a sequence of bytes, where individual elements are
22168 written to the file as described in the Ada Reference Manual. The type
22169 @code{Stream_Element} is simply a byte. There are two ways to read or
22170 write a stream file.
22176 The operations @code{Read} and @code{Write} directly read or write a
22177 sequence of stream elements with no control information.
22180 The stream attributes applied to a stream file transfer data in the
22181 manner described for stream attributes.
22184 @node Text Translation,Shared Files,Stream_IO,The Implementation of Standard I/O
22185 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id20}@anchor{2bc}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o text-translation}@anchor{2bd}
22186 @section Text Translation
22189 @code{Text_Translation=xxx} may be used as the Form parameter
22190 passed to Text_IO.Create and Text_IO.Open. @code{Text_Translation=xxx}
22191 has no effect on Unix systems. Possible values are:
22197 @code{Yes} or @code{Text} is the default, which means to
22198 translate LF to/from CR/LF on Windows systems.
22200 @code{No} disables this translation; i.e. it
22201 uses binary mode. For output files, @code{Text_Translation=No}
22202 may be used to create Unix-style files on
22206 @code{wtext} translation enabled in Unicode mode.
22207 (corresponds to _O_WTEXT).
22210 @code{u8text} translation enabled in Unicode UTF-8 mode.
22211 (corresponds to O_U8TEXT).
22214 @code{u16text} translation enabled in Unicode UTF-16
22215 mode. (corresponds to_O_U16TEXT).
22218 @node Shared Files,Filenames encoding,Text Translation,The Implementation of Standard I/O
22219 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id21}@anchor{2be}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o shared-files}@anchor{2bf}
22220 @section Shared Files
22223 Section A.14 of the Ada Reference Manual allows implementations to
22224 provide a wide variety of behavior if an attempt is made to access the
22225 same external file with two or more internal files.
22227 To provide a full range of functionality, while at the same time
22228 minimizing the problems of portability caused by this implementation
22229 dependence, GNAT handles file sharing as follows:
22235 In the absence of a @code{shared=xxx} form parameter, an attempt
22236 to open two or more files with the same full name is considered an error
22237 and is not supported. The exception @code{Use_Error} will be
22238 raised. Note that a file that is not explicitly closed by the program
22239 remains open until the program terminates.
22242 If the form parameter @code{shared=no} appears in the form string, the
22243 file can be opened or created with its own separate stream identifier,
22244 regardless of whether other files sharing the same external file are
22245 opened. The exact effect depends on how the C stream routines handle
22246 multiple accesses to the same external files using separate streams.
22249 If the form parameter @code{shared=yes} appears in the form string for
22250 each of two or more files opened using the same full name, the same
22251 stream is shared between these files, and the semantics are as described
22252 in Ada Reference Manual, Section A.14.
22255 When a program that opens multiple files with the same name is ported
22256 from another Ada compiler to GNAT, the effect will be that
22257 @code{Use_Error} is raised.
22259 The documentation of the original compiler and the documentation of the
22260 program should then be examined to determine if file sharing was
22261 expected, and @code{shared=xxx} parameters added to @code{Open}
22262 and @code{Create} calls as required.
22264 When a program is ported from GNAT to some other Ada compiler, no
22265 special attention is required unless the @code{shared=xxx} form
22266 parameter is used in the program. In this case, you must examine the
22267 documentation of the new compiler to see if it supports the required
22268 file sharing semantics, and form strings modified appropriately. Of
22269 course it may be the case that the program cannot be ported if the
22270 target compiler does not support the required functionality. The best
22271 approach in writing portable code is to avoid file sharing (and hence
22272 the use of the @code{shared=xxx} parameter in the form string)
22275 One common use of file sharing in Ada 83 is the use of instantiations of
22276 Sequential_IO on the same file with different types, to achieve
22277 heterogeneous input-output. Although this approach will work in GNAT if
22278 @code{shared=yes} is specified, it is preferable in Ada to use Stream_IO
22279 for this purpose (using the stream attributes)
22281 @node Filenames encoding,File content encoding,Shared Files,The Implementation of Standard I/O
22282 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o filenames-encoding}@anchor{2c0}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id22}@anchor{2c1}
22283 @section Filenames encoding
22286 An encoding form parameter can be used to specify the filename
22287 encoding @code{encoding=xxx}.
22293 If the form parameter @code{encoding=utf8} appears in the form string, the
22294 filename must be encoded in UTF-8.
22297 If the form parameter @code{encoding=8bits} appears in the form
22298 string, the filename must be a standard 8bits string.
22301 In the absence of a @code{encoding=xxx} form parameter, the
22302 encoding is controlled by the @code{GNAT_CODE_PAGE} environment
22303 variable. And if not set @code{utf8} is assumed.
22308 @item @emph{CP_ACP}
22310 The current system Windows ANSI code page.
22312 @item @emph{CP_UTF8}
22317 This encoding form parameter is only supported on the Windows
22318 platform. On the other Operating Systems the run-time is supporting
22321 @node File content encoding,Open Modes,Filenames encoding,The Implementation of Standard I/O
22322 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o file-content-encoding}@anchor{2c2}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id23}@anchor{2c3}
22323 @section File content encoding
22326 For text files it is possible to specify the encoding to use. This is
22327 controlled by the by the @code{GNAT_CCS_ENCODING} environment
22328 variable. And if not set @code{TEXT} is assumed.
22330 The possible values are those supported on Windows:
22337 Translated text mode
22341 Translated unicode encoding
22343 @item @emph{U16TEXT}
22345 Unicode 16-bit encoding
22347 @item @emph{U8TEXT}
22349 Unicode 8-bit encoding
22352 This encoding is only supported on the Windows platform.
22354 @node Open Modes,Operations on C Streams,File content encoding,The Implementation of Standard I/O
22355 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o open-modes}@anchor{2c4}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id24}@anchor{2c5}
22356 @section Open Modes
22359 @code{Open} and @code{Create} calls result in a call to @code{fopen}
22360 using the mode shown in the following table:
22363 @multitable {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx} {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx} {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx}
22366 @code{Open} and @code{Create} Call Modes
22408 Out_File (Direct_IO)
22420 Out_File (all other cases)
22445 If text file translation is required, then either @code{b} or @code{t}
22446 is added to the mode, depending on the setting of Text. Text file
22447 translation refers to the mapping of CR/LF sequences in an external file
22448 to LF characters internally. This mapping only occurs in DOS and
22449 DOS-like systems, and is not relevant to other systems.
22451 A special case occurs with Stream_IO. As shown in the above table, the
22452 file is initially opened in @code{r} or @code{w} mode for the
22453 @code{In_File} and @code{Out_File} cases. If a @code{Set_Mode} operation
22454 subsequently requires switching from reading to writing or vice-versa,
22455 then the file is reopened in @code{r+} mode to permit the required operation.
22457 @node Operations on C Streams,Interfacing to C Streams,Open Modes,The Implementation of Standard I/O
22458 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o operations-on-c-streams}@anchor{2c6}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id25}@anchor{2c7}
22459 @section Operations on C Streams
22462 The package @code{Interfaces.C_Streams} provides an Ada program with direct
22463 access to the C library functions for operations on C streams:
22466 package Interfaces.C_Streams is
22467 -- Note: the reason we do not use the types that are in
22468 -- Interfaces.C is that we want to avoid dragging in the
22469 -- code in this unit if possible.
22470 subtype chars is System.Address;
22471 -- Pointer to null-terminated array of characters
22472 subtype FILEs is System.Address;
22473 -- Corresponds to the C type FILE*
22474 subtype voids is System.Address;
22475 -- Corresponds to the C type void*
22476 subtype int is Integer;
22477 subtype long is Long_Integer;
22478 -- Note: the above types are subtypes deliberately, and it
22479 -- is part of this spec that the above correspondences are
22480 -- guaranteed. This means that it is legitimate to, for
22481 -- example, use Integer instead of int. We provide these
22482 -- synonyms for clarity, but in some cases it may be
22483 -- convenient to use the underlying types (for example to
22484 -- avoid an unnecessary dependency of a spec on the spec
22486 type size_t is mod 2 ** Standard'Address_Size;
22487 NULL_Stream : constant FILEs;
22488 -- Value returned (NULL in C) to indicate an
22489 -- fdopen/fopen/tmpfile error
22490 ----------------------------------
22491 -- Constants Defined in stdio.h --
22492 ----------------------------------
22493 EOF : constant int;
22494 -- Used by a number of routines to indicate error or
22496 IOFBF : constant int;
22497 IOLBF : constant int;
22498 IONBF : constant int;
22499 -- Used to indicate buffering mode for setvbuf call
22500 SEEK_CUR : constant int;
22501 SEEK_END : constant int;
22502 SEEK_SET : constant int;
22503 -- Used to indicate origin for fseek call
22504 function stdin return FILEs;
22505 function stdout return FILEs;
22506 function stderr return FILEs;
22507 -- Streams associated with standard files
22508 --------------------------
22509 -- Standard C functions --
22510 --------------------------
22511 -- The functions selected below are ones that are
22512 -- available in UNIX (but not necessarily in ANSI C).
22513 -- These are very thin interfaces
22514 -- which copy exactly the C headers. For more
22515 -- documentation on these functions, see the Microsoft C
22516 -- "Run-Time Library Reference" (Microsoft Press, 1990,
22517 -- ISBN 1-55615-225-6), which includes useful information
22518 -- on system compatibility.
22519 procedure clearerr (stream : FILEs);
22520 function fclose (stream : FILEs) return int;
22521 function fdopen (handle : int; mode : chars) return FILEs;
22522 function feof (stream : FILEs) return int;
22523 function ferror (stream : FILEs) return int;
22524 function fflush (stream : FILEs) return int;
22525 function fgetc (stream : FILEs) return int;
22526 function fgets (strng : chars; n : int; stream : FILEs)
22528 function fileno (stream : FILEs) return int;
22529 function fopen (filename : chars; Mode : chars)
22531 -- Note: to maintain target independence, use
22532 -- text_translation_required, a boolean variable defined in
22533 -- a-sysdep.c to deal with the target dependent text
22534 -- translation requirement. If this variable is set,
22535 -- then b/t should be appended to the standard mode
22536 -- argument to set the text translation mode off or on
22538 function fputc (C : int; stream : FILEs) return int;
22539 function fputs (Strng : chars; Stream : FILEs) return int;
22556 function ftell (stream : FILEs) return long;
22563 function isatty (handle : int) return int;
22564 procedure mktemp (template : chars);
22565 -- The return value (which is just a pointer to template)
22567 procedure rewind (stream : FILEs);
22568 function rmtmp return int;
22576 function tmpfile return FILEs;
22577 function ungetc (c : int; stream : FILEs) return int;
22578 function unlink (filename : chars) return int;
22579 ---------------------
22580 -- Extra functions --
22581 ---------------------
22582 -- These functions supply slightly thicker bindings than
22583 -- those above. They are derived from functions in the
22584 -- C Run-Time Library, but may do a bit more work than
22585 -- just directly calling one of the Library functions.
22586 function is_regular_file (handle : int) return int;
22587 -- Tests if given handle is for a regular file (result 1)
22588 -- or for a non-regular file (pipe or device, result 0).
22589 ---------------------------------
22590 -- Control of Text/Binary Mode --
22591 ---------------------------------
22592 -- If text_translation_required is true, then the following
22593 -- functions may be used to dynamically switch a file from
22594 -- binary to text mode or vice versa. These functions have
22595 -- no effect if text_translation_required is false (i.e., in
22596 -- normal UNIX mode). Use fileno to get a stream handle.
22597 procedure set_binary_mode (handle : int);
22598 procedure set_text_mode (handle : int);
22599 ----------------------------
22600 -- Full Path Name support --
22601 ----------------------------
22602 procedure full_name (nam : chars; buffer : chars);
22603 -- Given a NUL terminated string representing a file
22604 -- name, returns in buffer a NUL terminated string
22605 -- representing the full path name for the file name.
22606 -- On systems where it is relevant the drive is also
22607 -- part of the full path name. It is the responsibility
22608 -- of the caller to pass an actual parameter for buffer
22609 -- that is big enough for any full path name. Use
22610 -- max_path_len given below as the size of buffer.
22611 max_path_len : integer;
22612 -- Maximum length of an allowable full path name on the
22613 -- system, including a terminating NUL character.
22614 end Interfaces.C_Streams;
22617 @node Interfacing to C Streams,,Operations on C Streams,The Implementation of Standard I/O
22618 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o interfacing-to-c-streams}@anchor{2c8}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_implementation_of_standard_i_o id26}@anchor{2c9}
22619 @section Interfacing to C Streams
22622 The packages in this section permit interfacing Ada files to C Stream
22626 with Interfaces.C_Streams;
22627 package Ada.Sequential_IO.C_Streams is
22628 function C_Stream (F : File_Type)
22629 return Interfaces.C_Streams.FILEs;
22631 (File : in out File_Type;
22632 Mode : in File_Mode;
22633 C_Stream : in Interfaces.C_Streams.FILEs;
22634 Form : in String := "");
22635 end Ada.Sequential_IO.C_Streams;
22637 with Interfaces.C_Streams;
22638 package Ada.Direct_IO.C_Streams is
22639 function C_Stream (F : File_Type)
22640 return Interfaces.C_Streams.FILEs;
22642 (File : in out File_Type;
22643 Mode : in File_Mode;
22644 C_Stream : in Interfaces.C_Streams.FILEs;
22645 Form : in String := "");
22646 end Ada.Direct_IO.C_Streams;
22648 with Interfaces.C_Streams;
22649 package Ada.Text_IO.C_Streams is
22650 function C_Stream (F : File_Type)
22651 return Interfaces.C_Streams.FILEs;
22653 (File : in out File_Type;
22654 Mode : in File_Mode;
22655 C_Stream : in Interfaces.C_Streams.FILEs;
22656 Form : in String := "");
22657 end Ada.Text_IO.C_Streams;
22659 with Interfaces.C_Streams;
22660 package Ada.Wide_Text_IO.C_Streams is
22661 function C_Stream (F : File_Type)
22662 return Interfaces.C_Streams.FILEs;
22664 (File : in out File_Type;
22665 Mode : in File_Mode;
22666 C_Stream : in Interfaces.C_Streams.FILEs;
22667 Form : in String := "");
22668 end Ada.Wide_Text_IO.C_Streams;
22670 with Interfaces.C_Streams;
22671 package Ada.Wide_Wide_Text_IO.C_Streams is
22672 function C_Stream (F : File_Type)
22673 return Interfaces.C_Streams.FILEs;
22675 (File : in out File_Type;
22676 Mode : in File_Mode;
22677 C_Stream : in Interfaces.C_Streams.FILEs;
22678 Form : in String := "");
22679 end Ada.Wide_Wide_Text_IO.C_Streams;
22681 with Interfaces.C_Streams;
22682 package Ada.Stream_IO.C_Streams is
22683 function C_Stream (F : File_Type)
22684 return Interfaces.C_Streams.FILEs;
22686 (File : in out File_Type;
22687 Mode : in File_Mode;
22688 C_Stream : in Interfaces.C_Streams.FILEs;
22689 Form : in String := "");
22690 end Ada.Stream_IO.C_Streams;
22693 In each of these six packages, the @code{C_Stream} function obtains the
22694 @code{FILE} pointer from a currently opened Ada file. It is then
22695 possible to use the @code{Interfaces.C_Streams} package to operate on
22696 this stream, or the stream can be passed to a C program which can
22697 operate on it directly. Of course the program is responsible for
22698 ensuring that only appropriate sequences of operations are executed.
22700 One particular use of relevance to an Ada program is that the
22701 @code{setvbuf} function can be used to control the buffering of the
22702 stream used by an Ada file. In the absence of such a call the standard
22703 default buffering is used.
22705 The @code{Open} procedures in these packages open a file giving an
22706 existing C Stream instead of a file name. Typically this stream is
22707 imported from a C program, allowing an Ada file to operate on an
22710 @node The GNAT Library,Interfacing to Other Languages,The Implementation of Standard I/O,Top
22711 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library the-gnat-library}@anchor{10}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library doc}@anchor{2ca}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id1}@anchor{2cb}
22712 @chapter The GNAT Library
22715 The GNAT library contains a number of general and special purpose packages.
22716 It represents functionality that the GNAT developers have found useful, and
22717 which is made available to GNAT users. The packages described here are fully
22718 supported, and upwards compatibility will be maintained in future releases,
22719 so you can use these facilities with the confidence that the same functionality
22720 will be available in future releases.
22722 The chapter here simply gives a brief summary of the facilities available.
22723 The full documentation is found in the spec file for the package. The full
22724 sources of these library packages, including both spec and body, are provided
22725 with all GNAT releases. For example, to find out the full specifications of
22726 the SPITBOL pattern matching capability, including a full tutorial and
22727 extensive examples, look in the @code{g-spipat.ads} file in the library.
22729 For each entry here, the package name (as it would appear in a @code{with}
22730 clause) is given, followed by the name of the corresponding spec file in
22731 parentheses. The packages are children in four hierarchies, @code{Ada},
22732 @code{Interfaces}, @code{System}, and @code{GNAT}, the latter being a
22733 GNAT-specific hierarchy.
22735 Note that an application program should only use packages in one of these
22736 four hierarchies if the package is defined in the Ada Reference Manual,
22737 or is listed in this section of the GNAT Programmers Reference Manual.
22738 All other units should be considered internal implementation units and
22739 should not be directly @code{with}ed by application code. The use of
22740 a @code{with} clause that references one of these internal implementation
22741 units makes an application potentially dependent on changes in versions
22742 of GNAT, and will generate a warning message.
22745 * Ada.Characters.Latin_9 (a-chlat9.ads): Ada Characters Latin_9 a-chlat9 ads.
22746 * Ada.Characters.Wide_Latin_1 (a-cwila1.ads): Ada Characters Wide_Latin_1 a-cwila1 ads.
22747 * Ada.Characters.Wide_Latin_9 (a-cwila1.ads): Ada Characters Wide_Latin_9 a-cwila1 ads.
22748 * Ada.Characters.Wide_Wide_Latin_1 (a-chzla1.ads): Ada Characters Wide_Wide_Latin_1 a-chzla1 ads.
22749 * Ada.Characters.Wide_Wide_Latin_9 (a-chzla9.ads): Ada Characters Wide_Wide_Latin_9 a-chzla9 ads.
22750 * Ada.Containers.Formal_Doubly_Linked_Lists (a-cfdlli.ads): Ada Containers Formal_Doubly_Linked_Lists a-cfdlli ads.
22751 * Ada.Containers.Formal_Hashed_Maps (a-cfhama.ads): Ada Containers Formal_Hashed_Maps a-cfhama ads.
22752 * Ada.Containers.Formal_Hashed_Sets (a-cfhase.ads): Ada Containers Formal_Hashed_Sets a-cfhase ads.
22753 * Ada.Containers.Formal_Ordered_Maps (a-cforma.ads): Ada Containers Formal_Ordered_Maps a-cforma ads.
22754 * Ada.Containers.Formal_Ordered_Sets (a-cforse.ads): Ada Containers Formal_Ordered_Sets a-cforse ads.
22755 * Ada.Containers.Formal_Vectors (a-cofove.ads): Ada Containers Formal_Vectors a-cofove ads.
22756 * Ada.Containers.Formal_Indefinite_Vectors (a-cfinve.ads): Ada Containers Formal_Indefinite_Vectors a-cfinve ads.
22757 * Ada.Containers.Functional_Vectors (a-cofuve.ads): Ada Containers Functional_Vectors a-cofuve ads.
22758 * Ada.Containers.Functional_Sets (a-cofuse.ads): Ada Containers Functional_Sets a-cofuse ads.
22759 * Ada.Containers.Functional_Maps (a-cofuma.ads): Ada Containers Functional_Maps a-cofuma ads.
22760 * Ada.Containers.Bounded_Holders (a-coboho.ads): Ada Containers Bounded_Holders a-coboho ads.
22761 * Ada.Command_Line.Environment (a-colien.ads): Ada Command_Line Environment a-colien ads.
22762 * Ada.Command_Line.Remove (a-colire.ads): Ada Command_Line Remove a-colire ads.
22763 * Ada.Command_Line.Response_File (a-clrefi.ads): Ada Command_Line Response_File a-clrefi ads.
22764 * Ada.Direct_IO.C_Streams (a-diocst.ads): Ada Direct_IO C_Streams a-diocst ads.
22765 * Ada.Exceptions.Is_Null_Occurrence (a-einuoc.ads): Ada Exceptions Is_Null_Occurrence a-einuoc ads.
22766 * Ada.Exceptions.Last_Chance_Handler (a-elchha.ads): Ada Exceptions Last_Chance_Handler a-elchha ads.
22767 * Ada.Exceptions.Traceback (a-exctra.ads): Ada Exceptions Traceback a-exctra ads.
22768 * Ada.Sequential_IO.C_Streams (a-siocst.ads): Ada Sequential_IO C_Streams a-siocst ads.
22769 * Ada.Streams.Stream_IO.C_Streams (a-ssicst.ads): Ada Streams Stream_IO C_Streams a-ssicst ads.
22770 * Ada.Strings.Unbounded.Text_IO (a-suteio.ads): Ada Strings Unbounded Text_IO a-suteio ads.
22771 * Ada.Strings.Wide_Unbounded.Wide_Text_IO (a-swuwti.ads): Ada Strings Wide_Unbounded Wide_Text_IO a-swuwti ads.
22772 * Ada.Strings.Wide_Wide_Unbounded.Wide_Wide_Text_IO (a-szuzti.ads): Ada Strings Wide_Wide_Unbounded Wide_Wide_Text_IO a-szuzti ads.
22773 * Ada.Text_IO.C_Streams (a-tiocst.ads): Ada Text_IO C_Streams a-tiocst ads.
22774 * Ada.Text_IO.Reset_Standard_Files (a-tirsfi.ads): Ada Text_IO Reset_Standard_Files a-tirsfi ads.
22775 * Ada.Wide_Characters.Unicode (a-wichun.ads): Ada Wide_Characters Unicode a-wichun ads.
22776 * Ada.Wide_Text_IO.C_Streams (a-wtcstr.ads): Ada Wide_Text_IO C_Streams a-wtcstr ads.
22777 * Ada.Wide_Text_IO.Reset_Standard_Files (a-wrstfi.ads): Ada Wide_Text_IO Reset_Standard_Files a-wrstfi ads.
22778 * Ada.Wide_Wide_Characters.Unicode (a-zchuni.ads): Ada Wide_Wide_Characters Unicode a-zchuni ads.
22779 * Ada.Wide_Wide_Text_IO.C_Streams (a-ztcstr.ads): Ada Wide_Wide_Text_IO C_Streams a-ztcstr ads.
22780 * Ada.Wide_Wide_Text_IO.Reset_Standard_Files (a-zrstfi.ads): Ada Wide_Wide_Text_IO Reset_Standard_Files a-zrstfi ads.
22781 * GNAT.Altivec (g-altive.ads): GNAT Altivec g-altive ads.
22782 * GNAT.Altivec.Conversions (g-altcon.ads): GNAT Altivec Conversions g-altcon ads.
22783 * GNAT.Altivec.Vector_Operations (g-alveop.ads): GNAT Altivec Vector_Operations g-alveop ads.
22784 * GNAT.Altivec.Vector_Types (g-alvety.ads): GNAT Altivec Vector_Types g-alvety ads.
22785 * GNAT.Altivec.Vector_Views (g-alvevi.ads): GNAT Altivec Vector_Views g-alvevi ads.
22786 * GNAT.Array_Split (g-arrspl.ads): GNAT Array_Split g-arrspl ads.
22787 * GNAT.AWK (g-awk.ads): GNAT AWK g-awk ads.
22788 * GNAT.Bind_Environment (g-binenv.ads): GNAT Bind_Environment g-binenv ads.
22789 * GNAT.Bounded_Buffers (g-boubuf.ads): GNAT Bounded_Buffers g-boubuf ads.
22790 * GNAT.Bounded_Mailboxes (g-boumai.ads): GNAT Bounded_Mailboxes g-boumai ads.
22791 * GNAT.Bubble_Sort (g-bubsor.ads): GNAT Bubble_Sort g-bubsor ads.
22792 * GNAT.Bubble_Sort_A (g-busora.ads): GNAT Bubble_Sort_A g-busora ads.
22793 * GNAT.Bubble_Sort_G (g-busorg.ads): GNAT Bubble_Sort_G g-busorg ads.
22794 * GNAT.Byte_Order_Mark (g-byorma.ads): GNAT Byte_Order_Mark g-byorma ads.
22795 * GNAT.Byte_Swapping (g-bytswa.ads): GNAT Byte_Swapping g-bytswa ads.
22796 * GNAT.Calendar (g-calend.ads): GNAT Calendar g-calend ads.
22797 * GNAT.Calendar.Time_IO (g-catiio.ads): GNAT Calendar Time_IO g-catiio ads.
22798 * GNAT.CRC32 (g-crc32.ads): GNAT CRC32 g-crc32 ads.
22799 * GNAT.Case_Util (g-casuti.ads): GNAT Case_Util g-casuti ads.
22800 * GNAT.CGI (g-cgi.ads): GNAT CGI g-cgi ads.
22801 * GNAT.CGI.Cookie (g-cgicoo.ads): GNAT CGI Cookie g-cgicoo ads.
22802 * GNAT.CGI.Debug (g-cgideb.ads): GNAT CGI Debug g-cgideb ads.
22803 * GNAT.Command_Line (g-comlin.ads): GNAT Command_Line g-comlin ads.
22804 * GNAT.Compiler_Version (g-comver.ads): GNAT Compiler_Version g-comver ads.
22805 * GNAT.Ctrl_C (g-ctrl_c.ads): GNAT Ctrl_C g-ctrl_c ads.
22806 * GNAT.Current_Exception (g-curexc.ads): GNAT Current_Exception g-curexc ads.
22807 * GNAT.Debug_Pools (g-debpoo.ads): GNAT Debug_Pools g-debpoo ads.
22808 * GNAT.Debug_Utilities (g-debuti.ads): GNAT Debug_Utilities g-debuti ads.
22809 * GNAT.Decode_String (g-decstr.ads): GNAT Decode_String g-decstr ads.
22810 * GNAT.Decode_UTF8_String (g-deutst.ads): GNAT Decode_UTF8_String g-deutst ads.
22811 * GNAT.Directory_Operations (g-dirope.ads): GNAT Directory_Operations g-dirope ads.
22812 * GNAT.Directory_Operations.Iteration (g-diopit.ads): GNAT Directory_Operations Iteration g-diopit ads.
22813 * GNAT.Dynamic_HTables (g-dynhta.ads): GNAT Dynamic_HTables g-dynhta ads.
22814 * GNAT.Dynamic_Tables (g-dyntab.ads): GNAT Dynamic_Tables g-dyntab ads.
22815 * GNAT.Encode_String (g-encstr.ads): GNAT Encode_String g-encstr ads.
22816 * GNAT.Encode_UTF8_String (g-enutst.ads): GNAT Encode_UTF8_String g-enutst ads.
22817 * GNAT.Exception_Actions (g-excact.ads): GNAT Exception_Actions g-excact ads.
22818 * GNAT.Exception_Traces (g-exctra.ads): GNAT Exception_Traces g-exctra ads.
22819 * GNAT.Exceptions (g-except.ads): GNAT Exceptions g-except ads.
22820 * GNAT.Expect (g-expect.ads): GNAT Expect g-expect ads.
22821 * GNAT.Expect.TTY (g-exptty.ads): GNAT Expect TTY g-exptty ads.
22822 * GNAT.Float_Control (g-flocon.ads): GNAT Float_Control g-flocon ads.
22823 * GNAT.Formatted_String (g-forstr.ads): GNAT Formatted_String g-forstr ads.
22824 * GNAT.Heap_Sort (g-heasor.ads): GNAT Heap_Sort g-heasor ads.
22825 * GNAT.Heap_Sort_A (g-hesora.ads): GNAT Heap_Sort_A g-hesora ads.
22826 * GNAT.Heap_Sort_G (g-hesorg.ads): GNAT Heap_Sort_G g-hesorg ads.
22827 * GNAT.HTable (g-htable.ads): GNAT HTable g-htable ads.
22828 * GNAT.IO (g-io.ads): GNAT IO g-io ads.
22829 * GNAT.IO_Aux (g-io_aux.ads): GNAT IO_Aux g-io_aux ads.
22830 * GNAT.Lock_Files (g-locfil.ads): GNAT Lock_Files g-locfil ads.
22831 * GNAT.MBBS_Discrete_Random (g-mbdira.ads): GNAT MBBS_Discrete_Random g-mbdira ads.
22832 * GNAT.MBBS_Float_Random (g-mbflra.ads): GNAT MBBS_Float_Random g-mbflra ads.
22833 * GNAT.MD5 (g-md5.ads): GNAT MD5 g-md5 ads.
22834 * GNAT.Memory_Dump (g-memdum.ads): GNAT Memory_Dump g-memdum ads.
22835 * GNAT.Most_Recent_Exception (g-moreex.ads): GNAT Most_Recent_Exception g-moreex ads.
22836 * GNAT.OS_Lib (g-os_lib.ads): GNAT OS_Lib g-os_lib ads.
22837 * GNAT.Perfect_Hash_Generators (g-pehage.ads): GNAT Perfect_Hash_Generators g-pehage ads.
22838 * GNAT.Random_Numbers (g-rannum.ads): GNAT Random_Numbers g-rannum ads.
22839 * GNAT.Regexp (g-regexp.ads): GNAT Regexp g-regexp ads.
22840 * GNAT.Registry (g-regist.ads): GNAT Registry g-regist ads.
22841 * GNAT.Regpat (g-regpat.ads): GNAT Regpat g-regpat ads.
22842 * GNAT.Rewrite_Data (g-rewdat.ads): GNAT Rewrite_Data g-rewdat ads.
22843 * GNAT.Secondary_Stack_Info (g-sestin.ads): GNAT Secondary_Stack_Info g-sestin ads.
22844 * GNAT.Semaphores (g-semaph.ads): GNAT Semaphores g-semaph ads.
22845 * GNAT.Serial_Communications (g-sercom.ads): GNAT Serial_Communications g-sercom ads.
22846 * GNAT.SHA1 (g-sha1.ads): GNAT SHA1 g-sha1 ads.
22847 * GNAT.SHA224 (g-sha224.ads): GNAT SHA224 g-sha224 ads.
22848 * GNAT.SHA256 (g-sha256.ads): GNAT SHA256 g-sha256 ads.
22849 * GNAT.SHA384 (g-sha384.ads): GNAT SHA384 g-sha384 ads.
22850 * GNAT.SHA512 (g-sha512.ads): GNAT SHA512 g-sha512 ads.
22851 * GNAT.Signals (g-signal.ads): GNAT Signals g-signal ads.
22852 * GNAT.Sockets (g-socket.ads): GNAT Sockets g-socket ads.
22853 * GNAT.Source_Info (g-souinf.ads): GNAT Source_Info g-souinf ads.
22854 * GNAT.Spelling_Checker (g-speche.ads): GNAT Spelling_Checker g-speche ads.
22855 * GNAT.Spelling_Checker_Generic (g-spchge.ads): GNAT Spelling_Checker_Generic g-spchge ads.
22856 * GNAT.Spitbol.Patterns (g-spipat.ads): GNAT Spitbol Patterns g-spipat ads.
22857 * GNAT.Spitbol (g-spitbo.ads): GNAT Spitbol g-spitbo ads.
22858 * GNAT.Spitbol.Table_Boolean (g-sptabo.ads): GNAT Spitbol Table_Boolean g-sptabo ads.
22859 * GNAT.Spitbol.Table_Integer (g-sptain.ads): GNAT Spitbol Table_Integer g-sptain ads.
22860 * GNAT.Spitbol.Table_VString (g-sptavs.ads): GNAT Spitbol Table_VString g-sptavs ads.
22861 * GNAT.SSE (g-sse.ads): GNAT SSE g-sse ads.
22862 * GNAT.SSE.Vector_Types (g-ssvety.ads): GNAT SSE Vector_Types g-ssvety ads.
22863 * GNAT.String_Hash (g-strhas.ads): GNAT String_Hash g-strhas ads.
22864 * GNAT.Strings (g-string.ads): GNAT Strings g-string ads.
22865 * GNAT.String_Split (g-strspl.ads): GNAT String_Split g-strspl ads.
22866 * GNAT.Table (g-table.ads): GNAT Table g-table ads.
22867 * GNAT.Task_Lock (g-tasloc.ads): GNAT Task_Lock g-tasloc ads.
22868 * GNAT.Time_Stamp (g-timsta.ads): GNAT Time_Stamp g-timsta ads.
22869 * GNAT.Threads (g-thread.ads): GNAT Threads g-thread ads.
22870 * GNAT.Traceback (g-traceb.ads): GNAT Traceback g-traceb ads.
22871 * GNAT.Traceback.Symbolic (g-trasym.ads): GNAT Traceback Symbolic g-trasym ads.
22872 * GNAT.UTF_32 (g-table.ads): GNAT UTF_32 g-table ads.
22873 * GNAT.Wide_Spelling_Checker (g-u3spch.ads): GNAT Wide_Spelling_Checker g-u3spch ads.
22874 * GNAT.Wide_Spelling_Checker (g-wispch.ads): GNAT Wide_Spelling_Checker g-wispch ads.
22875 * GNAT.Wide_String_Split (g-wistsp.ads): GNAT Wide_String_Split g-wistsp ads.
22876 * GNAT.Wide_Wide_Spelling_Checker (g-zspche.ads): GNAT Wide_Wide_Spelling_Checker g-zspche ads.
22877 * GNAT.Wide_Wide_String_Split (g-zistsp.ads): GNAT Wide_Wide_String_Split g-zistsp ads.
22878 * Interfaces.C.Extensions (i-cexten.ads): Interfaces C Extensions i-cexten ads.
22879 * Interfaces.C.Streams (i-cstrea.ads): Interfaces C Streams i-cstrea ads.
22880 * Interfaces.Packed_Decimal (i-pacdec.ads): Interfaces Packed_Decimal i-pacdec ads.
22881 * Interfaces.VxWorks (i-vxwork.ads): Interfaces VxWorks i-vxwork ads.
22882 * Interfaces.VxWorks.Int_Connection (i-vxinco.ads): Interfaces VxWorks Int_Connection i-vxinco ads.
22883 * Interfaces.VxWorks.IO (i-vxwoio.ads): Interfaces VxWorks IO i-vxwoio ads.
22884 * System.Address_Image (s-addima.ads): System Address_Image s-addima ads.
22885 * System.Assertions (s-assert.ads): System Assertions s-assert ads.
22886 * System.Atomic_Counters (s-atocou.ads): System Atomic_Counters s-atocou ads.
22887 * System.Memory (s-memory.ads): System Memory s-memory ads.
22888 * System.Multiprocessors (s-multip.ads): System Multiprocessors s-multip ads.
22889 * System.Multiprocessors.Dispatching_Domains (s-mudido.ads): System Multiprocessors Dispatching_Domains s-mudido ads.
22890 * System.Partition_Interface (s-parint.ads): System Partition_Interface s-parint ads.
22891 * System.Pool_Global (s-pooglo.ads): System Pool_Global s-pooglo ads.
22892 * System.Pool_Local (s-pooloc.ads): System Pool_Local s-pooloc ads.
22893 * System.Restrictions (s-restri.ads): System Restrictions s-restri ads.
22894 * System.Rident (s-rident.ads): System Rident s-rident ads.
22895 * System.Strings.Stream_Ops (s-ststop.ads): System Strings Stream_Ops s-ststop ads.
22896 * System.Unsigned_Types (s-unstyp.ads): System Unsigned_Types s-unstyp ads.
22897 * System.Wch_Cnv (s-wchcnv.ads): System Wch_Cnv s-wchcnv ads.
22898 * System.Wch_Con (s-wchcon.ads): System Wch_Con s-wchcon ads.
22902 @node Ada Characters Latin_9 a-chlat9 ads,Ada Characters Wide_Latin_1 a-cwila1 ads,,The GNAT Library
22903 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id2}@anchor{2cc}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-characters-latin-9-a-chlat9-ads}@anchor{2cd}
22904 @section @code{Ada.Characters.Latin_9} (@code{a-chlat9.ads})
22907 @geindex Ada.Characters.Latin_9 (a-chlat9.ads)
22909 @geindex Latin_9 constants for Character
22911 This child of @code{Ada.Characters}
22912 provides a set of definitions corresponding to those in the
22913 RM-defined package @code{Ada.Characters.Latin_1} but with the
22914 few modifications required for @code{Latin-9}
22915 The provision of such a package
22916 is specifically authorized by the Ada Reference Manual
22919 @node Ada Characters Wide_Latin_1 a-cwila1 ads,Ada Characters Wide_Latin_9 a-cwila1 ads,Ada Characters Latin_9 a-chlat9 ads,The GNAT Library
22920 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-characters-wide-latin-1-a-cwila1-ads}@anchor{2ce}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id3}@anchor{2cf}
22921 @section @code{Ada.Characters.Wide_Latin_1} (@code{a-cwila1.ads})
22924 @geindex Ada.Characters.Wide_Latin_1 (a-cwila1.ads)
22926 @geindex Latin_1 constants for Wide_Character
22928 This child of @code{Ada.Characters}
22929 provides a set of definitions corresponding to those in the
22930 RM-defined package @code{Ada.Characters.Latin_1} but with the
22931 types of the constants being @code{Wide_Character}
22932 instead of @code{Character}. The provision of such a package
22933 is specifically authorized by the Ada Reference Manual
22936 @node Ada Characters Wide_Latin_9 a-cwila1 ads,Ada Characters Wide_Wide_Latin_1 a-chzla1 ads,Ada Characters Wide_Latin_1 a-cwila1 ads,The GNAT Library
22937 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id4}@anchor{2d0}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-characters-wide-latin-9-a-cwila1-ads}@anchor{2d1}
22938 @section @code{Ada.Characters.Wide_Latin_9} (@code{a-cwila1.ads})
22941 @geindex Ada.Characters.Wide_Latin_9 (a-cwila1.ads)
22943 @geindex Latin_9 constants for Wide_Character
22945 This child of @code{Ada.Characters}
22946 provides a set of definitions corresponding to those in the
22947 GNAT defined package @code{Ada.Characters.Latin_9} but with the
22948 types of the constants being @code{Wide_Character}
22949 instead of @code{Character}. The provision of such a package
22950 is specifically authorized by the Ada Reference Manual
22953 @node Ada Characters Wide_Wide_Latin_1 a-chzla1 ads,Ada Characters Wide_Wide_Latin_9 a-chzla9 ads,Ada Characters Wide_Latin_9 a-cwila1 ads,The GNAT Library
22954 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-characters-wide-wide-latin-1-a-chzla1-ads}@anchor{2d2}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id5}@anchor{2d3}
22955 @section @code{Ada.Characters.Wide_Wide_Latin_1} (@code{a-chzla1.ads})
22958 @geindex Ada.Characters.Wide_Wide_Latin_1 (a-chzla1.ads)
22960 @geindex Latin_1 constants for Wide_Wide_Character
22962 This child of @code{Ada.Characters}
22963 provides a set of definitions corresponding to those in the
22964 RM-defined package @code{Ada.Characters.Latin_1} but with the
22965 types of the constants being @code{Wide_Wide_Character}
22966 instead of @code{Character}. The provision of such a package
22967 is specifically authorized by the Ada Reference Manual
22970 @node Ada Characters Wide_Wide_Latin_9 a-chzla9 ads,Ada Containers Formal_Doubly_Linked_Lists a-cfdlli ads,Ada Characters Wide_Wide_Latin_1 a-chzla1 ads,The GNAT Library
22971 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-characters-wide-wide-latin-9-a-chzla9-ads}@anchor{2d4}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id6}@anchor{2d5}
22972 @section @code{Ada.Characters.Wide_Wide_Latin_9} (@code{a-chzla9.ads})
22975 @geindex Ada.Characters.Wide_Wide_Latin_9 (a-chzla9.ads)
22977 @geindex Latin_9 constants for Wide_Wide_Character
22979 This child of @code{Ada.Characters}
22980 provides a set of definitions corresponding to those in the
22981 GNAT defined package @code{Ada.Characters.Latin_9} but with the
22982 types of the constants being @code{Wide_Wide_Character}
22983 instead of @code{Character}. The provision of such a package
22984 is specifically authorized by the Ada Reference Manual
22987 @node Ada Containers Formal_Doubly_Linked_Lists a-cfdlli ads,Ada Containers Formal_Hashed_Maps a-cfhama ads,Ada Characters Wide_Wide_Latin_9 a-chzla9 ads,The GNAT Library
22988 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id7}@anchor{2d6}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-containers-formal-doubly-linked-lists-a-cfdlli-ads}@anchor{2d7}
22989 @section @code{Ada.Containers.Formal_Doubly_Linked_Lists} (@code{a-cfdlli.ads})
22992 @geindex Ada.Containers.Formal_Doubly_Linked_Lists (a-cfdlli.ads)
22994 @geindex Formal container for doubly linked lists
22996 This child of @code{Ada.Containers} defines a modified version of the
22997 Ada 2005 container for doubly linked lists, meant to facilitate formal
22998 verification of code using such containers. The specification of this
22999 unit is compatible with SPARK 2014.
23001 Note that although this container was designed with formal verification
23002 in mind, it may well be generally useful in that it is a simplified more
23003 efficient version than the one defined in the standard. In particular it
23004 does not have the complex overhead required to detect cursor tampering.
23006 @node Ada Containers Formal_Hashed_Maps a-cfhama ads,Ada Containers Formal_Hashed_Sets a-cfhase ads,Ada Containers Formal_Doubly_Linked_Lists a-cfdlli ads,The GNAT Library
23007 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id8}@anchor{2d8}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-containers-formal-hashed-maps-a-cfhama-ads}@anchor{2d9}
23008 @section @code{Ada.Containers.Formal_Hashed_Maps} (@code{a-cfhama.ads})
23011 @geindex Ada.Containers.Formal_Hashed_Maps (a-cfhama.ads)
23013 @geindex Formal container for hashed maps
23015 This child of @code{Ada.Containers} defines a modified version of the
23016 Ada 2005 container for hashed maps, meant to facilitate formal
23017 verification of code using such containers. The specification of this
23018 unit is compatible with SPARK 2014.
23020 Note that although this container was designed with formal verification
23021 in mind, it may well be generally useful in that it is a simplified more
23022 efficient version than the one defined in the standard. In particular it
23023 does not have the complex overhead required to detect cursor tampering.
23025 @node Ada Containers Formal_Hashed_Sets a-cfhase ads,Ada Containers Formal_Ordered_Maps a-cforma ads,Ada Containers Formal_Hashed_Maps a-cfhama ads,The GNAT Library
23026 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id9}@anchor{2da}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-containers-formal-hashed-sets-a-cfhase-ads}@anchor{2db}
23027 @section @code{Ada.Containers.Formal_Hashed_Sets} (@code{a-cfhase.ads})
23030 @geindex Ada.Containers.Formal_Hashed_Sets (a-cfhase.ads)
23032 @geindex Formal container for hashed sets
23034 This child of @code{Ada.Containers} defines a modified version of the
23035 Ada 2005 container for hashed sets, meant to facilitate formal
23036 verification of code using such containers. The specification of this
23037 unit is compatible with SPARK 2014.
23039 Note that although this container was designed with formal verification
23040 in mind, it may well be generally useful in that it is a simplified more
23041 efficient version than the one defined in the standard. In particular it
23042 does not have the complex overhead required to detect cursor tampering.
23044 @node Ada Containers Formal_Ordered_Maps a-cforma ads,Ada Containers Formal_Ordered_Sets a-cforse ads,Ada Containers Formal_Hashed_Sets a-cfhase ads,The GNAT Library
23045 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id10}@anchor{2dc}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-containers-formal-ordered-maps-a-cforma-ads}@anchor{2dd}
23046 @section @code{Ada.Containers.Formal_Ordered_Maps} (@code{a-cforma.ads})
23049 @geindex Ada.Containers.Formal_Ordered_Maps (a-cforma.ads)
23051 @geindex Formal container for ordered maps
23053 This child of @code{Ada.Containers} defines a modified version of the
23054 Ada 2005 container for ordered maps, meant to facilitate formal
23055 verification of code using such containers. The specification of this
23056 unit is compatible with SPARK 2014.
23058 Note that although this container was designed with formal verification
23059 in mind, it may well be generally useful in that it is a simplified more
23060 efficient version than the one defined in the standard. In particular it
23061 does not have the complex overhead required to detect cursor tampering.
23063 @node Ada Containers Formal_Ordered_Sets a-cforse ads,Ada Containers Formal_Vectors a-cofove ads,Ada Containers Formal_Ordered_Maps a-cforma ads,The GNAT Library
23064 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-containers-formal-ordered-sets-a-cforse-ads}@anchor{2de}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id11}@anchor{2df}
23065 @section @code{Ada.Containers.Formal_Ordered_Sets} (@code{a-cforse.ads})
23068 @geindex Ada.Containers.Formal_Ordered_Sets (a-cforse.ads)
23070 @geindex Formal container for ordered sets
23072 This child of @code{Ada.Containers} defines a modified version of the
23073 Ada 2005 container for ordered sets, meant to facilitate formal
23074 verification of code using such containers. The specification of this
23075 unit is compatible with SPARK 2014.
23077 Note that although this container was designed with formal verification
23078 in mind, it may well be generally useful in that it is a simplified more
23079 efficient version than the one defined in the standard. In particular it
23080 does not have the complex overhead required to detect cursor tampering.
23082 @node Ada Containers Formal_Vectors a-cofove ads,Ada Containers Formal_Indefinite_Vectors a-cfinve ads,Ada Containers Formal_Ordered_Sets a-cforse ads,The GNAT Library
23083 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id12}@anchor{2e0}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-containers-formal-vectors-a-cofove-ads}@anchor{2e1}
23084 @section @code{Ada.Containers.Formal_Vectors} (@code{a-cofove.ads})
23087 @geindex Ada.Containers.Formal_Vectors (a-cofove.ads)
23089 @geindex Formal container for vectors
23091 This child of @code{Ada.Containers} defines a modified version of the
23092 Ada 2005 container for vectors, meant to facilitate formal
23093 verification of code using such containers. The specification of this
23094 unit is compatible with SPARK 2014.
23096 Note that although this container was designed with formal verification
23097 in mind, it may well be generally useful in that it is a simplified more
23098 efficient version than the one defined in the standard. In particular it
23099 does not have the complex overhead required to detect cursor tampering.
23101 @node Ada Containers Formal_Indefinite_Vectors a-cfinve ads,Ada Containers Functional_Vectors a-cofuve ads,Ada Containers Formal_Vectors a-cofove ads,The GNAT Library
23102 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id13}@anchor{2e2}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-containers-formal-indefinite-vectors-a-cfinve-ads}@anchor{2e3}
23103 @section @code{Ada.Containers.Formal_Indefinite_Vectors} (@code{a-cfinve.ads})
23106 @geindex Ada.Containers.Formal_Indefinite_Vectors (a-cfinve.ads)
23108 @geindex Formal container for vectors
23110 This child of @code{Ada.Containers} defines a modified version of the
23111 Ada 2005 container for vectors of indefinite elements, meant to
23112 facilitate formal verification of code using such containers. The
23113 specification of this unit is compatible with SPARK 2014.
23115 Note that although this container was designed with formal verification
23116 in mind, it may well be generally useful in that it is a simplified more
23117 efficient version than the one defined in the standard. In particular it
23118 does not have the complex overhead required to detect cursor tampering.
23120 @node Ada Containers Functional_Vectors a-cofuve ads,Ada Containers Functional_Sets a-cofuse ads,Ada Containers Formal_Indefinite_Vectors a-cfinve ads,The GNAT Library
23121 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id14}@anchor{2e4}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-containers-functional-vectors-a-cofuve-ads}@anchor{2e5}
23122 @section @code{Ada.Containers.Functional_Vectors} (@code{a-cofuve.ads})
23125 @geindex Ada.Containers.Functional_Vectors (a-cofuve.ads)
23127 @geindex Functional vectors
23129 This child of @code{Ada.Containers} defines immutable vectors. These
23130 containers are unbounded and may contain indefinite elements. Furthermore, to
23131 be usable in every context, they are neither controlled nor limited. As they
23132 are functional, that is, no primitives are provided which would allow modifying
23133 an existing container, these containers can still be used safely.
23135 Their API features functions creating new containers from existing ones.
23136 As a consequence, these containers are highly inefficient. They are also
23137 memory consuming, as the allocated memory is not reclaimed when the container
23138 is no longer referenced. Thus, they should in general be used in ghost code
23139 and annotations, so that they can be removed from the final executable. The
23140 specification of this unit is compatible with SPARK 2014.
23142 @node Ada Containers Functional_Sets a-cofuse ads,Ada Containers Functional_Maps a-cofuma ads,Ada Containers Functional_Vectors a-cofuve ads,The GNAT Library
23143 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-containers-functional-sets-a-cofuse-ads}@anchor{2e6}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id15}@anchor{2e7}
23144 @section @code{Ada.Containers.Functional_Sets} (@code{a-cofuse.ads})
23147 @geindex Ada.Containers.Functional_Sets (a-cofuse.ads)
23149 @geindex Functional sets
23151 This child of @code{Ada.Containers} defines immutable sets. These containers are
23152 unbounded and may contain indefinite elements. Furthermore, to be usable in
23153 every context, they are neither controlled nor limited. As they are functional,
23154 that is, no primitives are provided which would allow modifying an existing
23155 container, these containers can still be used safely.
23157 Their API features functions creating new containers from existing ones.
23158 As a consequence, these containers are highly inefficient. They are also
23159 memory consuming, as the allocated memory is not reclaimed when the container
23160 is no longer referenced. Thus, they should in general be used in ghost code
23161 and annotations, so that they can be removed from the final executable. The
23162 specification of this unit is compatible with SPARK 2014.
23164 @node Ada Containers Functional_Maps a-cofuma ads,Ada Containers Bounded_Holders a-coboho ads,Ada Containers Functional_Sets a-cofuse ads,The GNAT Library
23165 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id16}@anchor{2e8}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-containers-functional-maps-a-cofuma-ads}@anchor{2e9}
23166 @section @code{Ada.Containers.Functional_Maps} (@code{a-cofuma.ads})
23169 @geindex Ada.Containers.Functional_Maps (a-cofuma.ads)
23171 @geindex Functional maps
23173 This child of @code{Ada.Containers} defines immutable maps. These containers are
23174 unbounded and may contain indefinite elements. Furthermore, to be usable in
23175 every context, they are neither controlled nor limited. As they are functional,
23176 that is, no primitives are provided which would allow modifying an existing
23177 container, these containers can still be used safely.
23179 Their API features functions creating new containers from existing ones.
23180 As a consequence, these containers are highly inefficient. They are also
23181 memory consuming, as the allocated memory is not reclaimed when the container
23182 is no longer referenced. Thus, they should in general be used in ghost code
23183 and annotations, so that they can be removed from the final executable. The
23184 specification of this unit is compatible with SPARK 2014.
23186 @node Ada Containers Bounded_Holders a-coboho ads,Ada Command_Line Environment a-colien ads,Ada Containers Functional_Maps a-cofuma ads,The GNAT Library
23187 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-containers-bounded-holders-a-coboho-ads}@anchor{2ea}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id17}@anchor{2eb}
23188 @section @code{Ada.Containers.Bounded_Holders} (@code{a-coboho.ads})
23191 @geindex Ada.Containers.Bounded_Holders (a-coboho.ads)
23193 @geindex Formal container for vectors
23195 This child of @code{Ada.Containers} defines a modified version of
23196 Indefinite_Holders that avoids heap allocation.
23198 @node Ada Command_Line Environment a-colien ads,Ada Command_Line Remove a-colire ads,Ada Containers Bounded_Holders a-coboho ads,The GNAT Library
23199 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-command-line-environment-a-colien-ads}@anchor{2ec}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id18}@anchor{2ed}
23200 @section @code{Ada.Command_Line.Environment} (@code{a-colien.ads})
23203 @geindex Ada.Command_Line.Environment (a-colien.ads)
23205 @geindex Environment entries
23207 This child of @code{Ada.Command_Line}
23208 provides a mechanism for obtaining environment values on systems
23209 where this concept makes sense.
23211 @node Ada Command_Line Remove a-colire ads,Ada Command_Line Response_File a-clrefi ads,Ada Command_Line Environment a-colien ads,The GNAT Library
23212 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id19}@anchor{2ee}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-command-line-remove-a-colire-ads}@anchor{2ef}
23213 @section @code{Ada.Command_Line.Remove} (@code{a-colire.ads})
23216 @geindex Ada.Command_Line.Remove (a-colire.ads)
23218 @geindex Removing command line arguments
23220 @geindex Command line
23221 @geindex argument removal
23223 This child of @code{Ada.Command_Line}
23224 provides a mechanism for logically removing
23225 arguments from the argument list. Once removed, an argument is not visible
23226 to further calls on the subprograms in @code{Ada.Command_Line} will not
23227 see the removed argument.
23229 @node Ada Command_Line Response_File a-clrefi ads,Ada Direct_IO C_Streams a-diocst ads,Ada Command_Line Remove a-colire ads,The GNAT Library
23230 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id20}@anchor{2f0}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-command-line-response-file-a-clrefi-ads}@anchor{2f1}
23231 @section @code{Ada.Command_Line.Response_File} (@code{a-clrefi.ads})
23234 @geindex Ada.Command_Line.Response_File (a-clrefi.ads)
23236 @geindex Response file for command line
23238 @geindex Command line
23239 @geindex response file
23241 @geindex Command line
23242 @geindex handling long command lines
23244 This child of @code{Ada.Command_Line} provides a mechanism facilities for
23245 getting command line arguments from a text file, called a "response file".
23246 Using a response file allow passing a set of arguments to an executable longer
23247 than the maximum allowed by the system on the command line.
23249 @node Ada Direct_IO C_Streams a-diocst ads,Ada Exceptions Is_Null_Occurrence a-einuoc ads,Ada Command_Line Response_File a-clrefi ads,The GNAT Library
23250 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id21}@anchor{2f2}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-direct-io-c-streams-a-diocst-ads}@anchor{2f3}
23251 @section @code{Ada.Direct_IO.C_Streams} (@code{a-diocst.ads})
23254 @geindex Ada.Direct_IO.C_Streams (a-diocst.ads)
23257 @geindex Interfacing with Direct_IO
23259 This package provides subprograms that allow interfacing between
23260 C streams and @code{Direct_IO}. The stream identifier can be
23261 extracted from a file opened on the Ada side, and an Ada file
23262 can be constructed from a stream opened on the C side.
23264 @node Ada Exceptions Is_Null_Occurrence a-einuoc ads,Ada Exceptions Last_Chance_Handler a-elchha ads,Ada Direct_IO C_Streams a-diocst ads,The GNAT Library
23265 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id22}@anchor{2f4}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-exceptions-is-null-occurrence-a-einuoc-ads}@anchor{2f5}
23266 @section @code{Ada.Exceptions.Is_Null_Occurrence} (@code{a-einuoc.ads})
23269 @geindex Ada.Exceptions.Is_Null_Occurrence (a-einuoc.ads)
23271 @geindex Null_Occurrence
23272 @geindex testing for
23274 This child subprogram provides a way of testing for the null
23275 exception occurrence (@code{Null_Occurrence}) without raising
23278 @node Ada Exceptions Last_Chance_Handler a-elchha ads,Ada Exceptions Traceback a-exctra ads,Ada Exceptions Is_Null_Occurrence a-einuoc ads,The GNAT Library
23279 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id23}@anchor{2f6}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-exceptions-last-chance-handler-a-elchha-ads}@anchor{2f7}
23280 @section @code{Ada.Exceptions.Last_Chance_Handler} (@code{a-elchha.ads})
23283 @geindex Ada.Exceptions.Last_Chance_Handler (a-elchha.ads)
23285 @geindex Null_Occurrence
23286 @geindex testing for
23288 This child subprogram is used for handling otherwise unhandled
23289 exceptions (hence the name last chance), and perform clean ups before
23290 terminating the program. Note that this subprogram never returns.
23292 @node Ada Exceptions Traceback a-exctra ads,Ada Sequential_IO C_Streams a-siocst ads,Ada Exceptions Last_Chance_Handler a-elchha ads,The GNAT Library
23293 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-exceptions-traceback-a-exctra-ads}@anchor{2f8}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id24}@anchor{2f9}
23294 @section @code{Ada.Exceptions.Traceback} (@code{a-exctra.ads})
23297 @geindex Ada.Exceptions.Traceback (a-exctra.ads)
23299 @geindex Traceback for Exception Occurrence
23301 This child package provides the subprogram (@code{Tracebacks}) to
23302 give a traceback array of addresses based on an exception
23305 @node Ada Sequential_IO C_Streams a-siocst ads,Ada Streams Stream_IO C_Streams a-ssicst ads,Ada Exceptions Traceback a-exctra ads,The GNAT Library
23306 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-sequential-io-c-streams-a-siocst-ads}@anchor{2fa}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id25}@anchor{2fb}
23307 @section @code{Ada.Sequential_IO.C_Streams} (@code{a-siocst.ads})
23310 @geindex Ada.Sequential_IO.C_Streams (a-siocst.ads)
23313 @geindex Interfacing with Sequential_IO
23315 This package provides subprograms that allow interfacing between
23316 C streams and @code{Sequential_IO}. The stream identifier can be
23317 extracted from a file opened on the Ada side, and an Ada file
23318 can be constructed from a stream opened on the C side.
23320 @node Ada Streams Stream_IO C_Streams a-ssicst ads,Ada Strings Unbounded Text_IO a-suteio ads,Ada Sequential_IO C_Streams a-siocst ads,The GNAT Library
23321 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id26}@anchor{2fc}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-streams-stream-io-c-streams-a-ssicst-ads}@anchor{2fd}
23322 @section @code{Ada.Streams.Stream_IO.C_Streams} (@code{a-ssicst.ads})
23325 @geindex Ada.Streams.Stream_IO.C_Streams (a-ssicst.ads)
23328 @geindex Interfacing with Stream_IO
23330 This package provides subprograms that allow interfacing between
23331 C streams and @code{Stream_IO}. The stream identifier can be
23332 extracted from a file opened on the Ada side, and an Ada file
23333 can be constructed from a stream opened on the C side.
23335 @node Ada Strings Unbounded Text_IO a-suteio ads,Ada Strings Wide_Unbounded Wide_Text_IO a-swuwti ads,Ada Streams Stream_IO C_Streams a-ssicst ads,The GNAT Library
23336 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-strings-unbounded-text-io-a-suteio-ads}@anchor{2fe}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id27}@anchor{2ff}
23337 @section @code{Ada.Strings.Unbounded.Text_IO} (@code{a-suteio.ads})
23340 @geindex Ada.Strings.Unbounded.Text_IO (a-suteio.ads)
23342 @geindex Unbounded_String
23343 @geindex IO support
23346 @geindex extensions for unbounded strings
23348 This package provides subprograms for Text_IO for unbounded
23349 strings, avoiding the necessity for an intermediate operation
23350 with ordinary strings.
23352 @node Ada Strings Wide_Unbounded Wide_Text_IO a-swuwti ads,Ada Strings Wide_Wide_Unbounded Wide_Wide_Text_IO a-szuzti ads,Ada Strings Unbounded Text_IO a-suteio ads,The GNAT Library
23353 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id28}@anchor{300}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-strings-wide-unbounded-wide-text-io-a-swuwti-ads}@anchor{301}
23354 @section @code{Ada.Strings.Wide_Unbounded.Wide_Text_IO} (@code{a-swuwti.ads})
23357 @geindex Ada.Strings.Wide_Unbounded.Wide_Text_IO (a-swuwti.ads)
23359 @geindex Unbounded_Wide_String
23360 @geindex IO support
23363 @geindex extensions for unbounded wide strings
23365 This package provides subprograms for Text_IO for unbounded
23366 wide strings, avoiding the necessity for an intermediate operation
23367 with ordinary wide strings.
23369 @node Ada Strings Wide_Wide_Unbounded Wide_Wide_Text_IO a-szuzti ads,Ada Text_IO C_Streams a-tiocst ads,Ada Strings Wide_Unbounded Wide_Text_IO a-swuwti ads,The GNAT Library
23370 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id29}@anchor{302}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-strings-wide-wide-unbounded-wide-wide-text-io-a-szuzti-ads}@anchor{303}
23371 @section @code{Ada.Strings.Wide_Wide_Unbounded.Wide_Wide_Text_IO} (@code{a-szuzti.ads})
23374 @geindex Ada.Strings.Wide_Wide_Unbounded.Wide_Wide_Text_IO (a-szuzti.ads)
23376 @geindex Unbounded_Wide_Wide_String
23377 @geindex IO support
23380 @geindex extensions for unbounded wide wide strings
23382 This package provides subprograms for Text_IO for unbounded
23383 wide wide strings, avoiding the necessity for an intermediate operation
23384 with ordinary wide wide strings.
23386 @node Ada Text_IO C_Streams a-tiocst ads,Ada Text_IO Reset_Standard_Files a-tirsfi ads,Ada Strings Wide_Wide_Unbounded Wide_Wide_Text_IO a-szuzti ads,The GNAT Library
23387 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-text-io-c-streams-a-tiocst-ads}@anchor{304}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id30}@anchor{305}
23388 @section @code{Ada.Text_IO.C_Streams} (@code{a-tiocst.ads})
23391 @geindex Ada.Text_IO.C_Streams (a-tiocst.ads)
23394 @geindex Interfacing with `@w{`}Text_IO`@w{`}
23396 This package provides subprograms that allow interfacing between
23397 C streams and @code{Text_IO}. The stream identifier can be
23398 extracted from a file opened on the Ada side, and an Ada file
23399 can be constructed from a stream opened on the C side.
23401 @node Ada Text_IO Reset_Standard_Files a-tirsfi ads,Ada Wide_Characters Unicode a-wichun ads,Ada Text_IO C_Streams a-tiocst ads,The GNAT Library
23402 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-text-io-reset-standard-files-a-tirsfi-ads}@anchor{306}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id31}@anchor{307}
23403 @section @code{Ada.Text_IO.Reset_Standard_Files} (@code{a-tirsfi.ads})
23406 @geindex Ada.Text_IO.Reset_Standard_Files (a-tirsfi.ads)
23408 @geindex Text_IO resetting standard files
23410 This procedure is used to reset the status of the standard files used
23411 by Ada.Text_IO. This is useful in a situation (such as a restart in an
23412 embedded application) where the status of the files may change during
23413 execution (for example a standard input file may be redefined to be
23416 @node Ada Wide_Characters Unicode a-wichun ads,Ada Wide_Text_IO C_Streams a-wtcstr ads,Ada Text_IO Reset_Standard_Files a-tirsfi ads,The GNAT Library
23417 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id32}@anchor{308}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-wide-characters-unicode-a-wichun-ads}@anchor{309}
23418 @section @code{Ada.Wide_Characters.Unicode} (@code{a-wichun.ads})
23421 @geindex Ada.Wide_Characters.Unicode (a-wichun.ads)
23423 @geindex Unicode categorization
23424 @geindex Wide_Character
23426 This package provides subprograms that allow categorization of
23427 Wide_Character values according to Unicode categories.
23429 @node Ada Wide_Text_IO C_Streams a-wtcstr ads,Ada Wide_Text_IO Reset_Standard_Files a-wrstfi ads,Ada Wide_Characters Unicode a-wichun ads,The GNAT Library
23430 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-wide-text-io-c-streams-a-wtcstr-ads}@anchor{30a}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id33}@anchor{30b}
23431 @section @code{Ada.Wide_Text_IO.C_Streams} (@code{a-wtcstr.ads})
23434 @geindex Ada.Wide_Text_IO.C_Streams (a-wtcstr.ads)
23437 @geindex Interfacing with `@w{`}Wide_Text_IO`@w{`}
23439 This package provides subprograms that allow interfacing between
23440 C streams and @code{Wide_Text_IO}. The stream identifier can be
23441 extracted from a file opened on the Ada side, and an Ada file
23442 can be constructed from a stream opened on the C side.
23444 @node Ada Wide_Text_IO Reset_Standard_Files a-wrstfi ads,Ada Wide_Wide_Characters Unicode a-zchuni ads,Ada Wide_Text_IO C_Streams a-wtcstr ads,The GNAT Library
23445 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-wide-text-io-reset-standard-files-a-wrstfi-ads}@anchor{30c}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id34}@anchor{30d}
23446 @section @code{Ada.Wide_Text_IO.Reset_Standard_Files} (@code{a-wrstfi.ads})
23449 @geindex Ada.Wide_Text_IO.Reset_Standard_Files (a-wrstfi.ads)
23451 @geindex Wide_Text_IO resetting standard files
23453 This procedure is used to reset the status of the standard files used
23454 by Ada.Wide_Text_IO. This is useful in a situation (such as a restart in an
23455 embedded application) where the status of the files may change during
23456 execution (for example a standard input file may be redefined to be
23459 @node Ada Wide_Wide_Characters Unicode a-zchuni ads,Ada Wide_Wide_Text_IO C_Streams a-ztcstr ads,Ada Wide_Text_IO Reset_Standard_Files a-wrstfi ads,The GNAT Library
23460 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id35}@anchor{30e}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-wide-wide-characters-unicode-a-zchuni-ads}@anchor{30f}
23461 @section @code{Ada.Wide_Wide_Characters.Unicode} (@code{a-zchuni.ads})
23464 @geindex Ada.Wide_Wide_Characters.Unicode (a-zchuni.ads)
23466 @geindex Unicode categorization
23467 @geindex Wide_Wide_Character
23469 This package provides subprograms that allow categorization of
23470 Wide_Wide_Character values according to Unicode categories.
23472 @node Ada Wide_Wide_Text_IO C_Streams a-ztcstr ads,Ada Wide_Wide_Text_IO Reset_Standard_Files a-zrstfi ads,Ada Wide_Wide_Characters Unicode a-zchuni ads,The GNAT Library
23473 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id36}@anchor{310}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-wide-wide-text-io-c-streams-a-ztcstr-ads}@anchor{311}
23474 @section @code{Ada.Wide_Wide_Text_IO.C_Streams} (@code{a-ztcstr.ads})
23477 @geindex Ada.Wide_Wide_Text_IO.C_Streams (a-ztcstr.ads)
23480 @geindex Interfacing with `@w{`}Wide_Wide_Text_IO`@w{`}
23482 This package provides subprograms that allow interfacing between
23483 C streams and @code{Wide_Wide_Text_IO}. The stream identifier can be
23484 extracted from a file opened on the Ada side, and an Ada file
23485 can be constructed from a stream opened on the C side.
23487 @node Ada Wide_Wide_Text_IO Reset_Standard_Files a-zrstfi ads,GNAT Altivec g-altive ads,Ada Wide_Wide_Text_IO C_Streams a-ztcstr ads,The GNAT Library
23488 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id37}@anchor{312}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library ada-wide-wide-text-io-reset-standard-files-a-zrstfi-ads}@anchor{313}
23489 @section @code{Ada.Wide_Wide_Text_IO.Reset_Standard_Files} (@code{a-zrstfi.ads})
23492 @geindex Ada.Wide_Wide_Text_IO.Reset_Standard_Files (a-zrstfi.ads)
23494 @geindex Wide_Wide_Text_IO resetting standard files
23496 This procedure is used to reset the status of the standard files used
23497 by Ada.Wide_Wide_Text_IO. This is useful in a situation (such as a
23498 restart in an embedded application) where the status of the files may
23499 change during execution (for example a standard input file may be
23500 redefined to be interactive).
23502 @node GNAT Altivec g-altive ads,GNAT Altivec Conversions g-altcon ads,Ada Wide_Wide_Text_IO Reset_Standard_Files a-zrstfi ads,The GNAT Library
23503 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-altivec-g-altive-ads}@anchor{314}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id38}@anchor{315}
23504 @section @code{GNAT.Altivec} (@code{g-altive.ads})
23507 @geindex GNAT.Altivec (g-altive.ads)
23511 This is the root package of the GNAT AltiVec binding. It provides
23512 definitions of constants and types common to all the versions of the
23515 @node GNAT Altivec Conversions g-altcon ads,GNAT Altivec Vector_Operations g-alveop ads,GNAT Altivec g-altive ads,The GNAT Library
23516 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-altivec-conversions-g-altcon-ads}@anchor{316}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id39}@anchor{317}
23517 @section @code{GNAT.Altivec.Conversions} (@code{g-altcon.ads})
23520 @geindex GNAT.Altivec.Conversions (g-altcon.ads)
23524 This package provides the Vector/View conversion routines.
23526 @node GNAT Altivec Vector_Operations g-alveop ads,GNAT Altivec Vector_Types g-alvety ads,GNAT Altivec Conversions g-altcon ads,The GNAT Library
23527 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-altivec-vector-operations-g-alveop-ads}@anchor{318}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id40}@anchor{319}
23528 @section @code{GNAT.Altivec.Vector_Operations} (@code{g-alveop.ads})
23531 @geindex GNAT.Altivec.Vector_Operations (g-alveop.ads)
23535 This package exposes the Ada interface to the AltiVec operations on
23536 vector objects. A soft emulation is included by default in the GNAT
23537 library. The hard binding is provided as a separate package. This unit
23538 is common to both bindings.
23540 @node GNAT Altivec Vector_Types g-alvety ads,GNAT Altivec Vector_Views g-alvevi ads,GNAT Altivec Vector_Operations g-alveop ads,The GNAT Library
23541 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-altivec-vector-types-g-alvety-ads}@anchor{31a}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id41}@anchor{31b}
23542 @section @code{GNAT.Altivec.Vector_Types} (@code{g-alvety.ads})
23545 @geindex GNAT.Altivec.Vector_Types (g-alvety.ads)
23549 This package exposes the various vector types part of the Ada binding
23550 to AltiVec facilities.
23552 @node GNAT Altivec Vector_Views g-alvevi ads,GNAT Array_Split g-arrspl ads,GNAT Altivec Vector_Types g-alvety ads,The GNAT Library
23553 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-altivec-vector-views-g-alvevi-ads}@anchor{31c}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id42}@anchor{31d}
23554 @section @code{GNAT.Altivec.Vector_Views} (@code{g-alvevi.ads})
23557 @geindex GNAT.Altivec.Vector_Views (g-alvevi.ads)
23561 This package provides public 'View' data types from/to which private
23562 vector representations can be converted via
23563 GNAT.Altivec.Conversions. This allows convenient access to individual
23564 vector elements and provides a simple way to initialize vector
23567 @node GNAT Array_Split g-arrspl ads,GNAT AWK g-awk ads,GNAT Altivec Vector_Views g-alvevi ads,The GNAT Library
23568 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-array-split-g-arrspl-ads}@anchor{31e}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id43}@anchor{31f}
23569 @section @code{GNAT.Array_Split} (@code{g-arrspl.ads})
23572 @geindex GNAT.Array_Split (g-arrspl.ads)
23574 @geindex Array splitter
23576 Useful array-manipulation routines: given a set of separators, split
23577 an array wherever the separators appear, and provide direct access
23578 to the resulting slices.
23580 @node GNAT AWK g-awk ads,GNAT Bind_Environment g-binenv ads,GNAT Array_Split g-arrspl ads,The GNAT Library
23581 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id44}@anchor{320}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-awk-g-awk-ads}@anchor{321}
23582 @section @code{GNAT.AWK} (@code{g-awk.ads})
23585 @geindex GNAT.AWK (g-awk.ads)
23591 Provides AWK-like parsing functions, with an easy interface for parsing one
23592 or more files containing formatted data. The file is viewed as a database
23593 where each record is a line and a field is a data element in this line.
23595 @node GNAT Bind_Environment g-binenv ads,GNAT Bounded_Buffers g-boubuf ads,GNAT AWK g-awk ads,The GNAT Library
23596 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-bind-environment-g-binenv-ads}@anchor{322}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id45}@anchor{323}
23597 @section @code{GNAT.Bind_Environment} (@code{g-binenv.ads})
23600 @geindex GNAT.Bind_Environment (g-binenv.ads)
23602 @geindex Bind environment
23604 Provides access to key=value associations captured at bind time.
23605 These associations can be specified using the @code{-V} binder command
23608 @node GNAT Bounded_Buffers g-boubuf ads,GNAT Bounded_Mailboxes g-boumai ads,GNAT Bind_Environment g-binenv ads,The GNAT Library
23609 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id46}@anchor{324}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-bounded-buffers-g-boubuf-ads}@anchor{325}
23610 @section @code{GNAT.Bounded_Buffers} (@code{g-boubuf.ads})
23613 @geindex GNAT.Bounded_Buffers (g-boubuf.ads)
23617 @geindex Bounded Buffers
23619 Provides a concurrent generic bounded buffer abstraction. Instances are
23620 useful directly or as parts of the implementations of other abstractions,
23623 @node GNAT Bounded_Mailboxes g-boumai ads,GNAT Bubble_Sort g-bubsor ads,GNAT Bounded_Buffers g-boubuf ads,The GNAT Library
23624 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id47}@anchor{326}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-bounded-mailboxes-g-boumai-ads}@anchor{327}
23625 @section @code{GNAT.Bounded_Mailboxes} (@code{g-boumai.ads})
23628 @geindex GNAT.Bounded_Mailboxes (g-boumai.ads)
23634 Provides a thread-safe asynchronous intertask mailbox communication facility.
23636 @node GNAT Bubble_Sort g-bubsor ads,GNAT Bubble_Sort_A g-busora ads,GNAT Bounded_Mailboxes g-boumai ads,The GNAT Library
23637 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-bubble-sort-g-bubsor-ads}@anchor{328}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id48}@anchor{329}
23638 @section @code{GNAT.Bubble_Sort} (@code{g-bubsor.ads})
23641 @geindex GNAT.Bubble_Sort (g-bubsor.ads)
23645 @geindex Bubble sort
23647 Provides a general implementation of bubble sort usable for sorting arbitrary
23648 data items. Exchange and comparison procedures are provided by passing
23649 access-to-procedure values.
23651 @node GNAT Bubble_Sort_A g-busora ads,GNAT Bubble_Sort_G g-busorg ads,GNAT Bubble_Sort g-bubsor ads,The GNAT Library
23652 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id49}@anchor{32a}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-bubble-sort-a-g-busora-ads}@anchor{32b}
23653 @section @code{GNAT.Bubble_Sort_A} (@code{g-busora.ads})
23656 @geindex GNAT.Bubble_Sort_A (g-busora.ads)
23660 @geindex Bubble sort
23662 Provides a general implementation of bubble sort usable for sorting arbitrary
23663 data items. Move and comparison procedures are provided by passing
23664 access-to-procedure values. This is an older version, retained for
23665 compatibility. Usually @code{GNAT.Bubble_Sort} will be preferable.
23667 @node GNAT Bubble_Sort_G g-busorg ads,GNAT Byte_Order_Mark g-byorma ads,GNAT Bubble_Sort_A g-busora ads,The GNAT Library
23668 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-bubble-sort-g-g-busorg-ads}@anchor{32c}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id50}@anchor{32d}
23669 @section @code{GNAT.Bubble_Sort_G} (@code{g-busorg.ads})
23672 @geindex GNAT.Bubble_Sort_G (g-busorg.ads)
23676 @geindex Bubble sort
23678 Similar to @code{Bubble_Sort_A} except that the move and sorting procedures
23679 are provided as generic parameters, this improves efficiency, especially
23680 if the procedures can be inlined, at the expense of duplicating code for
23681 multiple instantiations.
23683 @node GNAT Byte_Order_Mark g-byorma ads,GNAT Byte_Swapping g-bytswa ads,GNAT Bubble_Sort_G g-busorg ads,The GNAT Library
23684 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-byte-order-mark-g-byorma-ads}@anchor{32e}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id51}@anchor{32f}
23685 @section @code{GNAT.Byte_Order_Mark} (@code{g-byorma.ads})
23688 @geindex GNAT.Byte_Order_Mark (g-byorma.ads)
23690 @geindex UTF-8 representation
23692 @geindex Wide characte representations
23694 Provides a routine which given a string, reads the start of the string to
23695 see whether it is one of the standard byte order marks (BOM's) which signal
23696 the encoding of the string. The routine includes detection of special XML
23697 sequences for various UCS input formats.
23699 @node GNAT Byte_Swapping g-bytswa ads,GNAT Calendar g-calend ads,GNAT Byte_Order_Mark g-byorma ads,The GNAT Library
23700 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-byte-swapping-g-bytswa-ads}@anchor{330}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id52}@anchor{331}
23701 @section @code{GNAT.Byte_Swapping} (@code{g-bytswa.ads})
23704 @geindex GNAT.Byte_Swapping (g-bytswa.ads)
23706 @geindex Byte swapping
23708 @geindex Endianness
23710 General routines for swapping the bytes in 2-, 4-, and 8-byte quantities.
23711 Machine-specific implementations are available in some cases.
23713 @node GNAT Calendar g-calend ads,GNAT Calendar Time_IO g-catiio ads,GNAT Byte_Swapping g-bytswa ads,The GNAT Library
23714 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-calendar-g-calend-ads}@anchor{332}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id53}@anchor{333}
23715 @section @code{GNAT.Calendar} (@code{g-calend.ads})
23718 @geindex GNAT.Calendar (g-calend.ads)
23722 Extends the facilities provided by @code{Ada.Calendar} to include handling
23723 of days of the week, an extended @code{Split} and @code{Time_Of} capability.
23724 Also provides conversion of @code{Ada.Calendar.Time} values to and from the
23725 C @code{timeval} format.
23727 @node GNAT Calendar Time_IO g-catiio ads,GNAT CRC32 g-crc32 ads,GNAT Calendar g-calend ads,The GNAT Library
23728 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id54}@anchor{334}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-calendar-time-io-g-catiio-ads}@anchor{335}
23729 @section @code{GNAT.Calendar.Time_IO} (@code{g-catiio.ads})
23736 @geindex GNAT.Calendar.Time_IO (g-catiio.ads)
23738 @node GNAT CRC32 g-crc32 ads,GNAT Case_Util g-casuti ads,GNAT Calendar Time_IO g-catiio ads,The GNAT Library
23739 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id55}@anchor{336}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-crc32-g-crc32-ads}@anchor{337}
23740 @section @code{GNAT.CRC32} (@code{g-crc32.ads})
23743 @geindex GNAT.CRC32 (g-crc32.ads)
23747 @geindex Cyclic Redundancy Check
23749 This package implements the CRC-32 algorithm. For a full description
23750 of this algorithm see
23751 @emph{Computation of Cyclic Redundancy Checks via Table Look-Up},
23752 @cite{Communications of the ACM}, Vol. 31 No. 8, pp. 1008-1013,
23753 Aug. 1988. Sarwate, D.V.
23755 @node GNAT Case_Util g-casuti ads,GNAT CGI g-cgi ads,GNAT CRC32 g-crc32 ads,The GNAT Library
23756 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id56}@anchor{338}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-case-util-g-casuti-ads}@anchor{339}
23757 @section @code{GNAT.Case_Util} (@code{g-casuti.ads})
23760 @geindex GNAT.Case_Util (g-casuti.ads)
23762 @geindex Casing utilities
23764 @geindex Character handling (`@w{`}GNAT.Case_Util`@w{`})
23766 A set of simple routines for handling upper and lower casing of strings
23767 without the overhead of the full casing tables
23768 in @code{Ada.Characters.Handling}.
23770 @node GNAT CGI g-cgi ads,GNAT CGI Cookie g-cgicoo ads,GNAT Case_Util g-casuti ads,The GNAT Library
23771 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id57}@anchor{33a}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-cgi-g-cgi-ads}@anchor{33b}
23772 @section @code{GNAT.CGI} (@code{g-cgi.ads})
23775 @geindex GNAT.CGI (g-cgi.ads)
23777 @geindex CGI (Common Gateway Interface)
23779 This is a package for interfacing a GNAT program with a Web server via the
23780 Common Gateway Interface (CGI). Basically this package parses the CGI
23781 parameters, which are a set of key/value pairs sent by the Web server. It
23782 builds a table whose index is the key and provides some services to deal
23785 @node GNAT CGI Cookie g-cgicoo ads,GNAT CGI Debug g-cgideb ads,GNAT CGI g-cgi ads,The GNAT Library
23786 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-cgi-cookie-g-cgicoo-ads}@anchor{33c}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id58}@anchor{33d}
23787 @section @code{GNAT.CGI.Cookie} (@code{g-cgicoo.ads})
23790 @geindex GNAT.CGI.Cookie (g-cgicoo.ads)
23792 @geindex CGI (Common Gateway Interface) cookie support
23794 @geindex Cookie support in CGI
23796 This is a package to interface a GNAT program with a Web server via the
23797 Common Gateway Interface (CGI). It exports services to deal with Web
23798 cookies (piece of information kept in the Web client software).
23800 @node GNAT CGI Debug g-cgideb ads,GNAT Command_Line g-comlin ads,GNAT CGI Cookie g-cgicoo ads,The GNAT Library
23801 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-cgi-debug-g-cgideb-ads}@anchor{33e}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id59}@anchor{33f}
23802 @section @code{GNAT.CGI.Debug} (@code{g-cgideb.ads})
23805 @geindex GNAT.CGI.Debug (g-cgideb.ads)
23807 @geindex CGI (Common Gateway Interface) debugging
23809 This is a package to help debugging CGI (Common Gateway Interface)
23810 programs written in Ada.
23812 @node GNAT Command_Line g-comlin ads,GNAT Compiler_Version g-comver ads,GNAT CGI Debug g-cgideb ads,The GNAT Library
23813 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id60}@anchor{340}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-command-line-g-comlin-ads}@anchor{341}
23814 @section @code{GNAT.Command_Line} (@code{g-comlin.ads})
23817 @geindex GNAT.Command_Line (g-comlin.ads)
23819 @geindex Command line
23821 Provides a high level interface to @code{Ada.Command_Line} facilities,
23822 including the ability to scan for named switches with optional parameters
23823 and expand file names using wild card notations.
23825 @node GNAT Compiler_Version g-comver ads,GNAT Ctrl_C g-ctrl_c ads,GNAT Command_Line g-comlin ads,The GNAT Library
23826 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-compiler-version-g-comver-ads}@anchor{342}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id61}@anchor{343}
23827 @section @code{GNAT.Compiler_Version} (@code{g-comver.ads})
23830 @geindex GNAT.Compiler_Version (g-comver.ads)
23832 @geindex Compiler Version
23835 @geindex of compiler
23837 Provides a routine for obtaining the version of the compiler used to
23838 compile the program. More accurately this is the version of the binder
23839 used to bind the program (this will normally be the same as the version
23840 of the compiler if a consistent tool set is used to compile all units
23843 @node GNAT Ctrl_C g-ctrl_c ads,GNAT Current_Exception g-curexc ads,GNAT Compiler_Version g-comver ads,The GNAT Library
23844 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-ctrl-c-g-ctrl-c-ads}@anchor{344}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id62}@anchor{345}
23845 @section @code{GNAT.Ctrl_C} (@code{g-ctrl_c.ads})
23848 @geindex GNAT.Ctrl_C (g-ctrl_c.ads)
23852 Provides a simple interface to handle Ctrl-C keyboard events.
23854 @node GNAT Current_Exception g-curexc ads,GNAT Debug_Pools g-debpoo ads,GNAT Ctrl_C g-ctrl_c ads,The GNAT Library
23855 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id63}@anchor{346}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-current-exception-g-curexc-ads}@anchor{347}
23856 @section @code{GNAT.Current_Exception} (@code{g-curexc.ads})
23859 @geindex GNAT.Current_Exception (g-curexc.ads)
23861 @geindex Current exception
23863 @geindex Exception retrieval
23865 Provides access to information on the current exception that has been raised
23866 without the need for using the Ada 95 / Ada 2005 exception choice parameter
23867 specification syntax.
23868 This is particularly useful in simulating typical facilities for
23869 obtaining information about exceptions provided by Ada 83 compilers.
23871 @node GNAT Debug_Pools g-debpoo ads,GNAT Debug_Utilities g-debuti ads,GNAT Current_Exception g-curexc ads,The GNAT Library
23872 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-debug-pools-g-debpoo-ads}@anchor{348}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id64}@anchor{349}
23873 @section @code{GNAT.Debug_Pools} (@code{g-debpoo.ads})
23876 @geindex GNAT.Debug_Pools (g-debpoo.ads)
23880 @geindex Debug pools
23882 @geindex Memory corruption debugging
23884 Provide a debugging storage pools that helps tracking memory corruption
23886 See @code{The GNAT Debug_Pool Facility} section in the @cite{GNAT User's Guide}.
23888 @node GNAT Debug_Utilities g-debuti ads,GNAT Decode_String g-decstr ads,GNAT Debug_Pools g-debpoo ads,The GNAT Library
23889 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id65}@anchor{34a}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-debug-utilities-g-debuti-ads}@anchor{34b}
23890 @section @code{GNAT.Debug_Utilities} (@code{g-debuti.ads})
23893 @geindex GNAT.Debug_Utilities (g-debuti.ads)
23897 Provides a few useful utilities for debugging purposes, including conversion
23898 to and from string images of address values. Supports both C and Ada formats
23899 for hexadecimal literals.
23901 @node GNAT Decode_String g-decstr ads,GNAT Decode_UTF8_String g-deutst ads,GNAT Debug_Utilities g-debuti ads,The GNAT Library
23902 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-decode-string-g-decstr-ads}@anchor{34c}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id66}@anchor{34d}
23903 @section @code{GNAT.Decode_String} (@code{g-decstr.ads})
23906 @geindex GNAT.Decode_String (g-decstr.ads)
23908 @geindex Decoding strings
23910 @geindex String decoding
23912 @geindex Wide character encoding
23918 A generic package providing routines for decoding wide character and wide wide
23919 character strings encoded as sequences of 8-bit characters using a specified
23920 encoding method. Includes validation routines, and also routines for stepping
23921 to next or previous encoded character in an encoded string.
23922 Useful in conjunction with Unicode character coding. Note there is a
23923 preinstantiation for UTF-8. See next entry.
23925 @node GNAT Decode_UTF8_String g-deutst ads,GNAT Directory_Operations g-dirope ads,GNAT Decode_String g-decstr ads,The GNAT Library
23926 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-decode-utf8-string-g-deutst-ads}@anchor{34e}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id67}@anchor{34f}
23927 @section @code{GNAT.Decode_UTF8_String} (@code{g-deutst.ads})
23930 @geindex GNAT.Decode_UTF8_String (g-deutst.ads)
23932 @geindex Decoding strings
23934 @geindex Decoding UTF-8 strings
23936 @geindex UTF-8 string decoding
23938 @geindex Wide character decoding
23944 A preinstantiation of GNAT.Decode_Strings for UTF-8 encoding.
23946 @node GNAT Directory_Operations g-dirope ads,GNAT Directory_Operations Iteration g-diopit ads,GNAT Decode_UTF8_String g-deutst ads,The GNAT Library
23947 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-directory-operations-g-dirope-ads}@anchor{350}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id68}@anchor{351}
23948 @section @code{GNAT.Directory_Operations} (@code{g-dirope.ads})
23951 @geindex GNAT.Directory_Operations (g-dirope.ads)
23953 @geindex Directory operations
23955 Provides a set of routines for manipulating directories, including changing
23956 the current directory, making new directories, and scanning the files in a
23959 @node GNAT Directory_Operations Iteration g-diopit ads,GNAT Dynamic_HTables g-dynhta ads,GNAT Directory_Operations g-dirope ads,The GNAT Library
23960 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id69}@anchor{352}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-directory-operations-iteration-g-diopit-ads}@anchor{353}
23961 @section @code{GNAT.Directory_Operations.Iteration} (@code{g-diopit.ads})
23964 @geindex GNAT.Directory_Operations.Iteration (g-diopit.ads)
23966 @geindex Directory operations iteration
23968 A child unit of GNAT.Directory_Operations providing additional operations
23969 for iterating through directories.
23971 @node GNAT Dynamic_HTables g-dynhta ads,GNAT Dynamic_Tables g-dyntab ads,GNAT Directory_Operations Iteration g-diopit ads,The GNAT Library
23972 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id70}@anchor{354}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-dynamic-htables-g-dynhta-ads}@anchor{355}
23973 @section @code{GNAT.Dynamic_HTables} (@code{g-dynhta.ads})
23976 @geindex GNAT.Dynamic_HTables (g-dynhta.ads)
23978 @geindex Hash tables
23980 A generic implementation of hash tables that can be used to hash arbitrary
23981 data. Provided in two forms, a simple form with built in hash functions,
23982 and a more complex form in which the hash function is supplied.
23984 This package provides a facility similar to that of @code{GNAT.HTable},
23985 except that this package declares a type that can be used to define
23986 dynamic instances of the hash table, while an instantiation of
23987 @code{GNAT.HTable} creates a single instance of the hash table.
23989 @node GNAT Dynamic_Tables g-dyntab ads,GNAT Encode_String g-encstr ads,GNAT Dynamic_HTables g-dynhta ads,The GNAT Library
23990 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-dynamic-tables-g-dyntab-ads}@anchor{356}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id71}@anchor{357}
23991 @section @code{GNAT.Dynamic_Tables} (@code{g-dyntab.ads})
23994 @geindex GNAT.Dynamic_Tables (g-dyntab.ads)
23996 @geindex Table implementation
23999 @geindex extendable
24001 A generic package providing a single dimension array abstraction where the
24002 length of the array can be dynamically modified.
24004 This package provides a facility similar to that of @code{GNAT.Table},
24005 except that this package declares a type that can be used to define
24006 dynamic instances of the table, while an instantiation of
24007 @code{GNAT.Table} creates a single instance of the table type.
24009 @node GNAT Encode_String g-encstr ads,GNAT Encode_UTF8_String g-enutst ads,GNAT Dynamic_Tables g-dyntab ads,The GNAT Library
24010 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id72}@anchor{358}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-encode-string-g-encstr-ads}@anchor{359}
24011 @section @code{GNAT.Encode_String} (@code{g-encstr.ads})
24014 @geindex GNAT.Encode_String (g-encstr.ads)
24016 @geindex Encoding strings
24018 @geindex String encoding
24020 @geindex Wide character encoding
24026 A generic package providing routines for encoding wide character and wide
24027 wide character strings as sequences of 8-bit characters using a specified
24028 encoding method. Useful in conjunction with Unicode character coding.
24029 Note there is a preinstantiation for UTF-8. See next entry.
24031 @node GNAT Encode_UTF8_String g-enutst ads,GNAT Exception_Actions g-excact ads,GNAT Encode_String g-encstr ads,The GNAT Library
24032 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-encode-utf8-string-g-enutst-ads}@anchor{35a}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id73}@anchor{35b}
24033 @section @code{GNAT.Encode_UTF8_String} (@code{g-enutst.ads})
24036 @geindex GNAT.Encode_UTF8_String (g-enutst.ads)
24038 @geindex Encoding strings
24040 @geindex Encoding UTF-8 strings
24042 @geindex UTF-8 string encoding
24044 @geindex Wide character encoding
24050 A preinstantiation of GNAT.Encode_Strings for UTF-8 encoding.
24052 @node GNAT Exception_Actions g-excact ads,GNAT Exception_Traces g-exctra ads,GNAT Encode_UTF8_String g-enutst ads,The GNAT Library
24053 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-exception-actions-g-excact-ads}@anchor{35c}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id74}@anchor{35d}
24054 @section @code{GNAT.Exception_Actions} (@code{g-excact.ads})
24057 @geindex GNAT.Exception_Actions (g-excact.ads)
24059 @geindex Exception actions
24061 Provides callbacks when an exception is raised. Callbacks can be registered
24062 for specific exceptions, or when any exception is raised. This
24063 can be used for instance to force a core dump to ease debugging.
24065 @node GNAT Exception_Traces g-exctra ads,GNAT Exceptions g-except ads,GNAT Exception_Actions g-excact ads,The GNAT Library
24066 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-exception-traces-g-exctra-ads}@anchor{35e}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id75}@anchor{35f}
24067 @section @code{GNAT.Exception_Traces} (@code{g-exctra.ads})
24070 @geindex GNAT.Exception_Traces (g-exctra.ads)
24072 @geindex Exception traces
24076 Provides an interface allowing to control automatic output upon exception
24079 @node GNAT Exceptions g-except ads,GNAT Expect g-expect ads,GNAT Exception_Traces g-exctra ads,The GNAT Library
24080 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id76}@anchor{360}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-exceptions-g-except-ads}@anchor{361}
24081 @section @code{GNAT.Exceptions} (@code{g-except.ads})
24084 @geindex GNAT.Exceptions (g-except.ads)
24086 @geindex Exceptions
24089 @geindex Pure packages
24090 @geindex exceptions
24092 Normally it is not possible to raise an exception with
24093 a message from a subprogram in a pure package, since the
24094 necessary types and subprograms are in @code{Ada.Exceptions}
24095 which is not a pure unit. @code{GNAT.Exceptions} provides a
24096 facility for getting around this limitation for a few
24097 predefined exceptions, and for example allow raising
24098 @code{Constraint_Error} with a message from a pure subprogram.
24100 @node GNAT Expect g-expect ads,GNAT Expect TTY g-exptty ads,GNAT Exceptions g-except ads,The GNAT Library
24101 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-expect-g-expect-ads}@anchor{362}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id77}@anchor{363}
24102 @section @code{GNAT.Expect} (@code{g-expect.ads})
24105 @geindex GNAT.Expect (g-expect.ads)
24107 Provides a set of subprograms similar to what is available
24108 with the standard Tcl Expect tool.
24109 It allows you to easily spawn and communicate with an external process.
24110 You can send commands or inputs to the process, and compare the output
24111 with some expected regular expression. Currently @code{GNAT.Expect}
24112 is implemented on all native GNAT ports.
24113 It is not implemented for cross ports, and in particular is not
24114 implemented for VxWorks or LynxOS.
24116 @node GNAT Expect TTY g-exptty ads,GNAT Float_Control g-flocon ads,GNAT Expect g-expect ads,The GNAT Library
24117 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id78}@anchor{364}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-expect-tty-g-exptty-ads}@anchor{365}
24118 @section @code{GNAT.Expect.TTY} (@code{g-exptty.ads})
24121 @geindex GNAT.Expect.TTY (g-exptty.ads)
24123 As GNAT.Expect but using pseudo-terminal.
24124 Currently @code{GNAT.Expect.TTY} is implemented on all native GNAT
24125 ports. It is not implemented for cross ports, and
24126 in particular is not implemented for VxWorks or LynxOS.
24128 @node GNAT Float_Control g-flocon ads,GNAT Formatted_String g-forstr ads,GNAT Expect TTY g-exptty ads,The GNAT Library
24129 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id79}@anchor{366}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-float-control-g-flocon-ads}@anchor{367}
24130 @section @code{GNAT.Float_Control} (@code{g-flocon.ads})
24133 @geindex GNAT.Float_Control (g-flocon.ads)
24135 @geindex Floating-Point Processor
24137 Provides an interface for resetting the floating-point processor into the
24138 mode required for correct semantic operation in Ada. Some third party
24139 library calls may cause this mode to be modified, and the Reset procedure
24140 in this package can be used to reestablish the required mode.
24142 @node GNAT Formatted_String g-forstr ads,GNAT Heap_Sort g-heasor ads,GNAT Float_Control g-flocon ads,The GNAT Library
24143 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id80}@anchor{368}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-formatted-string-g-forstr-ads}@anchor{369}
24144 @section @code{GNAT.Formatted_String} (@code{g-forstr.ads})
24147 @geindex GNAT.Formatted_String (g-forstr.ads)
24149 @geindex Formatted String
24151 Provides support for C/C++ printf() formatted strings. The format is
24152 copied from the printf() routine and should therefore gives identical
24153 output. Some generic routines are provided to be able to use types
24154 derived from Integer, Float or enumerations as values for the
24157 @node GNAT Heap_Sort g-heasor ads,GNAT Heap_Sort_A g-hesora ads,GNAT Formatted_String g-forstr ads,The GNAT Library
24158 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-heap-sort-g-heasor-ads}@anchor{36a}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id81}@anchor{36b}
24159 @section @code{GNAT.Heap_Sort} (@code{g-heasor.ads})
24162 @geindex GNAT.Heap_Sort (g-heasor.ads)
24166 Provides a general implementation of heap sort usable for sorting arbitrary
24167 data items. Exchange and comparison procedures are provided by passing
24168 access-to-procedure values. The algorithm used is a modified heap sort
24169 that performs approximately N*log(N) comparisons in the worst case.
24171 @node GNAT Heap_Sort_A g-hesora ads,GNAT Heap_Sort_G g-hesorg ads,GNAT Heap_Sort g-heasor ads,The GNAT Library
24172 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id82}@anchor{36c}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-heap-sort-a-g-hesora-ads}@anchor{36d}
24173 @section @code{GNAT.Heap_Sort_A} (@code{g-hesora.ads})
24176 @geindex GNAT.Heap_Sort_A (g-hesora.ads)
24180 Provides a general implementation of heap sort usable for sorting arbitrary
24181 data items. Move and comparison procedures are provided by passing
24182 access-to-procedure values. The algorithm used is a modified heap sort
24183 that performs approximately N*log(N) comparisons in the worst case.
24184 This differs from @code{GNAT.Heap_Sort} in having a less convenient
24185 interface, but may be slightly more efficient.
24187 @node GNAT Heap_Sort_G g-hesorg ads,GNAT HTable g-htable ads,GNAT Heap_Sort_A g-hesora ads,The GNAT Library
24188 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id83}@anchor{36e}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-heap-sort-g-g-hesorg-ads}@anchor{36f}
24189 @section @code{GNAT.Heap_Sort_G} (@code{g-hesorg.ads})
24192 @geindex GNAT.Heap_Sort_G (g-hesorg.ads)
24196 Similar to @code{Heap_Sort_A} except that the move and sorting procedures
24197 are provided as generic parameters, this improves efficiency, especially
24198 if the procedures can be inlined, at the expense of duplicating code for
24199 multiple instantiations.
24201 @node GNAT HTable g-htable ads,GNAT IO g-io ads,GNAT Heap_Sort_G g-hesorg ads,The GNAT Library
24202 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id84}@anchor{370}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-htable-g-htable-ads}@anchor{371}
24203 @section @code{GNAT.HTable} (@code{g-htable.ads})
24206 @geindex GNAT.HTable (g-htable.ads)
24208 @geindex Hash tables
24210 A generic implementation of hash tables that can be used to hash arbitrary
24211 data. Provides two approaches, one a simple static approach, and the other
24212 allowing arbitrary dynamic hash tables.
24214 @node GNAT IO g-io ads,GNAT IO_Aux g-io_aux ads,GNAT HTable g-htable ads,The GNAT Library
24215 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id85}@anchor{372}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-io-g-io-ads}@anchor{373}
24216 @section @code{GNAT.IO} (@code{g-io.ads})
24219 @geindex GNAT.IO (g-io.ads)
24221 @geindex Simple I/O
24223 @geindex Input/Output facilities
24225 A simple preelaborable input-output package that provides a subset of
24226 simple Text_IO functions for reading characters and strings from
24227 Standard_Input, and writing characters, strings and integers to either
24228 Standard_Output or Standard_Error.
24230 @node GNAT IO_Aux g-io_aux ads,GNAT Lock_Files g-locfil ads,GNAT IO g-io ads,The GNAT Library
24231 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-io-aux-g-io-aux-ads}@anchor{374}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id86}@anchor{375}
24232 @section @code{GNAT.IO_Aux} (@code{g-io_aux.ads})
24235 @geindex GNAT.IO_Aux (g-io_aux.ads)
24239 @geindex Input/Output facilities
24241 Provides some auxiliary functions for use with Text_IO, including a test
24242 for whether a file exists, and functions for reading a line of text.
24244 @node GNAT Lock_Files g-locfil ads,GNAT MBBS_Discrete_Random g-mbdira ads,GNAT IO_Aux g-io_aux ads,The GNAT Library
24245 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id87}@anchor{376}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-lock-files-g-locfil-ads}@anchor{377}
24246 @section @code{GNAT.Lock_Files} (@code{g-locfil.ads})
24249 @geindex GNAT.Lock_Files (g-locfil.ads)
24251 @geindex File locking
24253 @geindex Locking using files
24255 Provides a general interface for using files as locks. Can be used for
24256 providing program level synchronization.
24258 @node GNAT MBBS_Discrete_Random g-mbdira ads,GNAT MBBS_Float_Random g-mbflra ads,GNAT Lock_Files g-locfil ads,The GNAT Library
24259 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id88}@anchor{378}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-mbbs-discrete-random-g-mbdira-ads}@anchor{379}
24260 @section @code{GNAT.MBBS_Discrete_Random} (@code{g-mbdira.ads})
24263 @geindex GNAT.MBBS_Discrete_Random (g-mbdira.ads)
24265 @geindex Random number generation
24267 The original implementation of @code{Ada.Numerics.Discrete_Random}. Uses
24268 a modified version of the Blum-Blum-Shub generator.
24270 @node GNAT MBBS_Float_Random g-mbflra ads,GNAT MD5 g-md5 ads,GNAT MBBS_Discrete_Random g-mbdira ads,The GNAT Library
24271 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id89}@anchor{37a}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-mbbs-float-random-g-mbflra-ads}@anchor{37b}
24272 @section @code{GNAT.MBBS_Float_Random} (@code{g-mbflra.ads})
24275 @geindex GNAT.MBBS_Float_Random (g-mbflra.ads)
24277 @geindex Random number generation
24279 The original implementation of @code{Ada.Numerics.Float_Random}. Uses
24280 a modified version of the Blum-Blum-Shub generator.
24282 @node GNAT MD5 g-md5 ads,GNAT Memory_Dump g-memdum ads,GNAT MBBS_Float_Random g-mbflra ads,The GNAT Library
24283 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id90}@anchor{37c}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-md5-g-md5-ads}@anchor{37d}
24284 @section @code{GNAT.MD5} (@code{g-md5.ads})
24287 @geindex GNAT.MD5 (g-md5.ads)
24289 @geindex Message Digest MD5
24291 Implements the MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm as described in RFC 1321, and
24292 the HMAC-MD5 message authentication function as described in RFC 2104 and
24295 @node GNAT Memory_Dump g-memdum ads,GNAT Most_Recent_Exception g-moreex ads,GNAT MD5 g-md5 ads,The GNAT Library
24296 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id91}@anchor{37e}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-memory-dump-g-memdum-ads}@anchor{37f}
24297 @section @code{GNAT.Memory_Dump} (@code{g-memdum.ads})
24300 @geindex GNAT.Memory_Dump (g-memdum.ads)
24302 @geindex Dump Memory
24304 Provides a convenient routine for dumping raw memory to either the
24305 standard output or standard error files. Uses GNAT.IO for actual
24308 @node GNAT Most_Recent_Exception g-moreex ads,GNAT OS_Lib g-os_lib ads,GNAT Memory_Dump g-memdum ads,The GNAT Library
24309 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id92}@anchor{380}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-most-recent-exception-g-moreex-ads}@anchor{381}
24310 @section @code{GNAT.Most_Recent_Exception} (@code{g-moreex.ads})
24313 @geindex GNAT.Most_Recent_Exception (g-moreex.ads)
24316 @geindex obtaining most recent
24318 Provides access to the most recently raised exception. Can be used for
24319 various logging purposes, including duplicating functionality of some
24320 Ada 83 implementation dependent extensions.
24322 @node GNAT OS_Lib g-os_lib ads,GNAT Perfect_Hash_Generators g-pehage ads,GNAT Most_Recent_Exception g-moreex ads,The GNAT Library
24323 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-os-lib-g-os-lib-ads}@anchor{382}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id93}@anchor{383}
24324 @section @code{GNAT.OS_Lib} (@code{g-os_lib.ads})
24327 @geindex GNAT.OS_Lib (g-os_lib.ads)
24329 @geindex Operating System interface
24331 @geindex Spawn capability
24333 Provides a range of target independent operating system interface functions,
24334 including time/date management, file operations, subprocess management,
24335 including a portable spawn procedure, and access to environment variables
24336 and error return codes.
24338 @node GNAT Perfect_Hash_Generators g-pehage ads,GNAT Random_Numbers g-rannum ads,GNAT OS_Lib g-os_lib ads,The GNAT Library
24339 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-perfect-hash-generators-g-pehage-ads}@anchor{384}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id94}@anchor{385}
24340 @section @code{GNAT.Perfect_Hash_Generators} (@code{g-pehage.ads})
24343 @geindex GNAT.Perfect_Hash_Generators (g-pehage.ads)
24345 @geindex Hash functions
24347 Provides a generator of static minimal perfect hash functions. No
24348 collisions occur and each item can be retrieved from the table in one
24349 probe (perfect property). The hash table size corresponds to the exact
24350 size of the key set and no larger (minimal property). The key set has to
24351 be know in advance (static property). The hash functions are also order
24352 preserving. If w2 is inserted after w1 in the generator, their
24353 hashcode are in the same order. These hashing functions are very
24354 convenient for use with realtime applications.
24356 @node GNAT Random_Numbers g-rannum ads,GNAT Regexp g-regexp ads,GNAT Perfect_Hash_Generators g-pehage ads,The GNAT Library
24357 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-random-numbers-g-rannum-ads}@anchor{386}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id95}@anchor{387}
24358 @section @code{GNAT.Random_Numbers} (@code{g-rannum.ads})
24361 @geindex GNAT.Random_Numbers (g-rannum.ads)
24363 @geindex Random number generation
24365 Provides random number capabilities which extend those available in the
24366 standard Ada library and are more convenient to use.
24368 @node GNAT Regexp g-regexp ads,GNAT Registry g-regist ads,GNAT Random_Numbers g-rannum ads,The GNAT Library
24369 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-regexp-g-regexp-ads}@anchor{251}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id96}@anchor{388}
24370 @section @code{GNAT.Regexp} (@code{g-regexp.ads})
24373 @geindex GNAT.Regexp (g-regexp.ads)
24375 @geindex Regular expressions
24377 @geindex Pattern matching
24379 A simple implementation of regular expressions, using a subset of regular
24380 expression syntax copied from familiar Unix style utilities. This is the
24381 simplest of the three pattern matching packages provided, and is particularly
24382 suitable for 'file globbing' applications.
24384 @node GNAT Registry g-regist ads,GNAT Regpat g-regpat ads,GNAT Regexp g-regexp ads,The GNAT Library
24385 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-registry-g-regist-ads}@anchor{389}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id97}@anchor{38a}
24386 @section @code{GNAT.Registry} (@code{g-regist.ads})
24389 @geindex GNAT.Registry (g-regist.ads)
24391 @geindex Windows Registry
24393 This is a high level binding to the Windows registry. It is possible to
24394 do simple things like reading a key value, creating a new key. For full
24395 registry API, but at a lower level of abstraction, refer to the Win32.Winreg
24396 package provided with the Win32Ada binding
24398 @node GNAT Regpat g-regpat ads,GNAT Rewrite_Data g-rewdat ads,GNAT Registry g-regist ads,The GNAT Library
24399 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id98}@anchor{38b}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-regpat-g-regpat-ads}@anchor{38c}
24400 @section @code{GNAT.Regpat} (@code{g-regpat.ads})
24403 @geindex GNAT.Regpat (g-regpat.ads)
24405 @geindex Regular expressions
24407 @geindex Pattern matching
24409 A complete implementation of Unix-style regular expression matching, copied
24410 from the original V7 style regular expression library written in C by
24411 Henry Spencer (and binary compatible with this C library).
24413 @node GNAT Rewrite_Data g-rewdat ads,GNAT Secondary_Stack_Info g-sestin ads,GNAT Regpat g-regpat ads,The GNAT Library
24414 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id99}@anchor{38d}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-rewrite-data-g-rewdat-ads}@anchor{38e}
24415 @section @code{GNAT.Rewrite_Data} (@code{g-rewdat.ads})
24418 @geindex GNAT.Rewrite_Data (g-rewdat.ads)
24420 @geindex Rewrite data
24422 A unit to rewrite on-the-fly string occurrences in a stream of
24423 data. The implementation has a very minimal memory footprint as the
24424 full content to be processed is not loaded into memory all at once. This makes
24425 this interface usable for large files or socket streams.
24427 @node GNAT Secondary_Stack_Info g-sestin ads,GNAT Semaphores g-semaph ads,GNAT Rewrite_Data g-rewdat ads,The GNAT Library
24428 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id100}@anchor{38f}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-secondary-stack-info-g-sestin-ads}@anchor{390}
24429 @section @code{GNAT.Secondary_Stack_Info} (@code{g-sestin.ads})
24432 @geindex GNAT.Secondary_Stack_Info (g-sestin.ads)
24434 @geindex Secondary Stack Info
24436 Provide the capability to query the high water mark of the current task's
24439 @node GNAT Semaphores g-semaph ads,GNAT Serial_Communications g-sercom ads,GNAT Secondary_Stack_Info g-sestin ads,The GNAT Library
24440 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id101}@anchor{391}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-semaphores-g-semaph-ads}@anchor{392}
24441 @section @code{GNAT.Semaphores} (@code{g-semaph.ads})
24444 @geindex GNAT.Semaphores (g-semaph.ads)
24446 @geindex Semaphores
24448 Provides classic counting and binary semaphores using protected types.
24450 @node GNAT Serial_Communications g-sercom ads,GNAT SHA1 g-sha1 ads,GNAT Semaphores g-semaph ads,The GNAT Library
24451 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-serial-communications-g-sercom-ads}@anchor{393}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id102}@anchor{394}
24452 @section @code{GNAT.Serial_Communications} (@code{g-sercom.ads})
24455 @geindex GNAT.Serial_Communications (g-sercom.ads)
24457 @geindex Serial_Communications
24459 Provides a simple interface to send and receive data over a serial
24460 port. This is only supported on GNU/Linux and Windows.
24462 @node GNAT SHA1 g-sha1 ads,GNAT SHA224 g-sha224 ads,GNAT Serial_Communications g-sercom ads,The GNAT Library
24463 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-sha1-g-sha1-ads}@anchor{395}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id103}@anchor{396}
24464 @section @code{GNAT.SHA1} (@code{g-sha1.ads})
24467 @geindex GNAT.SHA1 (g-sha1.ads)
24469 @geindex Secure Hash Algorithm SHA-1
24471 Implements the SHA-1 Secure Hash Algorithm as described in FIPS PUB 180-3
24472 and RFC 3174, and the HMAC-SHA1 message authentication function as described
24473 in RFC 2104 and FIPS PUB 198.
24475 @node GNAT SHA224 g-sha224 ads,GNAT SHA256 g-sha256 ads,GNAT SHA1 g-sha1 ads,The GNAT Library
24476 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-sha224-g-sha224-ads}@anchor{397}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id104}@anchor{398}
24477 @section @code{GNAT.SHA224} (@code{g-sha224.ads})
24480 @geindex GNAT.SHA224 (g-sha224.ads)
24482 @geindex Secure Hash Algorithm SHA-224
24484 Implements the SHA-224 Secure Hash Algorithm as described in FIPS PUB 180-3,
24485 and the HMAC-SHA224 message authentication function as described
24486 in RFC 2104 and FIPS PUB 198.
24488 @node GNAT SHA256 g-sha256 ads,GNAT SHA384 g-sha384 ads,GNAT SHA224 g-sha224 ads,The GNAT Library
24489 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id105}@anchor{399}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-sha256-g-sha256-ads}@anchor{39a}
24490 @section @code{GNAT.SHA256} (@code{g-sha256.ads})
24493 @geindex GNAT.SHA256 (g-sha256.ads)
24495 @geindex Secure Hash Algorithm SHA-256
24497 Implements the SHA-256 Secure Hash Algorithm as described in FIPS PUB 180-3,
24498 and the HMAC-SHA256 message authentication function as described
24499 in RFC 2104 and FIPS PUB 198.
24501 @node GNAT SHA384 g-sha384 ads,GNAT SHA512 g-sha512 ads,GNAT SHA256 g-sha256 ads,The GNAT Library
24502 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-sha384-g-sha384-ads}@anchor{39b}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id106}@anchor{39c}
24503 @section @code{GNAT.SHA384} (@code{g-sha384.ads})
24506 @geindex GNAT.SHA384 (g-sha384.ads)
24508 @geindex Secure Hash Algorithm SHA-384
24510 Implements the SHA-384 Secure Hash Algorithm as described in FIPS PUB 180-3,
24511 and the HMAC-SHA384 message authentication function as described
24512 in RFC 2104 and FIPS PUB 198.
24514 @node GNAT SHA512 g-sha512 ads,GNAT Signals g-signal ads,GNAT SHA384 g-sha384 ads,The GNAT Library
24515 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-sha512-g-sha512-ads}@anchor{39d}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id107}@anchor{39e}
24516 @section @code{GNAT.SHA512} (@code{g-sha512.ads})
24519 @geindex GNAT.SHA512 (g-sha512.ads)
24521 @geindex Secure Hash Algorithm SHA-512
24523 Implements the SHA-512 Secure Hash Algorithm as described in FIPS PUB 180-3,
24524 and the HMAC-SHA512 message authentication function as described
24525 in RFC 2104 and FIPS PUB 198.
24527 @node GNAT Signals g-signal ads,GNAT Sockets g-socket ads,GNAT SHA512 g-sha512 ads,The GNAT Library
24528 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-signals-g-signal-ads}@anchor{39f}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id108}@anchor{3a0}
24529 @section @code{GNAT.Signals} (@code{g-signal.ads})
24532 @geindex GNAT.Signals (g-signal.ads)
24536 Provides the ability to manipulate the blocked status of signals on supported
24539 @node GNAT Sockets g-socket ads,GNAT Source_Info g-souinf ads,GNAT Signals g-signal ads,The GNAT Library
24540 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id109}@anchor{3a1}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-sockets-g-socket-ads}@anchor{3a2}
24541 @section @code{GNAT.Sockets} (@code{g-socket.ads})
24544 @geindex GNAT.Sockets (g-socket.ads)
24548 A high level and portable interface to develop sockets based applications.
24549 This package is based on the sockets thin binding found in
24550 @code{GNAT.Sockets.Thin}. Currently @code{GNAT.Sockets} is implemented
24551 on all native GNAT ports and on VxWorks cross prots. It is not implemented for
24552 the LynxOS cross port.
24554 @node GNAT Source_Info g-souinf ads,GNAT Spelling_Checker g-speche ads,GNAT Sockets g-socket ads,The GNAT Library
24555 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-source-info-g-souinf-ads}@anchor{3a3}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id110}@anchor{3a4}
24556 @section @code{GNAT.Source_Info} (@code{g-souinf.ads})
24559 @geindex GNAT.Source_Info (g-souinf.ads)
24561 @geindex Source Information
24563 Provides subprograms that give access to source code information known at
24564 compile time, such as the current file name and line number. Also provides
24565 subprograms yielding the date and time of the current compilation (like the
24566 C macros @code{__DATE__} and @code{__TIME__})
24568 @node GNAT Spelling_Checker g-speche ads,GNAT Spelling_Checker_Generic g-spchge ads,GNAT Source_Info g-souinf ads,The GNAT Library
24569 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-spelling-checker-g-speche-ads}@anchor{3a5}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id111}@anchor{3a6}
24570 @section @code{GNAT.Spelling_Checker} (@code{g-speche.ads})
24573 @geindex GNAT.Spelling_Checker (g-speche.ads)
24575 @geindex Spell checking
24577 Provides a function for determining whether one string is a plausible
24578 near misspelling of another string.
24580 @node GNAT Spelling_Checker_Generic g-spchge ads,GNAT Spitbol Patterns g-spipat ads,GNAT Spelling_Checker g-speche ads,The GNAT Library
24581 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id112}@anchor{3a7}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-spelling-checker-generic-g-spchge-ads}@anchor{3a8}
24582 @section @code{GNAT.Spelling_Checker_Generic} (@code{g-spchge.ads})
24585 @geindex GNAT.Spelling_Checker_Generic (g-spchge.ads)
24587 @geindex Spell checking
24589 Provides a generic function that can be instantiated with a string type for
24590 determining whether one string is a plausible near misspelling of another
24593 @node GNAT Spitbol Patterns g-spipat ads,GNAT Spitbol g-spitbo ads,GNAT Spelling_Checker_Generic g-spchge ads,The GNAT Library
24594 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id113}@anchor{3a9}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-spitbol-patterns-g-spipat-ads}@anchor{3aa}
24595 @section @code{GNAT.Spitbol.Patterns} (@code{g-spipat.ads})
24598 @geindex GNAT.Spitbol.Patterns (g-spipat.ads)
24600 @geindex SPITBOL pattern matching
24602 @geindex Pattern matching
24604 A complete implementation of SNOBOL4 style pattern matching. This is the
24605 most elaborate of the pattern matching packages provided. It fully duplicates
24606 the SNOBOL4 dynamic pattern construction and matching capabilities, using the
24607 efficient algorithm developed by Robert Dewar for the SPITBOL system.
24609 @node GNAT Spitbol g-spitbo ads,GNAT Spitbol Table_Boolean g-sptabo ads,GNAT Spitbol Patterns g-spipat ads,The GNAT Library
24610 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-spitbol-g-spitbo-ads}@anchor{3ab}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id114}@anchor{3ac}
24611 @section @code{GNAT.Spitbol} (@code{g-spitbo.ads})
24614 @geindex GNAT.Spitbol (g-spitbo.ads)
24616 @geindex SPITBOL interface
24618 The top level package of the collection of SPITBOL-style functionality, this
24619 package provides basic SNOBOL4 string manipulation functions, such as
24620 Pad, Reverse, Trim, Substr capability, as well as a generic table function
24621 useful for constructing arbitrary mappings from strings in the style of
24622 the SNOBOL4 TABLE function.
24624 @node GNAT Spitbol Table_Boolean g-sptabo ads,GNAT Spitbol Table_Integer g-sptain ads,GNAT Spitbol g-spitbo ads,The GNAT Library
24625 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-spitbol-table-boolean-g-sptabo-ads}@anchor{3ad}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id115}@anchor{3ae}
24626 @section @code{GNAT.Spitbol.Table_Boolean} (@code{g-sptabo.ads})
24629 @geindex GNAT.Spitbol.Table_Boolean (g-sptabo.ads)
24631 @geindex Sets of strings
24633 @geindex SPITBOL Tables
24635 A library level of instantiation of @code{GNAT.Spitbol.Patterns.Table}
24636 for type @code{Standard.Boolean}, giving an implementation of sets of
24639 @node GNAT Spitbol Table_Integer g-sptain ads,GNAT Spitbol Table_VString g-sptavs ads,GNAT Spitbol Table_Boolean g-sptabo ads,The GNAT Library
24640 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-spitbol-table-integer-g-sptain-ads}@anchor{3af}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id116}@anchor{3b0}
24641 @section @code{GNAT.Spitbol.Table_Integer} (@code{g-sptain.ads})
24644 @geindex GNAT.Spitbol.Table_Integer (g-sptain.ads)
24646 @geindex Integer maps
24650 @geindex SPITBOL Tables
24652 A library level of instantiation of @code{GNAT.Spitbol.Patterns.Table}
24653 for type @code{Standard.Integer}, giving an implementation of maps
24654 from string to integer values.
24656 @node GNAT Spitbol Table_VString g-sptavs ads,GNAT SSE g-sse ads,GNAT Spitbol Table_Integer g-sptain ads,The GNAT Library
24657 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id117}@anchor{3b1}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-spitbol-table-vstring-g-sptavs-ads}@anchor{3b2}
24658 @section @code{GNAT.Spitbol.Table_VString} (@code{g-sptavs.ads})
24661 @geindex GNAT.Spitbol.Table_VString (g-sptavs.ads)
24663 @geindex String maps
24667 @geindex SPITBOL Tables
24669 A library level of instantiation of @code{GNAT.Spitbol.Patterns.Table} for
24670 a variable length string type, giving an implementation of general
24671 maps from strings to strings.
24673 @node GNAT SSE g-sse ads,GNAT SSE Vector_Types g-ssvety ads,GNAT Spitbol Table_VString g-sptavs ads,The GNAT Library
24674 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id118}@anchor{3b3}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-sse-g-sse-ads}@anchor{3b4}
24675 @section @code{GNAT.SSE} (@code{g-sse.ads})
24678 @geindex GNAT.SSE (g-sse.ads)
24680 Root of a set of units aimed at offering Ada bindings to a subset of
24681 the Intel(r) Streaming SIMD Extensions with GNAT on the x86 family of
24682 targets. It exposes vector component types together with a general
24683 introduction to the binding contents and use.
24685 @node GNAT SSE Vector_Types g-ssvety ads,GNAT String_Hash g-strhas ads,GNAT SSE g-sse ads,The GNAT Library
24686 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-sse-vector-types-g-ssvety-ads}@anchor{3b5}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id119}@anchor{3b6}
24687 @section @code{GNAT.SSE.Vector_Types} (@code{g-ssvety.ads})
24690 @geindex GNAT.SSE.Vector_Types (g-ssvety.ads)
24692 SSE vector types for use with SSE related intrinsics.
24694 @node GNAT String_Hash g-strhas ads,GNAT Strings g-string ads,GNAT SSE Vector_Types g-ssvety ads,The GNAT Library
24695 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-string-hash-g-strhas-ads}@anchor{3b7}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id120}@anchor{3b8}
24696 @section @code{GNAT.String_Hash} (@code{g-strhas.ads})
24699 @geindex GNAT.String_Hash (g-strhas.ads)
24701 @geindex Hash functions
24703 Provides a generic hash function working on arrays of scalars. Both the scalar
24704 type and the hash result type are parameters.
24706 @node GNAT Strings g-string ads,GNAT String_Split g-strspl ads,GNAT String_Hash g-strhas ads,The GNAT Library
24707 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-strings-g-string-ads}@anchor{3b9}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id121}@anchor{3ba}
24708 @section @code{GNAT.Strings} (@code{g-string.ads})
24711 @geindex GNAT.Strings (g-string.ads)
24713 Common String access types and related subprograms. Basically it
24714 defines a string access and an array of string access types.
24716 @node GNAT String_Split g-strspl ads,GNAT Table g-table ads,GNAT Strings g-string ads,The GNAT Library
24717 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-string-split-g-strspl-ads}@anchor{3bb}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id122}@anchor{3bc}
24718 @section @code{GNAT.String_Split} (@code{g-strspl.ads})
24721 @geindex GNAT.String_Split (g-strspl.ads)
24723 @geindex String splitter
24725 Useful string manipulation routines: given a set of separators, split
24726 a string wherever the separators appear, and provide direct access
24727 to the resulting slices. This package is instantiated from
24728 @code{GNAT.Array_Split}.
24730 @node GNAT Table g-table ads,GNAT Task_Lock g-tasloc ads,GNAT String_Split g-strspl ads,The GNAT Library
24731 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-table-g-table-ads}@anchor{3bd}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id123}@anchor{3be}
24732 @section @code{GNAT.Table} (@code{g-table.ads})
24735 @geindex GNAT.Table (g-table.ads)
24737 @geindex Table implementation
24740 @geindex extendable
24742 A generic package providing a single dimension array abstraction where the
24743 length of the array can be dynamically modified.
24745 This package provides a facility similar to that of @code{GNAT.Dynamic_Tables},
24746 except that this package declares a single instance of the table type,
24747 while an instantiation of @code{GNAT.Dynamic_Tables} creates a type that can be
24748 used to define dynamic instances of the table.
24750 @node GNAT Task_Lock g-tasloc ads,GNAT Time_Stamp g-timsta ads,GNAT Table g-table ads,The GNAT Library
24751 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id124}@anchor{3bf}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-task-lock-g-tasloc-ads}@anchor{3c0}
24752 @section @code{GNAT.Task_Lock} (@code{g-tasloc.ads})
24755 @geindex GNAT.Task_Lock (g-tasloc.ads)
24757 @geindex Task synchronization
24759 @geindex Task locking
24763 A very simple facility for locking and unlocking sections of code using a
24764 single global task lock. Appropriate for use in situations where contention
24765 between tasks is very rarely expected.
24767 @node GNAT Time_Stamp g-timsta ads,GNAT Threads g-thread ads,GNAT Task_Lock g-tasloc ads,The GNAT Library
24768 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id125}@anchor{3c1}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-time-stamp-g-timsta-ads}@anchor{3c2}
24769 @section @code{GNAT.Time_Stamp} (@code{g-timsta.ads})
24772 @geindex GNAT.Time_Stamp (g-timsta.ads)
24774 @geindex Time stamp
24776 @geindex Current time
24778 Provides a simple function that returns a string YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS.SS that
24779 represents the current date and time in ISO 8601 format. This is a very simple
24780 routine with minimal code and there are no dependencies on any other unit.
24782 @node GNAT Threads g-thread ads,GNAT Traceback g-traceb ads,GNAT Time_Stamp g-timsta ads,The GNAT Library
24783 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-threads-g-thread-ads}@anchor{3c3}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id126}@anchor{3c4}
24784 @section @code{GNAT.Threads} (@code{g-thread.ads})
24787 @geindex GNAT.Threads (g-thread.ads)
24789 @geindex Foreign threads
24794 Provides facilities for dealing with foreign threads which need to be known
24795 by the GNAT run-time system. Consult the documentation of this package for
24796 further details if your program has threads that are created by a non-Ada
24797 environment which then accesses Ada code.
24799 @node GNAT Traceback g-traceb ads,GNAT Traceback Symbolic g-trasym ads,GNAT Threads g-thread ads,The GNAT Library
24800 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id127}@anchor{3c5}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-traceback-g-traceb-ads}@anchor{3c6}
24801 @section @code{GNAT.Traceback} (@code{g-traceb.ads})
24804 @geindex GNAT.Traceback (g-traceb.ads)
24806 @geindex Trace back facilities
24808 Provides a facility for obtaining non-symbolic traceback information, useful
24809 in various debugging situations.
24811 @node GNAT Traceback Symbolic g-trasym ads,GNAT UTF_32 g-table ads,GNAT Traceback g-traceb ads,The GNAT Library
24812 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-traceback-symbolic-g-trasym-ads}@anchor{3c7}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id128}@anchor{3c8}
24813 @section @code{GNAT.Traceback.Symbolic} (@code{g-trasym.ads})
24816 @geindex GNAT.Traceback.Symbolic (g-trasym.ads)
24818 @geindex Trace back facilities
24820 @node GNAT UTF_32 g-table ads,GNAT Wide_Spelling_Checker g-u3spch ads,GNAT Traceback Symbolic g-trasym ads,The GNAT Library
24821 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id129}@anchor{3c9}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-utf-32-g-table-ads}@anchor{3ca}
24822 @section @code{GNAT.UTF_32} (@code{g-table.ads})
24825 @geindex GNAT.UTF_32 (g-table.ads)
24827 @geindex Wide character codes
24829 This is a package intended to be used in conjunction with the
24830 @code{Wide_Character} type in Ada 95 and the
24831 @code{Wide_Wide_Character} type in Ada 2005 (available
24832 in @code{GNAT} in Ada 2005 mode). This package contains
24833 Unicode categorization routines, as well as lexical
24834 categorization routines corresponding to the Ada 2005
24835 lexical rules for identifiers and strings, and also a
24836 lower case to upper case fold routine corresponding to
24837 the Ada 2005 rules for identifier equivalence.
24839 @node GNAT Wide_Spelling_Checker g-u3spch ads,GNAT Wide_Spelling_Checker g-wispch ads,GNAT UTF_32 g-table ads,The GNAT Library
24840 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-wide-spelling-checker-g-u3spch-ads}@anchor{3cb}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id130}@anchor{3cc}
24841 @section @code{GNAT.Wide_Spelling_Checker} (@code{g-u3spch.ads})
24844 @geindex GNAT.Wide_Spelling_Checker (g-u3spch.ads)
24846 @geindex Spell checking
24848 Provides a function for determining whether one wide wide string is a plausible
24849 near misspelling of another wide wide string, where the strings are represented
24850 using the UTF_32_String type defined in System.Wch_Cnv.
24852 @node GNAT Wide_Spelling_Checker g-wispch ads,GNAT Wide_String_Split g-wistsp ads,GNAT Wide_Spelling_Checker g-u3spch ads,The GNAT Library
24853 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-wide-spelling-checker-g-wispch-ads}@anchor{3cd}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id131}@anchor{3ce}
24854 @section @code{GNAT.Wide_Spelling_Checker} (@code{g-wispch.ads})
24857 @geindex GNAT.Wide_Spelling_Checker (g-wispch.ads)
24859 @geindex Spell checking
24861 Provides a function for determining whether one wide string is a plausible
24862 near misspelling of another wide string.
24864 @node GNAT Wide_String_Split g-wistsp ads,GNAT Wide_Wide_Spelling_Checker g-zspche ads,GNAT Wide_Spelling_Checker g-wispch ads,The GNAT Library
24865 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id132}@anchor{3cf}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-wide-string-split-g-wistsp-ads}@anchor{3d0}
24866 @section @code{GNAT.Wide_String_Split} (@code{g-wistsp.ads})
24869 @geindex GNAT.Wide_String_Split (g-wistsp.ads)
24871 @geindex Wide_String splitter
24873 Useful wide string manipulation routines: given a set of separators, split
24874 a wide string wherever the separators appear, and provide direct access
24875 to the resulting slices. This package is instantiated from
24876 @code{GNAT.Array_Split}.
24878 @node GNAT Wide_Wide_Spelling_Checker g-zspche ads,GNAT Wide_Wide_String_Split g-zistsp ads,GNAT Wide_String_Split g-wistsp ads,The GNAT Library
24879 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-wide-wide-spelling-checker-g-zspche-ads}@anchor{3d1}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id133}@anchor{3d2}
24880 @section @code{GNAT.Wide_Wide_Spelling_Checker} (@code{g-zspche.ads})
24883 @geindex GNAT.Wide_Wide_Spelling_Checker (g-zspche.ads)
24885 @geindex Spell checking
24887 Provides a function for determining whether one wide wide string is a plausible
24888 near misspelling of another wide wide string.
24890 @node GNAT Wide_Wide_String_Split g-zistsp ads,Interfaces C Extensions i-cexten ads,GNAT Wide_Wide_Spelling_Checker g-zspche ads,The GNAT Library
24891 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library gnat-wide-wide-string-split-g-zistsp-ads}@anchor{3d3}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id134}@anchor{3d4}
24892 @section @code{GNAT.Wide_Wide_String_Split} (@code{g-zistsp.ads})
24895 @geindex GNAT.Wide_Wide_String_Split (g-zistsp.ads)
24897 @geindex Wide_Wide_String splitter
24899 Useful wide wide string manipulation routines: given a set of separators, split
24900 a wide wide string wherever the separators appear, and provide direct access
24901 to the resulting slices. This package is instantiated from
24902 @code{GNAT.Array_Split}.
24904 @node Interfaces C Extensions i-cexten ads,Interfaces C Streams i-cstrea ads,GNAT Wide_Wide_String_Split g-zistsp ads,The GNAT Library
24905 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library interfaces-c-extensions-i-cexten-ads}@anchor{3d5}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id135}@anchor{3d6}
24906 @section @code{Interfaces.C.Extensions} (@code{i-cexten.ads})
24909 @geindex Interfaces.C.Extensions (i-cexten.ads)
24911 This package contains additional C-related definitions, intended
24912 for use with either manually or automatically generated bindings
24915 @node Interfaces C Streams i-cstrea ads,Interfaces Packed_Decimal i-pacdec ads,Interfaces C Extensions i-cexten ads,The GNAT Library
24916 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library interfaces-c-streams-i-cstrea-ads}@anchor{3d7}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id136}@anchor{3d8}
24917 @section @code{Interfaces.C.Streams} (@code{i-cstrea.ads})
24920 @geindex Interfaces.C.Streams (i-cstrea.ads)
24923 @geindex interfacing
24925 This package is a binding for the most commonly used operations
24928 @node Interfaces Packed_Decimal i-pacdec ads,Interfaces VxWorks i-vxwork ads,Interfaces C Streams i-cstrea ads,The GNAT Library
24929 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library interfaces-packed-decimal-i-pacdec-ads}@anchor{3d9}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id137}@anchor{3da}
24930 @section @code{Interfaces.Packed_Decimal} (@code{i-pacdec.ads})
24933 @geindex Interfaces.Packed_Decimal (i-pacdec.ads)
24935 @geindex IBM Packed Format
24937 @geindex Packed Decimal
24939 This package provides a set of routines for conversions to and
24940 from a packed decimal format compatible with that used on IBM
24943 @node Interfaces VxWorks i-vxwork ads,Interfaces VxWorks Int_Connection i-vxinco ads,Interfaces Packed_Decimal i-pacdec ads,The GNAT Library
24944 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id138}@anchor{3db}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library interfaces-vxworks-i-vxwork-ads}@anchor{3dc}
24945 @section @code{Interfaces.VxWorks} (@code{i-vxwork.ads})
24948 @geindex Interfaces.VxWorks (i-vxwork.ads)
24950 @geindex Interfacing to VxWorks
24953 @geindex interfacing
24955 This package provides a limited binding to the VxWorks API.
24956 In particular, it interfaces with the
24957 VxWorks hardware interrupt facilities.
24959 @node Interfaces VxWorks Int_Connection i-vxinco ads,Interfaces VxWorks IO i-vxwoio ads,Interfaces VxWorks i-vxwork ads,The GNAT Library
24960 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library interfaces-vxworks-int-connection-i-vxinco-ads}@anchor{3dd}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id139}@anchor{3de}
24961 @section @code{Interfaces.VxWorks.Int_Connection} (@code{i-vxinco.ads})
24964 @geindex Interfaces.VxWorks.Int_Connection (i-vxinco.ads)
24966 @geindex Interfacing to VxWorks
24969 @geindex interfacing
24971 This package provides a way for users to replace the use of
24972 intConnect() with a custom routine for installing interrupt
24975 @node Interfaces VxWorks IO i-vxwoio ads,System Address_Image s-addima ads,Interfaces VxWorks Int_Connection i-vxinco ads,The GNAT Library
24976 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library interfaces-vxworks-io-i-vxwoio-ads}@anchor{3df}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id140}@anchor{3e0}
24977 @section @code{Interfaces.VxWorks.IO} (@code{i-vxwoio.ads})
24980 @geindex Interfaces.VxWorks.IO (i-vxwoio.ads)
24982 @geindex Interfacing to VxWorks' I/O
24985 @geindex I/O interfacing
24988 @geindex Get_Immediate
24990 @geindex Get_Immediate
24993 This package provides a binding to the ioctl (IO/Control)
24994 function of VxWorks, defining a set of option values and
24995 function codes. A particular use of this package is
24996 to enable the use of Get_Immediate under VxWorks.
24998 @node System Address_Image s-addima ads,System Assertions s-assert ads,Interfaces VxWorks IO i-vxwoio ads,The GNAT Library
24999 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id141}@anchor{3e1}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library system-address-image-s-addima-ads}@anchor{3e2}
25000 @section @code{System.Address_Image} (@code{s-addima.ads})
25003 @geindex System.Address_Image (s-addima.ads)
25005 @geindex Address image
25008 @geindex of an address
25010 This function provides a useful debugging
25011 function that gives an (implementation dependent)
25012 string which identifies an address.
25014 @node System Assertions s-assert ads,System Atomic_Counters s-atocou ads,System Address_Image s-addima ads,The GNAT Library
25015 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library system-assertions-s-assert-ads}@anchor{3e3}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id142}@anchor{3e4}
25016 @section @code{System.Assertions} (@code{s-assert.ads})
25019 @geindex System.Assertions (s-assert.ads)
25021 @geindex Assertions
25023 @geindex Assert_Failure
25026 This package provides the declaration of the exception raised
25027 by an run-time assertion failure, as well as the routine that
25028 is used internally to raise this assertion.
25030 @node System Atomic_Counters s-atocou ads,System Memory s-memory ads,System Assertions s-assert ads,The GNAT Library
25031 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id143}@anchor{3e5}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library system-atomic-counters-s-atocou-ads}@anchor{3e6}
25032 @section @code{System.Atomic_Counters} (@code{s-atocou.ads})
25035 @geindex System.Atomic_Counters (s-atocou.ads)
25037 This package provides the declaration of an atomic counter type,
25038 together with efficient routines (using hardware
25039 synchronization primitives) for incrementing, decrementing,
25040 and testing of these counters. This package is implemented
25041 on most targets, including all Alpha, ia64, PowerPC, SPARC V9,
25042 x86, and x86_64 platforms.
25044 @node System Memory s-memory ads,System Multiprocessors s-multip ads,System Atomic_Counters s-atocou ads,The GNAT Library
25045 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library system-memory-s-memory-ads}@anchor{3e7}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id144}@anchor{3e8}
25046 @section @code{System.Memory} (@code{s-memory.ads})
25049 @geindex System.Memory (s-memory.ads)
25051 @geindex Memory allocation
25053 This package provides the interface to the low level routines used
25054 by the generated code for allocation and freeing storage for the
25055 default storage pool (analogous to the C routines malloc and free.
25056 It also provides a reallocation interface analogous to the C routine
25057 realloc. The body of this unit may be modified to provide alternative
25058 allocation mechanisms for the default pool, and in addition, direct
25059 calls to this unit may be made for low level allocation uses (for
25060 example see the body of @code{GNAT.Tables}).
25062 @node System Multiprocessors s-multip ads,System Multiprocessors Dispatching_Domains s-mudido ads,System Memory s-memory ads,The GNAT Library
25063 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id145}@anchor{3e9}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library system-multiprocessors-s-multip-ads}@anchor{3ea}
25064 @section @code{System.Multiprocessors} (@code{s-multip.ads})
25067 @geindex System.Multiprocessors (s-multip.ads)
25069 @geindex Multiprocessor interface
25071 This is an Ada 2012 unit defined in the Ada 2012 Reference Manual, but
25072 in GNAT we also make it available in Ada 95 and Ada 2005 (where it is
25073 technically an implementation-defined addition).
25075 @node System Multiprocessors Dispatching_Domains s-mudido ads,System Partition_Interface s-parint ads,System Multiprocessors s-multip ads,The GNAT Library
25076 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library system-multiprocessors-dispatching-domains-s-mudido-ads}@anchor{3eb}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id146}@anchor{3ec}
25077 @section @code{System.Multiprocessors.Dispatching_Domains} (@code{s-mudido.ads})
25080 @geindex System.Multiprocessors.Dispatching_Domains (s-mudido.ads)
25082 @geindex Multiprocessor interface
25084 This is an Ada 2012 unit defined in the Ada 2012 Reference Manual, but
25085 in GNAT we also make it available in Ada 95 and Ada 2005 (where it is
25086 technically an implementation-defined addition).
25088 @node System Partition_Interface s-parint ads,System Pool_Global s-pooglo ads,System Multiprocessors Dispatching_Domains s-mudido ads,The GNAT Library
25089 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id147}@anchor{3ed}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library system-partition-interface-s-parint-ads}@anchor{3ee}
25090 @section @code{System.Partition_Interface} (@code{s-parint.ads})
25093 @geindex System.Partition_Interface (s-parint.ads)
25095 @geindex Partition interfacing functions
25097 This package provides facilities for partition interfacing. It
25098 is used primarily in a distribution context when using Annex E
25101 @node System Pool_Global s-pooglo ads,System Pool_Local s-pooloc ads,System Partition_Interface s-parint ads,The GNAT Library
25102 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id148}@anchor{3ef}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library system-pool-global-s-pooglo-ads}@anchor{3f0}
25103 @section @code{System.Pool_Global} (@code{s-pooglo.ads})
25106 @geindex System.Pool_Global (s-pooglo.ads)
25108 @geindex Storage pool
25111 @geindex Global storage pool
25113 This package provides a storage pool that is equivalent to the default
25114 storage pool used for access types for which no pool is specifically
25115 declared. It uses malloc/free to allocate/free and does not attempt to
25116 do any automatic reclamation.
25118 @node System Pool_Local s-pooloc ads,System Restrictions s-restri ads,System Pool_Global s-pooglo ads,The GNAT Library
25119 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library system-pool-local-s-pooloc-ads}@anchor{3f1}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id149}@anchor{3f2}
25120 @section @code{System.Pool_Local} (@code{s-pooloc.ads})
25123 @geindex System.Pool_Local (s-pooloc.ads)
25125 @geindex Storage pool
25128 @geindex Local storage pool
25130 This package provides a storage pool that is intended for use with locally
25131 defined access types. It uses malloc/free for allocate/free, and maintains
25132 a list of allocated blocks, so that all storage allocated for the pool can
25133 be freed automatically when the pool is finalized.
25135 @node System Restrictions s-restri ads,System Rident s-rident ads,System Pool_Local s-pooloc ads,The GNAT Library
25136 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id150}@anchor{3f3}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library system-restrictions-s-restri-ads}@anchor{3f4}
25137 @section @code{System.Restrictions} (@code{s-restri.ads})
25140 @geindex System.Restrictions (s-restri.ads)
25142 @geindex Run-time restrictions access
25144 This package provides facilities for accessing at run time
25145 the status of restrictions specified at compile time for
25146 the partition. Information is available both with regard
25147 to actual restrictions specified, and with regard to
25148 compiler determined information on which restrictions
25149 are violated by one or more packages in the partition.
25151 @node System Rident s-rident ads,System Strings Stream_Ops s-ststop ads,System Restrictions s-restri ads,The GNAT Library
25152 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library system-rident-s-rident-ads}@anchor{3f5}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id151}@anchor{3f6}
25153 @section @code{System.Rident} (@code{s-rident.ads})
25156 @geindex System.Rident (s-rident.ads)
25158 @geindex Restrictions definitions
25160 This package provides definitions of the restrictions
25161 identifiers supported by GNAT, and also the format of
25162 the restrictions provided in package System.Restrictions.
25163 It is not normally necessary to @code{with} this generic package
25164 since the necessary instantiation is included in
25165 package System.Restrictions.
25167 @node System Strings Stream_Ops s-ststop ads,System Unsigned_Types s-unstyp ads,System Rident s-rident ads,The GNAT Library
25168 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id152}@anchor{3f7}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library system-strings-stream-ops-s-ststop-ads}@anchor{3f8}
25169 @section @code{System.Strings.Stream_Ops} (@code{s-ststop.ads})
25172 @geindex System.Strings.Stream_Ops (s-ststop.ads)
25174 @geindex Stream operations
25176 @geindex String stream operations
25178 This package provides a set of stream subprograms for standard string types.
25179 It is intended primarily to support implicit use of such subprograms when
25180 stream attributes are applied to string types, but the subprograms in this
25181 package can be used directly by application programs.
25183 @node System Unsigned_Types s-unstyp ads,System Wch_Cnv s-wchcnv ads,System Strings Stream_Ops s-ststop ads,The GNAT Library
25184 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library system-unsigned-types-s-unstyp-ads}@anchor{3f9}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id153}@anchor{3fa}
25185 @section @code{System.Unsigned_Types} (@code{s-unstyp.ads})
25188 @geindex System.Unsigned_Types (s-unstyp.ads)
25190 This package contains definitions of standard unsigned types that
25191 correspond in size to the standard signed types declared in Standard,
25192 and (unlike the types in Interfaces) have corresponding names. It
25193 also contains some related definitions for other specialized types
25194 used by the compiler in connection with packed array types.
25196 @node System Wch_Cnv s-wchcnv ads,System Wch_Con s-wchcon ads,System Unsigned_Types s-unstyp ads,The GNAT Library
25197 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library system-wch-cnv-s-wchcnv-ads}@anchor{3fb}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id154}@anchor{3fc}
25198 @section @code{System.Wch_Cnv} (@code{s-wchcnv.ads})
25201 @geindex System.Wch_Cnv (s-wchcnv.ads)
25203 @geindex Wide Character
25204 @geindex Representation
25206 @geindex Wide String
25207 @geindex Conversion
25209 @geindex Representation of wide characters
25211 This package provides routines for converting between
25212 wide and wide wide characters and a representation as a value of type
25213 @code{Standard.String}, using a specified wide character
25214 encoding method. It uses definitions in
25215 package @code{System.Wch_Con}.
25217 @node System Wch_Con s-wchcon ads,,System Wch_Cnv s-wchcnv ads,The GNAT Library
25218 @anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library system-wch-con-s-wchcon-ads}@anchor{3fd}@anchor{gnat_rm/the_gnat_library id155}@anchor{3fe}
25219 @section @code{System.Wch_Con} (@code{s-wchcon.ads})
25222 @geindex System.Wch_Con (s-wchcon.ads)
25224 This package provides definitions and descriptions of
25225 the various methods used for encoding wide characters
25226 in ordinary strings. These definitions are used by
25227 the package @code{System.Wch_Cnv}.
25229 @node Interfacing to Other Languages,Specialized Needs Annexes,The GNAT Library,Top
25230 @anchor{gnat_rm/interfacing_to_other_languages interfacing-to-other-languages}@anchor{11}@anchor{gnat_rm/interfacing_to_other_languages doc}@anchor{3ff}@anchor{gnat_rm/interfacing_to_other_languages id1}@anchor{400}
25231 @chapter Interfacing to Other Languages
25234 The facilities in Annex B of the Ada Reference Manual are fully
25235 implemented in GNAT, and in addition, a full interface to C++ is
25239 * Interfacing to C::
25240 * Interfacing to C++::
25241 * Interfacing to COBOL::
25242 * Interfacing to Fortran::
25243 * Interfacing to non-GNAT Ada code::
25247 @node Interfacing to C,Interfacing to C++,,Interfacing to Other Languages
25248 @anchor{gnat_rm/interfacing_to_other_languages interfacing-to-c}@anchor{401}@anchor{gnat_rm/interfacing_to_other_languages id2}@anchor{402}
25249 @section Interfacing to C
25252 Interfacing to C with GNAT can use one of two approaches:
25258 The types in the package @code{Interfaces.C} may be used.
25261 Standard Ada types may be used directly. This may be less portable to
25262 other compilers, but will work on all GNAT compilers, which guarantee
25263 correspondence between the C and Ada types.
25266 Pragma @code{Convention C} may be applied to Ada types, but mostly has no
25267 effect, since this is the default. The following table shows the
25268 correspondence between Ada scalar types and the corresponding C types.
25271 @multitable {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx} {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx}
25290 @code{Short_Integer}
25298 @code{Short_Short_Integer}
25306 @code{Long_Integer}
25314 @code{Long_Long_Integer}
25346 @code{Long_Long_Float}
25350 This is the longest floating-point type supported by the hardware.
25355 Additionally, there are the following general correspondences between Ada
25362 Ada enumeration types map to C enumeration types directly if pragma
25363 @code{Convention C} is specified, which causes them to have int
25364 length. Without pragma @code{Convention C}, Ada enumeration types map to
25365 8, 16, or 32 bits (i.e., C types @code{signed char}, @code{short},
25366 @code{int}, respectively) depending on the number of values passed.
25367 This is the only case in which pragma @code{Convention C} affects the
25368 representation of an Ada type.
25371 Ada access types map to C pointers, except for the case of pointers to
25372 unconstrained types in Ada, which have no direct C equivalent.
25375 Ada arrays map directly to C arrays.
25378 Ada records map directly to C structures.
25381 Packed Ada records map to C structures where all members are bit fields
25382 of the length corresponding to the @code{type'Size} value in Ada.
25385 @node Interfacing to C++,Interfacing to COBOL,Interfacing to C,Interfacing to Other Languages
25386 @anchor{gnat_rm/interfacing_to_other_languages id4}@anchor{403}@anchor{gnat_rm/interfacing_to_other_languages id3}@anchor{45}
25387 @section Interfacing to C++
25390 The interface to C++ makes use of the following pragmas, which are
25391 primarily intended to be constructed automatically using a binding generator
25392 tool, although it is possible to construct them by hand.
25394 Using these pragmas it is possible to achieve complete
25395 inter-operability between Ada tagged types and C++ class definitions.
25396 See @ref{7,,Implementation Defined Pragmas}, for more details.
25401 @item @code{pragma CPP_Class ([Entity =>] @emph{LOCAL_NAME})}
25403 The argument denotes an entity in the current declarative region that is
25404 declared as a tagged or untagged record type. It indicates that the type
25405 corresponds to an externally declared C++ class type, and is to be laid
25406 out the same way that C++ would lay out the type.
25408 Note: Pragma @code{CPP_Class} is currently obsolete. It is supported
25409 for backward compatibility but its functionality is available
25410 using pragma @code{Import} with @code{Convention} = @code{CPP}.
25412 @item @code{pragma CPP_Constructor ([Entity =>] @emph{LOCAL_NAME})}
25414 This pragma identifies an imported function (imported in the usual way
25415 with pragma @code{Import}) as corresponding to a C++ constructor.
25418 A few restrictions are placed on the use of the @code{Access} attribute
25419 in conjunction with subprograms subject to convention @code{CPP}: the
25420 attribute may be used neither on primitive operations of a tagged
25421 record type with convention @code{CPP}, imported or not, nor on
25422 subprograms imported with pragma @code{CPP_Constructor}.
25424 In addition, C++ exceptions are propagated and can be handled in an
25425 @code{others} choice of an exception handler. The corresponding Ada
25426 occurrence has no message, and the simple name of the exception identity
25427 contains @code{Foreign_Exception}. Finalization and awaiting dependent
25428 tasks works properly when such foreign exceptions are propagated.
25430 It is also possible to import a C++ exception using the following syntax:
25433 LOCAL_NAME : exception;
25434 pragma Import (Cpp,
25435 [Entity =>] LOCAL_NAME,
25436 [External_Name =>] static_string_EXPRESSION);
25439 The @code{External_Name} is the name of the C++ RTTI symbol. You can then
25440 cover a specific C++ exception in an exception handler.
25442 @node Interfacing to COBOL,Interfacing to Fortran,Interfacing to C++,Interfacing to Other Languages
25443 @anchor{gnat_rm/interfacing_to_other_languages id5}@anchor{404}@anchor{gnat_rm/interfacing_to_other_languages interfacing-to-cobol}@anchor{405}
25444 @section Interfacing to COBOL
25447 Interfacing to COBOL is achieved as described in section B.4 of
25448 the Ada Reference Manual.
25450 @node Interfacing to Fortran,Interfacing to non-GNAT Ada code,Interfacing to COBOL,Interfacing to Other Languages
25451 @anchor{gnat_rm/interfacing_to_other_languages id6}@anchor{406}@anchor{gnat_rm/interfacing_to_other_languages interfacing-to-fortran}@anchor{407}
25452 @section Interfacing to Fortran
25455 Interfacing to Fortran is achieved as described in section B.5 of the
25456 Ada Reference Manual. The pragma @code{Convention Fortran}, applied to a
25457 multi-dimensional array causes the array to be stored in column-major
25458 order as required for convenient interface to Fortran.
25460 @node Interfacing to non-GNAT Ada code,,Interfacing to Fortran,Interfacing to Other Languages
25461 @anchor{gnat_rm/interfacing_to_other_languages interfacing-to-non-gnat-ada-code}@anchor{408}@anchor{gnat_rm/interfacing_to_other_languages id7}@anchor{409}
25462 @section Interfacing to non-GNAT Ada code
25465 It is possible to specify the convention @code{Ada} in a pragma
25466 @code{Import} or pragma @code{Export}. However this refers to
25467 the calling conventions used by GNAT, which may or may not be
25468 similar enough to those used by some other Ada 83 / Ada 95 / Ada 2005
25469 compiler to allow interoperation.
25471 If arguments types are kept simple, and if the foreign compiler generally
25472 follows system calling conventions, then it may be possible to integrate
25473 files compiled by other Ada compilers, provided that the elaboration
25474 issues are adequately addressed (for example by eliminating the
25475 need for any load time elaboration).
25477 In particular, GNAT running on VMS is designed to
25478 be highly compatible with the DEC Ada 83 compiler, so this is one
25479 case in which it is possible to import foreign units of this type,
25480 provided that the data items passed are restricted to simple scalar
25481 values or simple record types without variants, or simple array
25482 types with fixed bounds.
25484 @node Specialized Needs Annexes,Implementation of Specific Ada Features,Interfacing to Other Languages,Top
25485 @anchor{gnat_rm/specialized_needs_annexes specialized-needs-annexes}@anchor{12}@anchor{gnat_rm/specialized_needs_annexes doc}@anchor{40a}@anchor{gnat_rm/specialized_needs_annexes id1}@anchor{40b}
25486 @chapter Specialized Needs Annexes
25489 Ada 95, Ada 2005, and Ada 2012 define a number of Specialized Needs Annexes, which are not
25490 required in all implementations. However, as described in this chapter,
25491 GNAT implements all of these annexes:
25496 @item @emph{Systems Programming (Annex C)}
25498 The Systems Programming Annex is fully implemented.
25500 @item @emph{Real-Time Systems (Annex D)}
25502 The Real-Time Systems Annex is fully implemented.
25504 @item @emph{Distributed Systems (Annex E)}
25506 Stub generation is fully implemented in the GNAT compiler. In addition,
25507 a complete compatible PCS is available as part of the GLADE system,
25508 a separate product. When the two
25509 products are used in conjunction, this annex is fully implemented.
25511 @item @emph{Information Systems (Annex F)}
25513 The Information Systems annex is fully implemented.
25515 @item @emph{Numerics (Annex G)}
25517 The Numerics Annex is fully implemented.
25519 @item @emph{Safety and Security / High-Integrity Systems (Annex H)}
25521 The Safety and Security Annex (termed the High-Integrity Systems Annex
25522 in Ada 2005) is fully implemented.
25525 @node Implementation of Specific Ada Features,Implementation of Ada 2012 Features,Specialized Needs Annexes,Top
25526 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features implementation-of-specific-ada-features}@anchor{13}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features doc}@anchor{40c}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features id1}@anchor{40d}
25527 @chapter Implementation of Specific Ada Features
25530 This chapter describes the GNAT implementation of several Ada language
25534 * Machine Code Insertions::
25535 * GNAT Implementation of Tasking::
25536 * GNAT Implementation of Shared Passive Packages::
25537 * Code Generation for Array Aggregates::
25538 * The Size of Discriminated Records with Default Discriminants::
25539 * Strict Conformance to the Ada Reference Manual::
25543 @node Machine Code Insertions,GNAT Implementation of Tasking,,Implementation of Specific Ada Features
25544 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features machine-code-insertions}@anchor{164}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features id2}@anchor{40e}
25545 @section Machine Code Insertions
25548 @geindex Machine Code insertions
25550 Package @code{Machine_Code} provides machine code support as described
25551 in the Ada Reference Manual in two separate forms:
25557 Machine code statements, consisting of qualified expressions that
25558 fit the requirements of RM section 13.8.
25561 An intrinsic callable procedure, providing an alternative mechanism of
25562 including machine instructions in a subprogram.
25565 The two features are similar, and both are closely related to the mechanism
25566 provided by the asm instruction in the GNU C compiler. Full understanding
25567 and use of the facilities in this package requires understanding the asm
25568 instruction, see the section on Extended Asm in
25569 @cite{Using_the_GNU_Compiler_Collection_(GCC)}.
25571 Calls to the function @code{Asm} and the procedure @code{Asm} have identical
25572 semantic restrictions and effects as described below. Both are provided so
25573 that the procedure call can be used as a statement, and the function call
25574 can be used to form a code_statement.
25576 Consider this C @code{asm} instruction:
25579 asm ("fsinx %1 %0" : "=f" (result) : "f" (angle));
25582 The equivalent can be written for GNAT as:
25585 Asm ("fsinx %1 %0",
25586 My_Float'Asm_Output ("=f", result),
25587 My_Float'Asm_Input ("f", angle));
25590 The first argument to @code{Asm} is the assembler template, and is
25591 identical to what is used in GNU C. This string must be a static
25592 expression. The second argument is the output operand list. It is
25593 either a single @code{Asm_Output} attribute reference, or a list of such
25594 references enclosed in parentheses (technically an array aggregate of
25597 The @code{Asm_Output} attribute denotes a function that takes two
25598 parameters. The first is a string, the second is the name of a variable
25599 of the type designated by the attribute prefix. The first (string)
25600 argument is required to be a static expression and designates the
25601 constraint (see the section on Constraints in
25602 @cite{Using_the_GNU_Compiler_Collection_(GCC)})
25603 for the parameter; e.g., what kind of register is required. The second
25604 argument is the variable to be written or updated with the
25605 result. The possible values for constraint are the same as those used in
25606 the RTL, and are dependent on the configuration file used to build the
25607 GCC back end. If there are no output operands, then this argument may
25608 either be omitted, or explicitly given as @code{No_Output_Operands}.
25609 No support is provided for GNU C's symbolic names for output parameters.
25611 The second argument of @code{my_float'Asm_Output} functions as
25612 though it were an @code{out} parameter, which is a little curious, but
25613 all names have the form of expressions, so there is no syntactic
25614 irregularity, even though normally functions would not be permitted
25615 @code{out} parameters. The third argument is the list of input
25616 operands. It is either a single @code{Asm_Input} attribute reference, or
25617 a list of such references enclosed in parentheses (technically an array
25618 aggregate of such references).
25620 The @code{Asm_Input} attribute denotes a function that takes two
25621 parameters. The first is a string, the second is an expression of the
25622 type designated by the prefix. The first (string) argument is required
25623 to be a static expression, and is the constraint for the parameter,
25624 (e.g., what kind of register is required). The second argument is the
25625 value to be used as the input argument. The possible values for the
25626 constraint are the same as those used in the RTL, and are dependent on
25627 the configuration file used to built the GCC back end.
25628 No support is provided for GNU C's symbolic names for input parameters.
25630 If there are no input operands, this argument may either be omitted, or
25631 explicitly given as @code{No_Input_Operands}. The fourth argument, not
25632 present in the above example, is a list of register names, called the
25633 @emph{clobber} argument. This argument, if given, must be a static string
25634 expression, and is a space or comma separated list of names of registers
25635 that must be considered destroyed as a result of the @code{Asm} call. If
25636 this argument is the null string (the default value), then the code
25637 generator assumes that no additional registers are destroyed.
25638 In addition to registers, the special clobbers @code{memory} and
25639 @code{cc} as described in the GNU C docs are both supported.
25641 The fifth argument, not present in the above example, called the
25642 @emph{volatile} argument, is by default @code{False}. It can be set to
25643 the literal value @code{True} to indicate to the code generator that all
25644 optimizations with respect to the instruction specified should be
25645 suppressed, and in particular an instruction that has outputs
25646 will still be generated, even if none of the outputs are
25647 used. See @cite{Using_the_GNU_Compiler_Collection_(GCC)}
25648 for the full description.
25649 Generally it is strongly advisable to use Volatile for any ASM statement
25650 that is missing either input or output operands or to avoid unwanted
25651 optimizations. A warning is generated if this advice is not followed.
25653 No support is provided for GNU C's @code{asm goto} feature.
25655 The @code{Asm} subprograms may be used in two ways. First the procedure
25656 forms can be used anywhere a procedure call would be valid, and
25657 correspond to what the RM calls 'intrinsic' routines. Such calls can
25658 be used to intersperse machine instructions with other Ada statements.
25659 Second, the function forms, which return a dummy value of the limited
25660 private type @code{Asm_Insn}, can be used in code statements, and indeed
25661 this is the only context where such calls are allowed. Code statements
25662 appear as aggregates of the form:
25665 Asm_Insn'(Asm (...));
25666 Asm_Insn'(Asm_Volatile (...));
25669 In accordance with RM rules, such code statements are allowed only
25670 within subprograms whose entire body consists of such statements. It is
25671 not permissible to intermix such statements with other Ada statements.
25673 Typically the form using intrinsic procedure calls is more convenient
25674 and more flexible. The code statement form is provided to meet the RM
25675 suggestion that such a facility should be made available. The following
25676 is the exact syntax of the call to @code{Asm}. As usual, if named notation
25677 is used, the arguments may be given in arbitrary order, following the
25678 normal rules for use of positional and named arguments:
25682 [Template =>] static_string_EXPRESSION
25683 [,[Outputs =>] OUTPUT_OPERAND_LIST ]
25684 [,[Inputs =>] INPUT_OPERAND_LIST ]
25685 [,[Clobber =>] static_string_EXPRESSION ]
25686 [,[Volatile =>] static_boolean_EXPRESSION] )
25688 OUTPUT_OPERAND_LIST ::=
25689 [PREFIX.]No_Output_Operands
25690 | OUTPUT_OPERAND_ATTRIBUTE
25691 | (OUTPUT_OPERAND_ATTRIBUTE @{,OUTPUT_OPERAND_ATTRIBUTE@})
25693 OUTPUT_OPERAND_ATTRIBUTE ::=
25694 SUBTYPE_MARK'Asm_Output (static_string_EXPRESSION, NAME)
25696 INPUT_OPERAND_LIST ::=
25697 [PREFIX.]No_Input_Operands
25698 | INPUT_OPERAND_ATTRIBUTE
25699 | (INPUT_OPERAND_ATTRIBUTE @{,INPUT_OPERAND_ATTRIBUTE@})
25701 INPUT_OPERAND_ATTRIBUTE ::=
25702 SUBTYPE_MARK'Asm_Input (static_string_EXPRESSION, EXPRESSION)
25705 The identifiers @code{No_Input_Operands} and @code{No_Output_Operands}
25706 are declared in the package @code{Machine_Code} and must be referenced
25707 according to normal visibility rules. In particular if there is no
25708 @code{use} clause for this package, then appropriate package name
25709 qualification is required.
25711 @node GNAT Implementation of Tasking,GNAT Implementation of Shared Passive Packages,Machine Code Insertions,Implementation of Specific Ada Features
25712 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features id3}@anchor{40f}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features gnat-implementation-of-tasking}@anchor{410}
25713 @section GNAT Implementation of Tasking
25716 This chapter outlines the basic GNAT approach to tasking (in particular,
25717 a multi-layered library for portability) and discusses issues related
25718 to compliance with the Real-Time Systems Annex.
25721 * Mapping Ada Tasks onto the Underlying Kernel Threads::
25722 * Ensuring Compliance with the Real-Time Annex::
25723 * Support for Locking Policies::
25727 @node Mapping Ada Tasks onto the Underlying Kernel Threads,Ensuring Compliance with the Real-Time Annex,,GNAT Implementation of Tasking
25728 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features mapping-ada-tasks-onto-the-underlying-kernel-threads}@anchor{411}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features id4}@anchor{412}
25729 @subsection Mapping Ada Tasks onto the Underlying Kernel Threads
25732 GNAT's run-time support comprises two layers:
25738 GNARL (GNAT Run-time Layer)
25741 GNULL (GNAT Low-level Library)
25744 In GNAT, Ada's tasking services rely on a platform and OS independent
25745 layer known as GNARL. This code is responsible for implementing the
25746 correct semantics of Ada's task creation, rendezvous, protected
25749 GNARL decomposes Ada's tasking semantics into simpler lower level
25750 operations such as create a thread, set the priority of a thread,
25751 yield, create a lock, lock/unlock, etc. The spec for these low-level
25752 operations constitutes GNULLI, the GNULL Interface. This interface is
25753 directly inspired from the POSIX real-time API.
25755 If the underlying executive or OS implements the POSIX standard
25756 faithfully, the GNULL Interface maps as is to the services offered by
25757 the underlying kernel. Otherwise, some target dependent glue code maps
25758 the services offered by the underlying kernel to the semantics expected
25761 Whatever the underlying OS (VxWorks, UNIX, Windows, etc.) the
25762 key point is that each Ada task is mapped on a thread in the underlying
25763 kernel. For example, in the case of VxWorks, one Ada task = one VxWorks task.
25765 In addition Ada task priorities map onto the underlying thread priorities.
25766 Mapping Ada tasks onto the underlying kernel threads has several advantages:
25772 The underlying scheduler is used to schedule the Ada tasks. This
25773 makes Ada tasks as efficient as kernel threads from a scheduling
25777 Interaction with code written in C containing threads is eased
25778 since at the lowest level Ada tasks and C threads map onto the same
25779 underlying kernel concept.
25782 When an Ada task is blocked during I/O the remaining Ada tasks are
25786 On multiprocessor systems Ada tasks can execute in parallel.
25789 Some threads libraries offer a mechanism to fork a new process, with the
25790 child process duplicating the threads from the parent.
25792 support this functionality when the parent contains more than one task.
25794 @geindex Forking a new process
25796 @node Ensuring Compliance with the Real-Time Annex,Support for Locking Policies,Mapping Ada Tasks onto the Underlying Kernel Threads,GNAT Implementation of Tasking
25797 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features id5}@anchor{413}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features ensuring-compliance-with-the-real-time-annex}@anchor{414}
25798 @subsection Ensuring Compliance with the Real-Time Annex
25801 @geindex Real-Time Systems Annex compliance
25803 Although mapping Ada tasks onto
25804 the underlying threads has significant advantages, it does create some
25805 complications when it comes to respecting the scheduling semantics
25806 specified in the real-time annex (Annex D).
25808 For instance the Annex D requirement for the @code{FIFO_Within_Priorities}
25809 scheduling policy states:
25813 @emph{When the active priority of a ready task that is not running
25814 changes, or the setting of its base priority takes effect, the
25815 task is removed from the ready queue for its old active priority
25816 and is added at the tail of the ready queue for its new active
25817 priority, except in the case where the active priority is lowered
25818 due to the loss of inherited priority, in which case the task is
25819 added at the head of the ready queue for its new active priority.}
25822 While most kernels do put tasks at the end of the priority queue when
25823 a task changes its priority, (which respects the main
25824 FIFO_Within_Priorities requirement), almost none keep a thread at the
25825 beginning of its priority queue when its priority drops from the loss
25826 of inherited priority.
25828 As a result most vendors have provided incomplete Annex D implementations.
25830 The GNAT run-time, has a nice cooperative solution to this problem
25831 which ensures that accurate FIFO_Within_Priorities semantics are
25834 The principle is as follows. When an Ada task T is about to start
25835 running, it checks whether some other Ada task R with the same
25836 priority as T has been suspended due to the loss of priority
25837 inheritance. If this is the case, T yields and is placed at the end of
25838 its priority queue. When R arrives at the front of the queue it
25841 Note that this simple scheme preserves the relative order of the tasks
25842 that were ready to execute in the priority queue where R has been
25845 @c Support_for_Locking_Policies
25847 @node Support for Locking Policies,,Ensuring Compliance with the Real-Time Annex,GNAT Implementation of Tasking
25848 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features support-for-locking-policies}@anchor{415}
25849 @subsection Support for Locking Policies
25852 This section specifies which policies specified by pragma Locking_Policy
25853 are supported on which platforms.
25855 GNAT supports the standard @code{Ceiling_Locking} policy, and the
25856 implementation defined @code{Inheritance_Locking} and
25857 @code{Concurrent_Readers_Locking} policies.
25859 @code{Ceiling_Locking} is supported on all platforms if the operating system
25860 supports it. In particular, @code{Ceiling_Locking} is not supported on
25862 @code{Inheritance_Locking} is supported on
25867 @code{Concurrent_Readers_Locking} is supported on Linux.
25869 Notes about @code{Ceiling_Locking} on Linux:
25870 If the process is running as 'root', ceiling locking is used.
25871 If the capabilities facility is installed
25872 ("sudo apt-get --assume-yes install libcap-dev" on Ubuntu,
25874 and the program is linked against that library
25876 and the executable file has the cap_sys_nice capability
25877 ("sudo /sbin/setcap cap_sys_nice=ep executable_file_name"),
25878 then ceiling locking is used.
25879 Otherwise, the @code{Ceiling_Locking} policy is ignored.
25881 @node GNAT Implementation of Shared Passive Packages,Code Generation for Array Aggregates,GNAT Implementation of Tasking,Implementation of Specific Ada Features
25882 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features id6}@anchor{416}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features gnat-implementation-of-shared-passive-packages}@anchor{417}
25883 @section GNAT Implementation of Shared Passive Packages
25886 @geindex Shared passive packages
25888 GNAT fully implements the
25889 @geindex pragma Shared_Passive
25891 @code{Shared_Passive} for
25892 the purpose of designating shared passive packages.
25893 This allows the use of passive partitions in the
25894 context described in the Ada Reference Manual; i.e., for communication
25895 between separate partitions of a distributed application using the
25896 features in Annex E.
25900 @geindex Distribution Systems Annex
25902 However, the implementation approach used by GNAT provides for more
25903 extensive usage as follows:
25908 @item @emph{Communication between separate programs}
25910 This allows separate programs to access the data in passive
25911 partitions, using protected objects for synchronization where
25912 needed. The only requirement is that the two programs have a
25913 common shared file system. It is even possible for programs
25914 running on different machines with different architectures
25915 (e.g., different endianness) to communicate via the data in
25916 a passive partition.
25918 @item @emph{Persistence between program runs}
25920 The data in a passive package can persist from one run of a
25921 program to another, so that a later program sees the final
25922 values stored by a previous run of the same program.
25925 The implementation approach used is to store the data in files. A
25926 separate stream file is created for each object in the package, and
25927 an access to an object causes the corresponding file to be read or
25930 @geindex SHARED_MEMORY_DIRECTORY environment variable
25932 The environment variable @code{SHARED_MEMORY_DIRECTORY} should be
25933 set to the directory to be used for these files.
25934 The files in this directory
25935 have names that correspond to their fully qualified names. For
25936 example, if we have the package
25940 pragma Shared_Passive (X);
25946 and the environment variable is set to @code{/stemp/}, then the files created
25947 will have the names:
25954 These files are created when a value is initially written to the object, and
25955 the files are retained until manually deleted. This provides the persistence
25956 semantics. If no file exists, it means that no partition has assigned a value
25957 to the variable; in this case the initial value declared in the package
25958 will be used. This model ensures that there are no issues in synchronizing
25959 the elaboration process, since elaboration of passive packages elaborates the
25960 initial values, but does not create the files.
25962 The files are written using normal @code{Stream_IO} access.
25963 If you want to be able
25964 to communicate between programs or partitions running on different
25965 architectures, then you should use the XDR versions of the stream attribute
25966 routines, since these are architecture independent.
25968 If active synchronization is required for access to the variables in the
25969 shared passive package, then as described in the Ada Reference Manual, the
25970 package may contain protected objects used for this purpose. In this case
25971 a lock file (whose name is @code{___lock} (three underscores)
25972 is created in the shared memory directory.
25974 @geindex ___lock file (for shared passive packages)
25976 This is used to provide the required locking
25977 semantics for proper protected object synchronization.
25979 GNAT supports shared passive packages on all platforms
25980 except for OpenVMS.
25982 @node Code Generation for Array Aggregates,The Size of Discriminated Records with Default Discriminants,GNAT Implementation of Shared Passive Packages,Implementation of Specific Ada Features
25983 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features code-generation-for-array-aggregates}@anchor{418}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features id7}@anchor{419}
25984 @section Code Generation for Array Aggregates
25987 Aggregates have a rich syntax and allow the user to specify the values of
25988 complex data structures by means of a single construct. As a result, the
25989 code generated for aggregates can be quite complex and involve loops, case
25990 statements and multiple assignments. In the simplest cases, however, the
25991 compiler will recognize aggregates whose components and constraints are
25992 fully static, and in those cases the compiler will generate little or no
25993 executable code. The following is an outline of the code that GNAT generates
25994 for various aggregate constructs. For further details, you will find it
25995 useful to examine the output produced by the -gnatG flag to see the expanded
25996 source that is input to the code generator. You may also want to examine
25997 the assembly code generated at various levels of optimization.
25999 The code generated for aggregates depends on the context, the component values,
26000 and the type. In the context of an object declaration the code generated is
26001 generally simpler than in the case of an assignment. As a general rule, static
26002 component values and static subtypes also lead to simpler code.
26005 * Static constant aggregates with static bounds::
26006 * Constant aggregates with unconstrained nominal types::
26007 * Aggregates with static bounds::
26008 * Aggregates with nonstatic bounds::
26009 * Aggregates in assignment statements::
26013 @node Static constant aggregates with static bounds,Constant aggregates with unconstrained nominal types,,Code Generation for Array Aggregates
26014 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features static-constant-aggregates-with-static-bounds}@anchor{41a}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features id8}@anchor{41b}
26015 @subsection Static constant aggregates with static bounds
26018 For the declarations:
26021 type One_Dim is array (1..10) of integer;
26022 ar0 : constant One_Dim := (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 0);
26025 GNAT generates no executable code: the constant ar0 is placed in static memory.
26026 The same is true for constant aggregates with named associations:
26029 Cr1 : constant One_Dim := (4 => 16, 2 => 4, 3 => 9, 1 => 1, 5 .. 10 => 0);
26030 Cr3 : constant One_Dim := (others => 7777);
26033 The same is true for multidimensional constant arrays such as:
26036 type two_dim is array (1..3, 1..3) of integer;
26037 Unit : constant two_dim := ( (1,0,0), (0,1,0), (0,0,1));
26040 The same is true for arrays of one-dimensional arrays: the following are
26044 type ar1b is array (1..3) of boolean;
26045 type ar_ar is array (1..3) of ar1b;
26046 None : constant ar1b := (others => false); -- fully static
26047 None2 : constant ar_ar := (1..3 => None); -- fully static
26050 However, for multidimensional aggregates with named associations, GNAT will
26051 generate assignments and loops, even if all associations are static. The
26052 following two declarations generate a loop for the first dimension, and
26053 individual component assignments for the second dimension:
26056 Zero1: constant two_dim := (1..3 => (1..3 => 0));
26057 Zero2: constant two_dim := (others => (others => 0));
26060 @node Constant aggregates with unconstrained nominal types,Aggregates with static bounds,Static constant aggregates with static bounds,Code Generation for Array Aggregates
26061 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features constant-aggregates-with-unconstrained-nominal-types}@anchor{41c}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features id9}@anchor{41d}
26062 @subsection Constant aggregates with unconstrained nominal types
26065 In such cases the aggregate itself establishes the subtype, so that
26066 associations with @code{others} cannot be used. GNAT determines the
26067 bounds for the actual subtype of the aggregate, and allocates the
26068 aggregate statically as well. No code is generated for the following:
26071 type One_Unc is array (natural range <>) of integer;
26072 Cr_Unc : constant One_Unc := (12,24,36);
26075 @node Aggregates with static bounds,Aggregates with nonstatic bounds,Constant aggregates with unconstrained nominal types,Code Generation for Array Aggregates
26076 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features id10}@anchor{41e}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features aggregates-with-static-bounds}@anchor{41f}
26077 @subsection Aggregates with static bounds
26080 In all previous examples the aggregate was the initial (and immutable) value
26081 of a constant. If the aggregate initializes a variable, then code is generated
26082 for it as a combination of individual assignments and loops over the target
26083 object. The declarations
26086 Cr_Var1 : One_Dim := (2, 5, 7, 11, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0);
26087 Cr_Var2 : One_Dim := (others > -1);
26090 generate the equivalent of
26098 for I in Cr_Var2'range loop
26103 @node Aggregates with nonstatic bounds,Aggregates in assignment statements,Aggregates with static bounds,Code Generation for Array Aggregates
26104 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features id11}@anchor{420}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features aggregates-with-nonstatic-bounds}@anchor{421}
26105 @subsection Aggregates with nonstatic bounds
26108 If the bounds of the aggregate are not statically compatible with the bounds
26109 of the nominal subtype of the target, then constraint checks have to be
26110 generated on the bounds. For a multidimensional array, constraint checks may
26111 have to be applied to sub-arrays individually, if they do not have statically
26112 compatible subtypes.
26114 @node Aggregates in assignment statements,,Aggregates with nonstatic bounds,Code Generation for Array Aggregates
26115 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features id12}@anchor{422}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features aggregates-in-assignment-statements}@anchor{423}
26116 @subsection Aggregates in assignment statements
26119 In general, aggregate assignment requires the construction of a temporary,
26120 and a copy from the temporary to the target of the assignment. This is because
26121 it is not always possible to convert the assignment into a series of individual
26122 component assignments. For example, consider the simple case:
26128 This cannot be converted into:
26135 So the aggregate has to be built first in a separate location, and then
26136 copied into the target. GNAT recognizes simple cases where this intermediate
26137 step is not required, and the assignments can be performed in place, directly
26138 into the target. The following sufficient criteria are applied:
26144 The bounds of the aggregate are static, and the associations are static.
26147 The components of the aggregate are static constants, names of
26148 simple variables that are not renamings, or expressions not involving
26149 indexed components whose operands obey these rules.
26152 If any of these conditions are violated, the aggregate will be built in
26153 a temporary (created either by the front-end or the code generator) and then
26154 that temporary will be copied onto the target.
26156 @node The Size of Discriminated Records with Default Discriminants,Strict Conformance to the Ada Reference Manual,Code Generation for Array Aggregates,Implementation of Specific Ada Features
26157 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features id13}@anchor{424}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features the-size-of-discriminated-records-with-default-discriminants}@anchor{425}
26158 @section The Size of Discriminated Records with Default Discriminants
26161 If a discriminated type @code{T} has discriminants with default values, it is
26162 possible to declare an object of this type without providing an explicit
26166 type Size is range 1..100;
26168 type Rec (D : Size := 15) is record
26169 Name : String (1..D);
26175 Such an object is said to be @emph{unconstrained}.
26176 The discriminant of the object
26177 can be modified by a full assignment to the object, as long as it preserves the
26178 relation between the value of the discriminant, and the value of the components
26182 Word := (3, "yes");
26184 Word := (5, "maybe");
26186 Word := (5, "no"); -- raises Constraint_Error
26189 In order to support this behavior efficiently, an unconstrained object is
26190 given the maximum size that any value of the type requires. In the case
26191 above, @code{Word} has storage for the discriminant and for
26192 a @code{String} of length 100.
26193 It is important to note that unconstrained objects do not require dynamic
26194 allocation. It would be an improper implementation to place on the heap those
26195 components whose size depends on discriminants. (This improper implementation
26196 was used by some Ada83 compilers, where the @code{Name} component above
26198 been stored as a pointer to a dynamic string). Following the principle that
26199 dynamic storage management should never be introduced implicitly,
26200 an Ada compiler should reserve the full size for an unconstrained declared
26201 object, and place it on the stack.
26203 This maximum size approach
26204 has been a source of surprise to some users, who expect the default
26205 values of the discriminants to determine the size reserved for an
26206 unconstrained object: "If the default is 15, why should the object occupy
26208 The answer, of course, is that the discriminant may be later modified,
26209 and its full range of values must be taken into account. This is why the
26213 type Rec (D : Positive := 15) is record
26214 Name : String (1..D);
26220 is flagged by the compiler with a warning:
26221 an attempt to create @code{Too_Large} will raise @code{Storage_Error},
26222 because the required size includes @code{Positive'Last}
26223 bytes. As the first example indicates, the proper approach is to declare an
26224 index type of 'reasonable' range so that unconstrained objects are not too
26227 One final wrinkle: if the object is declared to be @code{aliased}, or if it is
26228 created in the heap by means of an allocator, then it is @emph{not}
26230 it is constrained by the default values of the discriminants, and those values
26231 cannot be modified by full assignment. This is because in the presence of
26232 aliasing all views of the object (which may be manipulated by different tasks,
26233 say) must be consistent, so it is imperative that the object, once created,
26236 @node Strict Conformance to the Ada Reference Manual,,The Size of Discriminated Records with Default Discriminants,Implementation of Specific Ada Features
26237 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features strict-conformance-to-the-ada-reference-manual}@anchor{426}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_specific_ada_features id14}@anchor{427}
26238 @section Strict Conformance to the Ada Reference Manual
26241 The dynamic semantics defined by the Ada Reference Manual impose a set of
26242 run-time checks to be generated. By default, the GNAT compiler will insert many
26243 run-time checks into the compiled code, including most of those required by the
26244 Ada Reference Manual. However, there are two checks that are not enabled in
26245 the default mode for efficiency reasons: checks for access before elaboration
26246 on subprogram calls, and stack overflow checking (most operating systems do not
26247 perform this check by default).
26249 Strict conformance to the Ada Reference Manual can be achieved by adding two
26250 compiler options for dynamic checks for access-before-elaboration on subprogram
26251 calls and generic instantiations (@emph{-gnatE}), and stack overflow checking
26252 (@emph{-fstack-check}).
26254 Note that the result of a floating point arithmetic operation in overflow and
26255 invalid situations, when the @code{Machine_Overflows} attribute of the result
26256 type is @code{False}, is to generate IEEE NaN and infinite values. This is the
26257 case for machines compliant with the IEEE floating-point standard, but on
26258 machines that are not fully compliant with this standard, such as Alpha, the
26259 @emph{-mieee} compiler flag must be used for achieving IEEE confirming
26260 behavior (although at the cost of a significant performance penalty), so
26261 infinite and NaN values are properly generated.
26263 @node Implementation of Ada 2012 Features,Obsolescent Features,Implementation of Specific Ada Features,Top
26264 @anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_ada_2012_features doc}@anchor{428}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_ada_2012_features implementation-of-ada-2012-features}@anchor{14}@anchor{gnat_rm/implementation_of_ada_2012_features id1}@anchor{429}
26265 @chapter Implementation of Ada 2012 Features
26268 @geindex Ada 2012 implementation status
26270 @geindex -gnat12 option (gcc)
26272 @geindex pragma Ada_2012
26274 @geindex configuration pragma Ada_2012
26276 @geindex Ada_2012 configuration pragma
26278 This chapter contains a complete list of Ada 2012 features that have been
26280 Generally, these features are only
26281 available if the @emph{-gnat12} (Ada 2012 features enabled) option is set,
26282 which is the default behavior,
26283 or if the configuration pragma @code{Ada_2012} is used.
26285 However, new pragmas, attributes, and restrictions are
26286 unconditionally available, since the Ada 95 standard allows the addition of
26287 new pragmas, attributes, and restrictions (there are exceptions, which are
26288 documented in the individual descriptions), and also certain packages
26289 were made available in earlier versions of Ada.
26291 An ISO date (YYYY-MM-DD) appears in parentheses on the description line.
26292 This date shows the implementation date of the feature. Any wavefront
26293 subsequent to this date will contain the indicated feature, as will any
26294 subsequent releases. A date of 0000-00-00 means that GNAT has always
26295 implemented the feature, or implemented it as soon as it appeared as a
26296 binding interpretation.
26298 Each feature corresponds to an Ada Issue ('AI') approved by the Ada
26299 standardization group (ISO/IEC JTC1/SC22/WG9) for inclusion in Ada 2012.
26300 The features are ordered based on the relevant sections of the Ada
26301 Reference Manual ("RM"). When a given AI relates to multiple points
26302 in the RM, the earliest is used.
26304 A complete description of the AIs may be found in
26305 @indicateurl{http://www.ada-auth.org/ai05-summary.html}.
26307 @geindex AI-0176 (Ada 2012 feature)
26313 @emph{AI-0176 Quantified expressions (2010-09-29)}
26315 Both universally and existentially quantified expressions are implemented.
26316 They use the new syntax for iterators proposed in AI05-139-2, as well as
26317 the standard Ada loop syntax.
26319 RM References: 1.01.04 (12) 2.09 (2/2) 4.04 (7) 4.05.09 (0)
26322 @geindex AI-0079 (Ada 2012 feature)
26328 @emph{AI-0079 Allow other_format characters in source (2010-07-10)}
26330 Wide characters in the unicode category @emph{other_format} are now allowed in
26331 source programs between tokens, but not within a token such as an identifier.
26333 RM References: 2.01 (4/2) 2.02 (7)
26336 @geindex AI-0091 (Ada 2012 feature)
26342 @emph{AI-0091 Do not allow other_format in identifiers (0000-00-00)}
26344 Wide characters in the unicode category @emph{other_format} are not permitted
26345 within an identifier, since this can be a security problem. The error
26346 message for this case has been improved to be more specific, but GNAT has
26347 never allowed such characters to appear in identifiers.
26349 RM References: 2.03 (3.1/2) 2.03 (4/2) 2.03 (5/2) 2.03 (5.1/2) 2.03 (5.2/2) 2.03 (5.3/2) 2.09 (2/2)
26352 @geindex AI-0100 (Ada 2012 feature)
26358 @emph{AI-0100 Placement of pragmas (2010-07-01)}
26360 This AI is an earlier version of AI-163. It simplifies the rules
26361 for legal placement of pragmas. In the case of lists that allow pragmas, if
26362 the list may have no elements, then the list may consist solely of pragmas.
26364 RM References: 2.08 (7)
26367 @geindex AI-0163 (Ada 2012 feature)
26373 @emph{AI-0163 Pragmas in place of null (2010-07-01)}
26375 A statement sequence may be composed entirely of pragmas. It is no longer
26376 necessary to add a dummy @code{null} statement to make the sequence legal.
26378 RM References: 2.08 (7) 2.08 (16)
26381 @geindex AI-0080 (Ada 2012 feature)
26387 @emph{AI-0080 'View of' not needed if clear from context (0000-00-00)}
26389 This is an editorial change only, described as non-testable in the AI.
26391 RM References: 3.01 (7)
26394 @geindex AI-0183 (Ada 2012 feature)
26400 @emph{AI-0183 Aspect specifications (2010-08-16)}
26402 Aspect specifications have been fully implemented except for pre and post-
26403 conditions, and type invariants, which have their own separate AI's. All
26404 forms of declarations listed in the AI are supported. The following is a
26405 list of the aspects supported (with GNAT implementation aspects marked)
26409 @multitable {xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx} {xxxxxxxxxxxxx}
26454 @code{Atomic_Components}
26466 @code{Component_Size}
26472 @code{Contract_Cases}
26480 @code{Discard_Names}
26486 @code{External_Tag}
26492 @code{Favor_Top_Level}
26506 @code{Inline_Always}
26522 @code{Machine_Radix}
26548 @code{Persistent_BSS}
26574 @code{Preelaborable_Initialization}
26580 @code{Pure_Function}
26588 @code{Remote_Access_Type}
26610 @code{Storage_Pool}
26616 @code{Storage_Size}
26634 @code{Suppress_Debug_Info}
26650 @code{Thread_Local_Storage}
26658 @code{Type_Invariant}
26664 @code{Unchecked_Union}
26670 @code{Universal_Aliasing}
26686 @code{Unreferenced}
26694 @code{Unreferenced_Objects}
26722 @code{Volatile_Components}
26739 Note that for aspects with an expression, e.g. @code{Size}, the expression is
26740 treated like a default expression (visibility is analyzed at the point of
26741 occurrence of the aspect, but evaluation of the expression occurs at the
26742 freeze point of the entity involved).
26744 RM References: 3.02.01 (3) 3.02.02 (2) 3.03.01 (2/2) 3.08 (6)
26745 3.09.03 (1.1/2) 6.01 (2/2) 6.07 (2/2) 9.05.02 (2/2) 7.01 (3) 7.03
26746 (2) 7.03 (3) 9.01 (2/2) 9.01 (3/2) 9.04 (2/2) 9.04 (3/2)
26747 9.05.02 (2/2) 11.01 (2) 12.01 (3) 12.03 (2/2) 12.04 (2/2) 12.05 (2)
26748 12.06 (2.1/2) 12.06 (2.2/2) 12.07 (2) 13.01 (0.1/2) 13.03 (5/1)
26752 @geindex AI-0128 (Ada 2012 feature)
26758 @emph{AI-0128 Inequality is a primitive operation (0000-00-00)}
26760 If an equality operator ("=") is declared for a type, then the implicitly
26761 declared inequality operator ("/=") is a primitive operation of the type.
26762 This is the only reasonable interpretation, and is the one always implemented
26763 by GNAT, but the RM was not entirely clear in making this point.
26765 RM References: 3.02.03 (6) 6.06 (6)
26768 @geindex AI-0003 (Ada 2012 feature)
26774 @emph{AI-0003 Qualified expressions as names (2010-07-11)}
26776 In Ada 2012, a qualified expression is considered to be syntactically a name,
26777 meaning that constructs such as @code{A'(F(X)).B} are now legal. This is
26778 useful in disambiguating some cases of overloading.
26780 RM References: 3.03 (11) 3.03 (21) 4.01 (2) 4.04 (7) 4.07 (3)
26784 @geindex AI-0120 (Ada 2012 feature)
26790 @emph{AI-0120 Constant instance of protected object (0000-00-00)}
26792 This is an RM editorial change only. The section that lists objects that are
26793 constant failed to include the current instance of a protected object
26794 within a protected function. This has always been treated as a constant
26797 RM References: 3.03 (21)
26800 @geindex AI-0008 (Ada 2012 feature)
26806 @emph{AI-0008 General access to constrained objects (0000-00-00)}
26808 The wording in the RM implied that if you have a general access to a
26809 constrained object, it could be used to modify the discriminants. This was
26810 obviously not intended. @code{Constraint_Error} should be raised, and GNAT
26811 has always done so in this situation.
26813 RM References: 3.03 (23) 3.10.02 (26/2) 4.01 (9) 6.04.01 (17) 8.05.01 (5/2)
26816 @geindex AI-0093 (Ada 2012 feature)
26822 @emph{AI-0093 Additional rules use immutably limited (0000-00-00)}
26824 This is an editorial change only, to make more widespread use of the Ada 2012
26825 'immutably limited'.
26827 RM References: 3.03 (23.4/3)
26830 @geindex AI-0096 (Ada 2012 feature)
26836 @emph{AI-0096 Deriving from formal private types (2010-07-20)}
26838 In general it is illegal for a type derived from a formal limited type to be
26839 nonlimited. This AI makes an exception to this rule: derivation is legal
26840 if it appears in the private part of the generic, and the formal type is not
26841 tagged. If the type is tagged, the legality check must be applied to the
26842 private part of the package.
26844 RM References: 3.04 (5.1/2) 6.02 (7)
26847 @geindex AI-0181 (Ada 2012 feature)
26853 @emph{AI-0181 Soft hyphen is a non-graphic character (2010-07-23)}
26855 From Ada 2005 on, soft hyphen is considered a non-graphic character, which
26856 means that it has a special name (@code{SOFT_HYPHEN}) in conjunction with the
26857 @code{Image} and @code{Value} attributes for the character types. Strictly
26858 speaking this is an inconsistency with Ada 95, but in practice the use of
26859 these attributes is so obscure that it will not cause problems.
26861 RM References: 3.05.02 (2/2) A.01 (35/2) A.03.03 (21)
26864 @geindex AI-0182 (Ada 2012 feature)
26870 @emph{AI-0182 Additional forms for} @code{Character'Value} @emph{(0000-00-00)}
26872 This AI allows @code{Character'Value} to accept the string @code{'?'} where
26873 @code{?} is any character including non-graphic control characters. GNAT has
26874 always accepted such strings. It also allows strings such as
26875 @code{HEX_00000041} to be accepted, but GNAT does not take advantage of this
26876 permission and raises @code{Constraint_Error}, as is certainly still
26879 RM References: 3.05 (56/2)
26882 @geindex AI-0214 (Ada 2012 feature)
26888 @emph{AI-0214 Defaulted discriminants for limited tagged (2010-10-01)}
26890 Ada 2012 relaxes the restriction that forbids discriminants of tagged types
26891 to have default expressions by allowing them when the type is limited. It
26892 is often useful to define a default value for a discriminant even though
26893 it can't be changed by assignment.
26895 RM References: 3.07 (9.1/2) 3.07.02 (3)
26898 @geindex AI-0102 (Ada 2012 feature)
26904 @emph{AI-0102 Some implicit conversions are illegal (0000-00-00)}
26906 It is illegal to assign an anonymous access constant to an anonymous access
26907 variable. The RM did not have a clear rule to prevent this, but GNAT has
26908 always generated an error for this usage.
26910 RM References: 3.07 (16) 3.07.01 (9) 6.04.01 (6) 8.06 (27/2)
26913 @geindex AI-0158 (Ada 2012 feature)
26919 @emph{AI-0158 Generalizing membership tests (2010-09-16)}
26921 This AI extends the syntax of membership tests to simplify complex conditions
26922 that can be expressed as membership in a subset of values of any type. It
26923 introduces syntax for a list of expressions that may be used in loop contexts
26926 RM References: 3.08.01 (5) 4.04 (3) 4.05.02 (3) 4.05.02 (5) 4.05.02 (27)
26929 @geindex AI-0173 (Ada 2012 feature)
26935 @emph{AI-0173 Testing if tags represent abstract types (2010-07-03)}
26937 The function @code{Ada.Tags.Type_Is_Abstract} returns @code{True} if invoked
26938 with the tag of an abstract type, and @code{False} otherwise.
26940 RM References: 3.09 (7.4/2) 3.09 (12.4/2)
26943 @geindex AI-0076 (Ada 2012 feature)
26949 @emph{AI-0076 function with controlling result (0000-00-00)}
26951 This is an editorial change only. The RM defines calls with controlling
26952 results, but uses the term 'function with controlling result' without an
26953 explicit definition.
26955 RM References: 3.09.02 (2/2)
26958 @geindex AI-0126 (Ada 2012 feature)
26964 @emph{AI-0126 Dispatching with no declared operation (0000-00-00)}
26966 This AI clarifies dispatching rules, and simply confirms that dispatching
26967 executes the operation of the parent type when there is no explicitly or
26968 implicitly declared operation for the descendant type. This has always been
26969 the case in all versions of GNAT.
26971 RM References: 3.09.02 (20/2) 3.09.02 (20.1/2) 3.09.02 (20.2/2)
26974 @geindex AI-0097 (Ada 2012 feature)
26980 @emph{AI-0097 Treatment of abstract null extension (2010-07-19)}
26982 The RM as written implied that in some cases it was possible to create an
26983 object of an abstract type, by having an abstract extension inherit a non-
26984 abstract constructor from its parent type. This mistake has been corrected
26985 in GNAT and in the RM, and this construct is now illegal.
26987 RM References: 3.09.03 (4/2)
26990 @geindex AI-0203 (Ada 2012 feature)
26996 @emph{AI-0203 Extended return cannot be abstract (0000-00-00)}
26998 A return_subtype_indication cannot denote an abstract subtype. GNAT has never
26999 permitted such usage.
27001 RM References: 3.09.03 (8/3)
27004 @geindex AI-0198 (Ada 2012 feature)
27010 @emph{AI-0198 Inheriting abstract operators (0000-00-00)}
27012 This AI resolves a conflict between two rules involving inherited abstract
27013 operations and predefined operators. If a derived numeric type inherits
27014 an abstract operator, it overrides the predefined one. This interpretation
27015 was always the one implemented in GNAT.
27017 RM References: 3.09.03 (4/3)
27020 @geindex AI-0073 (Ada 2012 feature)
27026 @emph{AI-0073 Functions returning abstract types (2010-07-10)}
27028 This AI covers a number of issues regarding returning abstract types. In
27029 particular generic functions cannot have abstract result types or access
27030 result types designated an abstract type. There are some other cases which
27031 are detailed in the AI. Note that this binding interpretation has not been
27032 retrofitted to operate before Ada 2012 mode, since it caused a significant
27033 number of regressions.
27035 RM References: 3.09.03 (8) 3.09.03 (10) 6.05 (8/2)
27038 @geindex AI-0070 (Ada 2012 feature)
27044 @emph{AI-0070 Elaboration of interface types (0000-00-00)}
27046 This is an editorial change only, there are no testable consequences short of
27047 checking for the absence of generated code for an interface declaration.
27049 RM References: 3.09.04 (18/2)
27052 @geindex AI-0208 (Ada 2012 feature)
27058 @emph{AI-0208 Characteristics of incomplete views (0000-00-00)}
27060 The wording in the Ada 2005 RM concerning characteristics of incomplete views
27061 was incorrect and implied that some programs intended to be legal were now
27062 illegal. GNAT had never considered such programs illegal, so it has always
27063 implemented the intent of this AI.
27065 RM References: 3.10.01 (2.4/2) 3.10.01 (2.6/2)
27068 @geindex AI-0162 (Ada 2012 feature)
27074 @emph{AI-0162 Incomplete type completed by partial view (2010-09-15)}
27076 Incomplete types are made more useful by allowing them to be completed by
27077 private types and private extensions.
27079 RM References: 3.10.01 (2.5/2) 3.10.01 (2.6/2) 3.10.01 (3) 3.10.01 (4/2)
27082 @geindex AI-0098 (Ada 2012 feature)
27088 @emph{AI-0098 Anonymous subprogram access restrictions (0000-00-00)}
27090 An unintentional omission in the RM implied some inconsistent restrictions on
27091 the use of anonymous access to subprogram values. These restrictions were not
27092 intentional, and have never been enforced by GNAT.
27094 RM References: 3.10.01 (6) 3.10.01 (9.2/2)
27097 @geindex AI-0199 (Ada 2012 feature)
27103 @emph{AI-0199 Aggregate with anonymous access components (2010-07-14)}
27105 A choice list in a record aggregate can include several components of
27106 (distinct) anonymous access types as long as they have matching designated
27109 RM References: 4.03.01 (16)
27112 @geindex AI-0220 (Ada 2012 feature)
27118 @emph{AI-0220 Needed components for aggregates (0000-00-00)}
27120 This AI addresses a wording problem in the RM that appears to permit some
27121 complex cases of aggregates with nonstatic discriminants. GNAT has always
27122 implemented the intended semantics.
27124 RM References: 4.03.01 (17)
27127 @geindex AI-0147 (Ada 2012 feature)
27133 @emph{AI-0147 Conditional expressions (2009-03-29)}
27135 Conditional expressions are permitted. The form of such an expression is:
27138 (if expr then expr @{elsif expr then expr@} [else expr])
27141 The parentheses can be omitted in contexts where parentheses are present
27142 anyway, such as subprogram arguments and pragma arguments. If the @strong{else}
27143 clause is omitted, @strong{else} @emph{True} is assumed;
27144 thus @code{(if A then B)} is a way to conveniently represent
27145 @emph{(A implies B)} in standard logic.
27147 RM References: 4.03.03 (15) 4.04 (1) 4.04 (7) 4.05.07 (0) 4.07 (2)
27148 4.07 (3) 4.09 (12) 4.09 (33) 5.03 (3) 5.03 (4) 7.05 (2.1/2)
27151 @geindex AI-0037 (Ada 2012 feature)
27157 @emph{AI-0037 Out-of-range box associations in aggregate (0000-00-00)}
27159 This AI confirms that an association of the form @code{Indx => <>} in an
27160 array aggregate must raise @code{Constraint_Error} if @code{Indx}
27161 is out of range. The RM specified a range check on other associations, but
27162 not when the value of the association was defaulted. GNAT has always inserted
27163 a constraint check on the index value.
27165 RM References: 4.03.03 (29)
27168 @geindex AI-0123 (Ada 2012 feature)
27174 @emph{AI-0123 Composability of equality (2010-04-13)}
27176 Equality of untagged record composes, so that the predefined equality for a
27177 composite type that includes a component of some untagged record type
27178 @code{R} uses the equality operation of @code{R} (which may be user-defined
27179 or predefined). This makes the behavior of untagged records identical to that
27180 of tagged types in this respect.
27182 This change is an incompatibility with previous versions of Ada, but it
27183 corrects a non-uniformity that was often a source of confusion. Analysis of
27184 a large number of industrial programs indicates that in those rare cases
27185 where a composite type had an untagged record component with a user-defined
27186 equality, either there was no use of the composite equality, or else the code
27187 expected the same composability as for tagged types, and thus had a bug that
27188 would be fixed by this change.
27190 RM References: 4.05.02 (9.7/2) 4.05.02 (14) 4.05.02 (15) 4.05.02 (24)
27194 @geindex AI-0088 (Ada 2012 feature)
27200 @emph{AI-0088 The value of exponentiation (0000-00-00)}
27202 This AI clarifies the equivalence rule given for the dynamic semantics of
27203 exponentiation: the value of the operation can be obtained by repeated
27204 multiplication, but the operation can be implemented otherwise (for example
27205 using the familiar divide-by-two-and-square algorithm, even if this is less
27206 accurate), and does not imply repeated reads of a volatile base.
27208 RM References: 4.05.06 (11)
27211 @geindex AI-0188 (Ada 2012 feature)
27217 @emph{AI-0188 Case expressions (2010-01-09)}
27219 Case expressions are permitted. This allows use of constructs such as:
27222 X := (case Y is when 1 => 2, when 2 => 3, when others => 31)
27225 RM References: 4.05.07 (0) 4.05.08 (0) 4.09 (12) 4.09 (33)
27228 @geindex AI-0104 (Ada 2012 feature)
27234 @emph{AI-0104 Null exclusion and uninitialized allocator (2010-07-15)}
27236 The assignment @code{Ptr := new not null Some_Ptr;} will raise
27237 @code{Constraint_Error} because the default value of the allocated object is
27238 @strong{null}. This useless construct is illegal in Ada 2012.
27240 RM References: 4.08 (2)
27243 @geindex AI-0157 (Ada 2012 feature)
27249 @emph{AI-0157 Allocation/Deallocation from empty pool (2010-07-11)}
27251 Allocation and Deallocation from an empty storage pool (i.e. allocation or
27252 deallocation of a pointer for which a static storage size clause of zero
27253 has been given) is now illegal and is detected as such. GNAT
27254 previously gave a warning but not an error.
27256 RM References: 4.08 (5.3/2) 13.11.02 (4) 13.11.02 (17)
27259 @geindex AI-0179 (Ada 2012 feature)
27265 @emph{AI-0179 Statement not required after label (2010-04-10)}
27267 It is not necessary to have a statement following a label, so a label
27268 can appear at the end of a statement sequence without the need for putting a
27269 null statement afterwards, but it is not allowable to have only labels and
27270 no real statements in a statement sequence.
27272 RM References: 5.01 (2)
27275 @geindex AI-0139-2 (Ada 2012 feature)
27281 @emph{AI-0139-2 Syntactic sugar for iterators (2010-09-29)}
27283 The new syntax for iterating over arrays and containers is now implemented.
27284 Iteration over containers is for now limited to read-only iterators. Only
27285 default iterators are supported, with the syntax: @code{for Elem of C}.
27287 RM References: 5.05
27290 @geindex AI-0134 (Ada 2012 feature)
27296 @emph{AI-0134 Profiles must match for full conformance (0000-00-00)}
27298 For full conformance, the profiles of anonymous-access-to-subprogram
27299 parameters must match. GNAT has always enforced this rule.
27301 RM References: 6.03.01 (18)
27304 @geindex AI-0207 (Ada 2012 feature)
27310 @emph{AI-0207 Mode conformance and access constant (0000-00-00)}
27312 This AI confirms that access_to_constant indication must match for mode
27313 conformance. This was implemented in GNAT when the qualifier was originally
27314 introduced in Ada 2005.
27316 RM References: 6.03.01 (16/2)
27319 @geindex AI-0046 (Ada 2012 feature)
27325 @emph{AI-0046 Null exclusion match for full conformance (2010-07-17)}
27327 For full conformance, in the case of access parameters, the null exclusion
27328 must match (either both or neither must have @code{not null}).
27330 RM References: 6.03.02 (18)
27333 @geindex AI-0118 (Ada 2012 feature)
27339 @emph{AI-0118 The association of parameter associations (0000-00-00)}
27341 This AI clarifies the rules for named associations in subprogram calls and
27342 generic instantiations. The rules have been in place since Ada 83.
27344 RM References: 6.04.01 (2) 12.03 (9)
27347 @geindex AI-0196 (Ada 2012 feature)
27353 @emph{AI-0196 Null exclusion tests for out parameters (0000-00-00)}
27355 Null exclusion checks are not made for @code{out} parameters when
27356 evaluating the actual parameters. GNAT has never generated these checks.
27358 RM References: 6.04.01 (13)
27361 @geindex AI-0015 (Ada 2012 feature)
27367 @emph{AI-0015 Constant return objects (0000-00-00)}
27369 The return object declared in an @emph{extended_return_statement} may be
27370 declared constant. This was always intended, and GNAT has always allowed it.
27372 RM References: 6.05 (2.1/2) 3.03 (10/2) 3.03 (21) 6.05 (5/2)
27376 @geindex AI-0032 (Ada 2012 feature)
27382 @emph{AI-0032 Extended return for class-wide functions (0000-00-00)}
27384 If a function returns a class-wide type, the object of an extended return
27385 statement can be declared with a specific type that is covered by the class-
27386 wide type. This has been implemented in GNAT since the introduction of
27387 extended returns. Note AI-0103 complements this AI by imposing matching
27388 rules for constrained return types.
27390 RM References: 6.05 (5.2/2) 6.05 (5.3/2) 6.05 (5.6/2) 6.05 (5.8/2)
27394 @geindex AI-0103 (Ada 2012 feature)
27400 @emph{AI-0103 Static matching for extended return (2010-07-23)}
27402 If the return subtype of a function is an elementary type or a constrained
27403 type, the subtype indication in an extended return statement must match
27404 statically this return subtype.
27406 RM References: 6.05 (5.2/2)
27409 @geindex AI-0058 (Ada 2012 feature)
27415 @emph{AI-0058 Abnormal completion of an extended return (0000-00-00)}
27417 The RM had some incorrect wording implying wrong treatment of abnormal
27418 completion in an extended return. GNAT has always implemented the intended
27419 correct semantics as described by this AI.
27421 RM References: 6.05 (22/2)
27424 @geindex AI-0050 (Ada 2012 feature)
27430 @emph{AI-0050 Raising Constraint_Error early for function call (0000-00-00)}
27432 The implementation permissions for raising @code{Constraint_Error} early on a function call
27433 when it was clear an exception would be raised were over-permissive and allowed
27434 mishandling of discriminants in some cases. GNAT did
27435 not take advantage of these incorrect permissions in any case.
27437 RM References: 6.05 (24/2)
27440 @geindex AI-0125 (Ada 2012 feature)
27446 @emph{AI-0125 Nonoverridable operations of an ancestor (2010-09-28)}
27448 In Ada 2012, the declaration of a primitive operation of a type extension
27449 or private extension can also override an inherited primitive that is not
27450 visible at the point of this declaration.
27452 RM References: 7.03.01 (6) 8.03 (23) 8.03.01 (5/2) 8.03.01 (6/2)
27455 @geindex AI-0062 (Ada 2012 feature)
27461 @emph{AI-0062 Null exclusions and deferred constants (0000-00-00)}
27463 A full constant may have a null exclusion even if its associated deferred
27464 constant does not. GNAT has always allowed this.
27466 RM References: 7.04 (6/2) 7.04 (7.1/2)
27469 @geindex AI-0178 (Ada 2012 feature)
27475 @emph{AI-0178 Incomplete views are limited (0000-00-00)}
27477 This AI clarifies the role of incomplete views and plugs an omission in the
27478 RM. GNAT always correctly restricted the use of incomplete views and types.
27480 RM References: 7.05 (3/2) 7.05 (6/2)
27483 @geindex AI-0087 (Ada 2012 feature)
27489 @emph{AI-0087 Actual for formal nonlimited derived type (2010-07-15)}
27491 The actual for a formal nonlimited derived type cannot be limited. In
27492 particular, a formal derived type that extends a limited interface but which
27493 is not explicitly limited cannot be instantiated with a limited type.
27495 RM References: 7.05 (5/2) 12.05.01 (5.1/2)
27498 @geindex AI-0099 (Ada 2012 feature)
27504 @emph{AI-0099 Tag determines whether finalization needed (0000-00-00)}
27506 This AI clarifies that 'needs finalization' is part of dynamic semantics,
27507 and therefore depends on the run-time characteristics of an object (i.e. its
27508 tag) and not on its nominal type. As the AI indicates: "we do not expect
27509 this to affect any implementation'@w{'}.
27511 RM References: 7.06.01 (6) 7.06.01 (7) 7.06.01 (8) 7.06.01 (9/2)
27514 @geindex AI-0064 (Ada 2012 feature)
27520 @emph{AI-0064 Redundant finalization rule (0000-00-00)}
27522 This is an editorial change only. The intended behavior is already checked
27523 by an existing ACATS test, which GNAT has always executed correctly.
27525 RM References: 7.06.01 (17.1/1)
27528 @geindex AI-0026 (Ada 2012 feature)
27534 @emph{AI-0026 Missing rules for Unchecked_Union (2010-07-07)}
27536 Record representation clauses concerning Unchecked_Union types cannot mention
27537 the discriminant of the type. The type of a component declared in the variant
27538 part of an Unchecked_Union cannot be controlled, have controlled components,
27539 nor have protected or task parts. If an Unchecked_Union type is declared
27540 within the body of a generic unit or its descendants, then the type of a
27541 component declared in the variant part cannot be a formal private type or a
27542 formal private extension declared within the same generic unit.
27544 RM References: 7.06 (9.4/2) B.03.03 (9/2) B.03.03 (10/2)
27547 @geindex AI-0205 (Ada 2012 feature)
27553 @emph{AI-0205 Extended return declares visible name (0000-00-00)}
27555 This AI corrects a simple omission in the RM. Return objects have always
27556 been visible within an extended return statement.
27558 RM References: 8.03 (17)
27561 @geindex AI-0042 (Ada 2012 feature)
27567 @emph{AI-0042 Overriding versus implemented-by (0000-00-00)}
27569 This AI fixes a wording gap in the RM. An operation of a synchronized
27570 interface can be implemented by a protected or task entry, but the abstract
27571 operation is not being overridden in the usual sense, and it must be stated
27572 separately that this implementation is legal. This has always been the case
27575 RM References: 9.01 (9.2/2) 9.04 (11.1/2)
27578 @geindex AI-0030 (Ada 2012 feature)
27584 @emph{AI-0030 Requeue on synchronized interfaces (2010-07-19)}
27586 Requeue is permitted to a protected, synchronized or task interface primitive
27587 providing it is known that the overriding operation is an entry. Otherwise
27588 the requeue statement has the same effect as a procedure call. Use of pragma
27589 @code{Implemented} provides a way to impose a static requirement on the
27590 overriding operation by adhering to one of the implementation kinds: entry,
27591 protected procedure or any of the above.
27593 RM References: 9.05 (9) 9.05.04 (2) 9.05.04 (3) 9.05.04 (5)
27594 9.05.04 (6) 9.05.04 (7) 9.05.04 (12)
27597 @geindex AI-0201 (Ada 2012 feature)
27603 @emph{AI-0201 Independence of atomic object components (2010-07-22)}
27605 If an Atomic object has a pragma @code{Pack} or a @code{Component_Size}
27606 attribute, then individual components may not be addressable by independent
27607 tasks. However, if the representation clause has no effect (is confirming),
27608 then independence is not compromised. Furthermore, in GNAT, specification of
27609 other appropriately addressable component sizes (e.g. 16 for 8-bit
27610 characters) also preserves independence. GNAT now gives very clear warnings
27611 both for the declaration of such a type, and for any assignment to its components.
27613 RM References: 9.10 (1/3) C.06 (22/2) C.06 (23/2)
27616 @geindex AI-0009 (Ada 2012 feature)
27622 @emph{AI-0009 Pragma Independent[_Components] (2010-07-23)}
27624 This AI introduces the new pragmas @code{Independent} and
27625 @code{Independent_Components},
27626 which control guaranteeing independence of access to objects and components.
27627 The AI also requires independence not unaffected by confirming rep clauses.
27629 RM References: 9.10 (1) 13.01 (15/1) 13.02 (9) 13.03 (13) C.06 (2)
27630 C.06 (4) C.06 (6) C.06 (9) C.06 (13) C.06 (14)
27633 @geindex AI-0072 (Ada 2012 feature)
27639 @emph{AI-0072 Task signalling using 'Terminated (0000-00-00)}
27641 This AI clarifies that task signalling for reading @code{'Terminated} only
27642 occurs if the result is True. GNAT semantics has always been consistent with
27643 this notion of task signalling.
27645 RM References: 9.10 (6.1/1)
27648 @geindex AI-0108 (Ada 2012 feature)
27654 @emph{AI-0108 Limited incomplete view and discriminants (0000-00-00)}
27656 This AI confirms that an incomplete type from a limited view does not have
27657 discriminants. This has always been the case in GNAT.
27659 RM References: 10.01.01 (12.3/2)
27662 @geindex AI-0129 (Ada 2012 feature)
27668 @emph{AI-0129 Limited views and incomplete types (0000-00-00)}
27670 This AI clarifies the description of limited views: a limited view of a
27671 package includes only one view of a type that has an incomplete declaration
27672 and a full declaration (there is no possible ambiguity in a client package).
27673 This AI also fixes an omission: a nested package in the private part has no
27674 limited view. GNAT always implemented this correctly.
27676 RM References: 10.01.01 (12.2/2) 10.01.01 (12.3/2)
27679 @geindex AI-0077 (Ada 2012 feature)
27685 @emph{AI-0077 Limited withs and scope of declarations (0000-00-00)}
27687 This AI clarifies that a declaration does not include a context clause,
27688 and confirms that it is illegal to have a context in which both a limited
27689 and a nonlimited view of a package are accessible. Such double visibility
27690 was always rejected by GNAT.
27692 RM References: 10.01.02 (12/2) 10.01.02 (21/2) 10.01.02 (22/2)
27695 @geindex AI-0122 (Ada 2012 feature)
27701 @emph{AI-0122 Private with and children of generics (0000-00-00)}
27703 This AI clarifies the visibility of private children of generic units within
27704 instantiations of a parent. GNAT has always handled this correctly.
27706 RM References: 10.01.02 (12/2)
27709 @geindex AI-0040 (Ada 2012 feature)
27715 @emph{AI-0040 Limited with clauses on descendant (0000-00-00)}
27717 This AI confirms that a limited with clause in a child unit cannot name
27718 an ancestor of the unit. This has always been checked in GNAT.
27720 RM References: 10.01.02 (20/2)
27723 @geindex AI-0132 (Ada 2012 feature)
27729 @emph{AI-0132 Placement of library unit pragmas (0000-00-00)}
27731 This AI fills a gap in the description of library unit pragmas. The pragma
27732 clearly must apply to a library unit, even if it does not carry the name
27733 of the enclosing unit. GNAT has always enforced the required check.
27735 RM References: 10.01.05 (7)
27738 @geindex AI-0034 (Ada 2012 feature)
27744 @emph{AI-0034 Categorization of limited views (0000-00-00)}
27746 The RM makes certain limited with clauses illegal because of categorization
27747 considerations, when the corresponding normal with would be legal. This is
27748 not intended, and GNAT has always implemented the recommended behavior.
27750 RM References: 10.02.01 (11/1) 10.02.01 (17/2)
27753 @geindex AI-0035 (Ada 2012 feature)
27759 @emph{AI-0035 Inconsistencies with Pure units (0000-00-00)}
27761 This AI remedies some inconsistencies in the legality rules for Pure units.
27762 Derived access types are legal in a pure unit (on the assumption that the
27763 rule for a zero storage pool size has been enforced on the ancestor type).
27764 The rules are enforced in generic instances and in subunits. GNAT has always
27765 implemented the recommended behavior.
27767 RM References: 10.02.01 (15.1/2) 10.02.01 (15.4/2) 10.02.01 (15.5/2) 10.02.01 (17/2)
27770 @geindex AI-0219 (Ada 2012 feature)
27776 @emph{AI-0219 Pure permissions and limited parameters (2010-05-25)}
27778 This AI refines the rules for the cases with limited parameters which do not
27779 allow the implementations to omit 'redundant'. GNAT now properly conforms
27780 to the requirements of this binding interpretation.
27782 RM References: 10.02.01 (18/2)
27785 @geindex AI-0043 (Ada 2012 feature)
27791 @emph{AI-0043 Rules about raising exceptions (0000-00-00)}
27793 This AI covers various omissions in the RM regarding the raising of
27794 exceptions. GNAT has always implemented the intended semantics.
27796 RM References: 11.04.01 (10.1/2) 11 (2)
27799 @geindex AI-0200 (Ada 2012 feature)
27805 @emph{AI-0200 Mismatches in formal package declarations (0000-00-00)}
27807 This AI plugs a gap in the RM which appeared to allow some obviously intended
27808 illegal instantiations. GNAT has never allowed these instantiations.
27810 RM References: 12.07 (16)
27813 @geindex AI-0112 (Ada 2012 feature)
27819 @emph{AI-0112 Detection of duplicate pragmas (2010-07-24)}
27821 This AI concerns giving names to various representation aspects, but the
27822 practical effect is simply to make the use of duplicate
27823 @code{Atomic[_Components]},
27824 @code{Volatile[_Components]}, and
27825 @code{Independent[_Components]} pragmas illegal, and GNAT
27826 now performs this required check.
27828 RM References: 13.01 (8)
27831 @geindex AI-0106 (Ada 2012 feature)
27837 @emph{AI-0106 No representation pragmas on generic formals (0000-00-00)}
27839 The RM appeared to allow representation pragmas on generic formal parameters,
27840 but this was not intended, and GNAT has never permitted this usage.
27842 RM References: 13.01 (9.1/1)
27845 @geindex AI-0012 (Ada 2012 feature)
27851 @emph{AI-0012 Pack/Component_Size for aliased/atomic (2010-07-15)}
27853 It is now illegal to give an inappropriate component size or a pragma
27854 @code{Pack} that attempts to change the component size in the case of atomic
27855 or aliased components. Previously GNAT ignored such an attempt with a
27858 RM References: 13.02 (6.1/2) 13.02 (7) C.06 (10) C.06 (11) C.06 (21)
27861 @geindex AI-0039 (Ada 2012 feature)
27867 @emph{AI-0039 Stream attributes cannot be dynamic (0000-00-00)}
27869 The RM permitted the use of dynamic expressions (such as @code{ptr.all})`
27870 for stream attributes, but these were never useful and are now illegal. GNAT
27871 has always regarded such expressions as illegal.
27873 RM References: 13.03 (4) 13.03 (6) 13.13.02 (38/2)
27876 @geindex AI-0095 (Ada 2012 feature)
27882 @emph{AI-0095 Address of intrinsic subprograms (0000-00-00)}
27884 The prefix of @code{'Address} cannot statically denote a subprogram with
27885 convention @code{Intrinsic}. The use of the @code{Address} attribute raises
27886 @code{Program_Error} if the prefix denotes a subprogram with convention
27889 RM References: 13.03 (11/1)
27892 @geindex AI-0116 (Ada 2012 feature)
27898 @emph{AI-0116 Alignment of class-wide objects (0000-00-00)}
27900 This AI requires that the alignment of a class-wide object be no greater
27901 than the alignment of any type in the class. GNAT has always followed this
27904 RM References: 13.03 (29) 13.11 (16)
27907 @geindex AI-0146 (Ada 2012 feature)
27913 @emph{AI-0146 Type invariants (2009-09-21)}
27915 Type invariants may be specified for private types using the aspect notation.
27916 Aspect @code{Type_Invariant} may be specified for any private type,
27917 @code{Type_Invariant'Class} can
27918 only be specified for tagged types, and is inherited by any descendent of the
27919 tagged types. The invariant is a boolean expression that is tested for being
27920 true in the following situations: conversions to the private type, object
27921 declarations for the private type that are default initialized, and
27922 [@strong{in}] @strong{out}
27923 parameters and returned result on return from any primitive operation for
27924 the type that is visible to a client.
27925 GNAT defines the synonyms @code{Invariant} for @code{Type_Invariant} and
27926 @code{Invariant'Class} for @code{Type_Invariant'Class}.
27928 RM References: 13.03.03 (00)
27931 @geindex AI-0078 (Ada 2012 feature)
27937 @emph{AI-0078 Relax Unchecked_Conversion alignment rules (0000-00-00)}
27939 In Ada 2012, compilers are required to support unchecked conversion where the
27940 target alignment is a multiple of the source alignment. GNAT always supported
27941 this case (and indeed all cases of differing alignments, doing copies where
27942 required if the alignment was reduced).
27944 RM References: 13.09 (7)
27947 @geindex AI-0195 (Ada 2012 feature)
27953 @emph{AI-0195 Invalid value handling is implementation defined (2010-07-03)}
27955 The handling of invalid values is now designated to be implementation
27956 defined. This is a documentation change only, requiring Annex M in the GNAT
27957 Reference Manual to document this handling.
27958 In GNAT, checks for invalid values are made
27959 only when necessary to avoid erroneous behavior. Operations like assignments
27960 which cannot cause erroneous behavior ignore the possibility of invalid
27961 values and do not do a check. The date given above applies only to the
27962 documentation change, this behavior has always been implemented by GNAT.
27964 RM References: 13.09.01 (10)
27967 @geindex AI-0193 (Ada 2012 feature)
27973 @emph{AI-0193 Alignment of allocators (2010-09-16)}
27975 This AI introduces a new attribute @code{Max_Alignment_For_Allocation},
27976 analogous to @code{Max_Size_In_Storage_Elements}, but for alignment instead
27979 RM References: 13.11 (16) 13.11 (21) 13.11.01 (0) 13.11.01 (1)
27980 13.11.01 (2) 13.11.01 (3)
27983 @geindex AI-0177 (Ada 2012 feature)
27989 @emph{AI-0177 Parameterized expressions (2010-07-10)}
27991 The new Ada 2012 notion of parameterized expressions is implemented. The form
27995 function-specification is (expression)
27998 This is exactly equivalent to the
27999 corresponding function body that returns the expression, but it can appear
28000 in a package spec. Note that the expression must be parenthesized.
28002 RM References: 13.11.01 (3/2)
28005 @geindex AI-0033 (Ada 2012 feature)
28011 @emph{AI-0033 Attach/Interrupt_Handler in generic (2010-07-24)}
28013 Neither of these two pragmas may appear within a generic template, because
28014 the generic might be instantiated at other than the library level.
28016 RM References: 13.11.02 (16) C.03.01 (7/2) C.03.01 (8/2)
28019 @geindex AI-0161 (Ada 2012 feature)
28025 @emph{AI-0161 Restriction No_Default_Stream_Attributes (2010-09-11)}
28027 A new restriction @code{No_Default_Stream_Attributes} prevents the use of any
28028 of the default stream attributes for elementary types. If this restriction is
28029 in force, then it is necessary to provide explicit subprograms for any
28030 stream attributes used.
28032 RM References: 13.12.01 (4/2) 13.13.02 (40/2) 13.13.02 (52/2)
28035 @geindex AI-0194 (Ada 2012 feature)
28041 @emph{AI-0194 Value of Stream_Size attribute (0000-00-00)}
28043 The @code{Stream_Size} attribute returns the default number of bits in the
28044 stream representation of the given type.
28045 This value is not affected by the presence
28046 of stream subprogram attributes for the type. GNAT has always implemented
28047 this interpretation.
28049 RM References: 13.13.02 (1.2/2)
28052 @geindex AI-0109 (Ada 2012 feature)
28058 @emph{AI-0109 Redundant check in S'Class'Input (0000-00-00)}
28060 This AI is an editorial change only. It removes the need for a tag check
28061 that can never fail.
28063 RM References: 13.13.02 (34/2)
28066 @geindex AI-0007 (Ada 2012 feature)
28072 @emph{AI-0007 Stream read and private scalar types (0000-00-00)}
28074 The RM as written appeared to limit the possibilities of declaring read
28075 attribute procedures for private scalar types. This limitation was not
28076 intended, and has never been enforced by GNAT.
28078 RM References: 13.13.02 (50/2) 13.13.02 (51/2)
28081 @geindex AI-0065 (Ada 2012 feature)
28087 @emph{AI-0065 Remote access types and external streaming (0000-00-00)}
28089 This AI clarifies the fact that all remote access types support external
28090 streaming. This fixes an obvious oversight in the definition of the
28091 language, and GNAT always implemented the intended correct rules.
28093 RM References: 13.13.02 (52/2)
28096 @geindex AI-0019 (Ada 2012 feature)
28102 @emph{AI-0019 Freezing of primitives for tagged types (0000-00-00)}
28104 The RM suggests that primitive subprograms of a specific tagged type are
28105 frozen when the tagged type is frozen. This would be an incompatible change
28106 and is not intended. GNAT has never attempted this kind of freezing and its
28107 behavior is consistent with the recommendation of this AI.
28109 RM References: 13.14 (2) 13.14 (3/1) 13.14 (8.1/1) 13.14 (10) 13.14 (14) 13.14 (15.1/2)
28112 @geindex AI-0017 (Ada 2012 feature)
28118 @emph{AI-0017 Freezing and incomplete types (0000-00-00)}
28120 So-called 'Taft-amendment types' (i.e., types that are completed in package
28121 bodies) are not frozen by the occurrence of bodies in the
28122 enclosing declarative part. GNAT always implemented this properly.
28124 RM References: 13.14 (3/1)
28127 @geindex AI-0060 (Ada 2012 feature)
28133 @emph{AI-0060 Extended definition of remote access types (0000-00-00)}
28135 This AI extends the definition of remote access types to include access
28136 to limited, synchronized, protected or task class-wide interface types.
28137 GNAT already implemented this extension.
28139 RM References: A (4) E.02.02 (9/1) E.02.02 (9.2/1) E.02.02 (14/2) E.02.02 (18)
28142 @geindex AI-0114 (Ada 2012 feature)
28148 @emph{AI-0114 Classification of letters (0000-00-00)}
28150 The code points 170 (@code{FEMININE ORDINAL INDICATOR}),
28151 181 (@code{MICRO SIGN}), and
28152 186 (@code{MASCULINE ORDINAL INDICATOR}) are technically considered
28153 lower case letters by Unicode.
28154 However, they are not allowed in identifiers, and they
28155 return @code{False} to @code{Ada.Characters.Handling.Is_Letter/Is_Lower}.
28156 This behavior is consistent with that defined in Ada 95.
28158 RM References: A.03.02 (59) A.04.06 (7)
28161 @geindex AI-0185 (Ada 2012 feature)
28167 @emph{AI-0185 Ada.Wide_[Wide_]Characters.Handling (2010-07-06)}
28169 Two new packages @code{Ada.Wide_[Wide_]Characters.Handling} provide
28170 classification functions for @code{Wide_Character} and
28171 @code{Wide_Wide_Character}, as well as providing
28172 case folding routines for @code{Wide_[Wide_]Character} and
28173 @code{Wide_[Wide_]String}.
28175 RM References: A.03.05 (0) A.03.06 (0)
28178 @geindex AI-0031 (Ada 2012 feature)
28184 @emph{AI-0031 Add From parameter to Find_Token (2010-07-25)}
28186 A new version of @code{Find_Token} is added to all relevant string packages,
28187 with an extra parameter @code{From}. Instead of starting at the first
28188 character of the string, the search for a matching Token starts at the
28189 character indexed by the value of @code{From}.
28190 These procedures are available in all versions of Ada
28191 but if used in versions earlier than Ada 2012 they will generate a warning
28192 that an Ada 2012 subprogram is being used.
28194 RM References: A.04.03 (16) A.04.03 (67) A.04.03 (68/1) A.04.04 (51)
28198 @geindex AI-0056 (Ada 2012 feature)
28204 @emph{AI-0056 Index on null string returns zero (0000-00-00)}
28206 The wording in the Ada 2005 RM implied an incompatible handling of the
28207 @code{Index} functions, resulting in raising an exception instead of
28208 returning zero in some situations.
28209 This was not intended and has been corrected.
28210 GNAT always returned zero, and is thus consistent with this AI.
28212 RM References: A.04.03 (56.2/2) A.04.03 (58.5/2)
28215 @geindex AI-0137 (Ada 2012 feature)
28221 @emph{AI-0137 String encoding package (2010-03-25)}
28223 The packages @code{Ada.Strings.UTF_Encoding}, together with its child
28224 packages, @code{Conversions}, @code{Strings}, @code{Wide_Strings},
28225 and @code{Wide_Wide_Strings} have been
28226 implemented. These packages (whose documentation can be found in the spec
28227 files @code{a-stuten.ads}, @code{a-suenco.ads}, @code{a-suenst.ads},
28228 @code{a-suewst.ads}, @code{a-suezst.ads}) allow encoding and decoding of
28229 @code{String}, @code{Wide_String}, and @code{Wide_Wide_String}
28230 values using UTF coding schemes (including UTF-8, UTF-16LE, UTF-16BE, and
28231 UTF-16), as well as conversions between the different UTF encodings. With
28232 the exception of @code{Wide_Wide_Strings}, these packages are available in
28233 Ada 95 and Ada 2005 mode as well as Ada 2012 mode.
28234 The @code{Wide_Wide_Strings} package
28235 is available in Ada 2005 mode as well as Ada 2012 mode (but not in Ada 95
28236 mode since it uses @code{Wide_Wide_Character}).
28238 RM References: A.04.11
28241 @geindex AI-0038 (Ada 2012 feature)
28247 @emph{AI-0038 Minor errors in Text_IO (0000-00-00)}
28249 These are minor errors in the description on three points. The intent on
28250 all these points has always been clear, and GNAT has always implemented the
28251 correct intended semantics.
28253 RM References: A.10.05 (37) A.10.07 (8/1) A.10.07 (10) A.10.07 (12) A.10.08 (10) A.10.08 (24)
28256 @geindex AI-0044 (Ada 2012 feature)
28262 @emph{AI-0044 Restrictions on container instantiations (0000-00-00)}
28264 This AI places restrictions on allowed instantiations of generic containers.
28265 These restrictions are not checked by the compiler, so there is nothing to
28266 change in the implementation. This affects only the RM documentation.
28268 RM References: A.18 (4/2) A.18.02 (231/2) A.18.03 (145/2) A.18.06 (56/2) A.18.08 (66/2) A.18.09 (79/2) A.18.26 (5/2) A.18.26 (9/2)
28271 @geindex AI-0127 (Ada 2012 feature)
28277 @emph{AI-0127 Adding Locale Capabilities (2010-09-29)}
28279 This package provides an interface for identifying the current locale.
28281 RM References: A.19 A.19.01 A.19.02 A.19.03 A.19.05 A.19.06
28282 A.19.07 A.19.08 A.19.09 A.19.10 A.19.11 A.19.12 A.19.13
28285 @geindex AI-0002 (Ada 2012 feature)
28291 @emph{AI-0002 Export C with unconstrained arrays (0000-00-00)}
28293 The compiler is not required to support exporting an Ada subprogram with
28294 convention C if there are parameters or a return type of an unconstrained
28295 array type (such as @code{String}). GNAT allows such declarations but
28296 generates warnings. It is possible, but complicated, to write the
28297 corresponding C code and certainly such code would be specific to GNAT and
28300 RM References: B.01 (17) B.03 (62) B.03 (71.1/2)
28303 @geindex AI05-0216 (Ada 2012 feature)
28309 @emph{AI-0216 No_Task_Hierarchy forbids local tasks (0000-00-00)}
28311 It is clearly the intention that @code{No_Task_Hierarchy} is intended to
28312 forbid tasks declared locally within subprograms, or functions returning task
28313 objects, and that is the implementation that GNAT has always provided.
28314 However the language in the RM was not sufficiently clear on this point.
28315 Thus this is a documentation change in the RM only.
28317 RM References: D.07 (3/3)
28320 @geindex AI-0211 (Ada 2012 feature)
28326 @emph{AI-0211 No_Relative_Delays forbids Set_Handler use (2010-07-09)}
28328 The restriction @code{No_Relative_Delays} forbids any calls to the subprogram
28329 @code{Ada.Real_Time.Timing_Events.Set_Handler}.
28331 RM References: D.07 (5) D.07 (10/2) D.07 (10.4/2) D.07 (10.7/2)
28334 @geindex AI-0190 (Ada 2012 feature)
28340 @emph{AI-0190 pragma Default_Storage_Pool (2010-09-15)}
28342 This AI introduces a new pragma @code{Default_Storage_Pool}, which can be
28343 used to control storage pools globally.
28344 In particular, you can force every access
28345 type that is used for allocation (@strong{new}) to have an explicit storage pool,
28346 or you can declare a pool globally to be used for all access types that lack
28349 RM References: D.07 (8)
28352 @geindex AI-0189 (Ada 2012 feature)
28358 @emph{AI-0189 No_Allocators_After_Elaboration (2010-01-23)}
28360 This AI introduces a new restriction @code{No_Allocators_After_Elaboration},
28361 which says that no dynamic allocation will occur once elaboration is
28363 In general this requires a run-time check, which is not required, and which
28364 GNAT does not attempt. But the static cases of allocators in a task body or
28365 in the body of the main program are detected and flagged at compile or bind
28368 RM References: D.07 (19.1/2) H.04 (23.3/2)
28371 @geindex AI-0171 (Ada 2012 feature)
28377 @emph{AI-0171 Pragma CPU and Ravenscar Profile (2010-09-24)}
28379 A new package @code{System.Multiprocessors} is added, together with the
28380 definition of pragma @code{CPU} for controlling task affinity. A new no
28381 dependence restriction, on @code{System.Multiprocessors.Dispatching_Domains},
28382 is added to the Ravenscar profile.
28384 RM References: D.13.01 (4/2) D.16
28387 @geindex AI-0210 (Ada 2012 feature)
28393 @emph{AI-0210 Correct Timing_Events metric (0000-00-00)}
28395 This is a documentation only issue regarding wording of metric requirements,
28396 that does not affect the implementation of the compiler.
28398 RM References: D.15 (24/2)
28401 @geindex AI-0206 (Ada 2012 feature)
28407 @emph{AI-0206 Remote types packages and preelaborate (2010-07-24)}
28409 Remote types packages are now allowed to depend on preelaborated packages.
28410 This was formerly considered illegal.
28412 RM References: E.02.02 (6)
28415 @geindex AI-0152 (Ada 2012 feature)
28421 @emph{AI-0152 Restriction No_Anonymous_Allocators (2010-09-08)}
28423 Restriction @code{No_Anonymous_Allocators} prevents the use of allocators
28424 where the type of the returned value is an anonymous access type.
28426 RM References: H.04 (8/1)
28429 @node Obsolescent Features,Compatibility and Porting Guide,Implementation of Ada 2012 Features,Top
28430 @anchor{gnat_rm/obsolescent_features id1}@anchor{42a}@anchor{gnat_rm/obsolescent_features doc}@anchor{42b}@anchor{gnat_rm/obsolescent_features obsolescent-features}@anchor{15}
28431 @chapter Obsolescent Features
28434 This chapter describes features that are provided by GNAT, but are
28435 considered obsolescent since there are preferred ways of achieving
28436 the same effect. These features are provided solely for historical
28437 compatibility purposes.
28440 * pragma No_Run_Time::
28441 * pragma Ravenscar::
28442 * pragma Restricted_Run_Time::
28443 * pragma Task_Info::
28444 * package System.Task_Info (s-tasinf.ads): package System Task_Info s-tasinf ads.
28448 @node pragma No_Run_Time,pragma Ravenscar,,Obsolescent Features
28449 @anchor{gnat_rm/obsolescent_features id2}@anchor{42c}@anchor{gnat_rm/obsolescent_features pragma-no-run-time}@anchor{42d}
28450 @section pragma No_Run_Time
28453 The pragma @code{No_Run_Time} is used to achieve an affect similar
28454 to the use of the "Zero Foot Print" configurable run time, but without
28455 requiring a specially configured run time. The result of using this
28456 pragma, which must be used for all units in a partition, is to restrict
28457 the use of any language features requiring run-time support code. The
28458 preferred usage is to use an appropriately configured run-time that
28459 includes just those features that are to be made accessible.
28461 @node pragma Ravenscar,pragma Restricted_Run_Time,pragma No_Run_Time,Obsolescent Features
28462 @anchor{gnat_rm/obsolescent_features id3}@anchor{42e}@anchor{gnat_rm/obsolescent_features pragma-ravenscar}@anchor{42f}
28463 @section pragma Ravenscar
28466 The pragma @code{Ravenscar} has exactly the same effect as pragma
28467 @code{Profile (Ravenscar)}. The latter usage is preferred since it
28468 is part of the new Ada 2005 standard.
28470 @node pragma Restricted_Run_Time,pragma Task_Info,pragma Ravenscar,Obsolescent Features
28471 @anchor{gnat_rm/obsolescent_features pragma-restricted-run-time}@anchor{430}@anchor{gnat_rm/obsolescent_features id4}@anchor{431}
28472 @section pragma Restricted_Run_Time
28475 The pragma @code{Restricted_Run_Time} has exactly the same effect as
28476 pragma @code{Profile (Restricted)}. The latter usage is
28477 preferred since the Ada 2005 pragma @code{Profile} is intended for
28478 this kind of implementation dependent addition.
28480 @node pragma Task_Info,package System Task_Info s-tasinf ads,pragma Restricted_Run_Time,Obsolescent Features
28481 @anchor{gnat_rm/obsolescent_features pragma-task-info}@anchor{432}@anchor{gnat_rm/obsolescent_features id5}@anchor{433}
28482 @section pragma Task_Info
28485 The functionality provided by pragma @code{Task_Info} is now part of the
28486 Ada language. The @code{CPU} aspect and the package
28487 @code{System.Multiprocessors} offer a less system-dependent way to specify
28488 task affinity or to query the number of processsors.
28493 pragma Task_Info (EXPRESSION);
28496 This pragma appears within a task definition (like pragma
28497 @code{Priority}) and applies to the task in which it appears. The
28498 argument must be of type @code{System.Task_Info.Task_Info_Type}.
28499 The @code{Task_Info} pragma provides system dependent control over
28500 aspects of tasking implementation, for example, the ability to map
28501 tasks to specific processors. For details on the facilities available
28502 for the version of GNAT that you are using, see the documentation
28503 in the spec of package System.Task_Info in the runtime
28506 @node package System Task_Info s-tasinf ads,,pragma Task_Info,Obsolescent Features
28507 @anchor{gnat_rm/obsolescent_features package-system-task-info}@anchor{434}@anchor{gnat_rm/obsolescent_features package-system-task-info-s-tasinf-ads}@anchor{435}
28508 @section package System.Task_Info (@code{s-tasinf.ads})
28511 This package provides target dependent functionality that is used
28512 to support the @code{Task_Info} pragma. The predefined Ada package
28513 @code{System.Multiprocessors} and the @code{CPU} aspect now provide a
28514 standard replacement for GNAT's @code{Task_Info} functionality.
28516 @node Compatibility and Porting Guide,GNU Free Documentation License,Obsolescent Features,Top
28517 @anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide compatibility-and-porting-guide}@anchor{16}@anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide doc}@anchor{436}@anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide id1}@anchor{437}
28518 @chapter Compatibility and Porting Guide
28521 This chapter presents some guidelines for developing portable Ada code,
28522 describes the compatibility issues that may arise between
28523 GNAT and other Ada compilation systems (including those for Ada 83),
28524 and shows how GNAT can expedite porting
28525 applications developed in other Ada environments.
28528 * Writing Portable Fixed-Point Declarations::
28529 * Compatibility with Ada 83::
28530 * Compatibility between Ada 95 and Ada 2005::
28531 * Implementation-dependent characteristics::
28532 * Compatibility with Other Ada Systems::
28533 * Representation Clauses::
28534 * Compatibility with HP Ada 83::
28538 @node Writing Portable Fixed-Point Declarations,Compatibility with Ada 83,,Compatibility and Porting Guide
28539 @anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide id2}@anchor{438}@anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide writing-portable-fixed-point-declarations}@anchor{439}
28540 @section Writing Portable Fixed-Point Declarations
28543 The Ada Reference Manual gives an implementation freedom to choose bounds
28544 that are narrower by @code{Small} from the given bounds.
28545 For example, if we write
28548 type F1 is delta 1.0 range -128.0 .. +128.0;
28551 then the implementation is allowed to choose -128.0 .. +127.0 if it
28552 likes, but is not required to do so.
28554 This leads to possible portability problems, so let's have a closer
28555 look at this, and figure out how to avoid these problems.
28557 First, why does this freedom exist, and why would an implementation
28558 take advantage of it? To answer this, take a closer look at the type
28559 declaration for @code{F1} above. If the compiler uses the given bounds,
28560 it would need 9 bits to hold the largest positive value (and typically
28561 that means 16 bits on all machines). But if the implementation chooses
28562 the +127.0 bound then it can fit values of the type in 8 bits.
28564 Why not make the user write +127.0 if that's what is wanted?
28565 The rationale is that if you are thinking of fixed point
28566 as a kind of 'poor man's floating-point', then you don't want
28567 to be thinking about the scaled integers that are used in its
28568 representation. Let's take another example:
28571 type F2 is delta 2.0**(-15) range -1.0 .. +1.0;
28574 Looking at this declaration, it seems casually as though
28575 it should fit in 16 bits, but again that extra positive value
28576 +1.0 has the scaled integer equivalent of 2**15 which is one too
28577 big for signed 16 bits. The implementation can treat this as:
28580 type F2 is delta 2.0**(-15) range -1.0 .. +1.0-(2.0**(-15));
28583 and the Ada language design team felt that this was too annoying
28584 to require. We don't need to debate this decision at this point,
28585 since it is well established (the rule about narrowing the ranges
28588 But the important point is that an implementation is not required
28589 to do this narrowing, so we have a potential portability problem.
28590 We could imagine three types of implementation:
28596 those that narrow the range automatically if they can figure
28597 out that the narrower range will allow storage in a smaller machine unit,
28600 those that will narrow only if forced to by a @code{'Size} clause, and
28603 those that will never narrow.
28606 Now if we are language theoreticians, we can imagine a fourth
28607 approach: to narrow all the time, e.g. to treat
28610 type F3 is delta 1.0 range -10.0 .. +23.0;
28613 as though it had been written:
28616 type F3 is delta 1.0 range -9.0 .. +22.0;
28619 But although technically allowed, such a behavior would be hostile and silly,
28620 and no real compiler would do this. All real compilers will fall into one of
28621 the categories (a), (b) or (c) above.
28623 So, how do you get the compiler to do what you want? The answer is give the
28624 actual bounds you want, and then use a @code{'Small} clause and a
28625 @code{'Size} clause to absolutely pin down what the compiler does.
28626 E.g., for @code{F2} above, we will write:
28629 My_Small : constant := 2.0**(-15);
28630 My_First : constant := -1.0;
28631 My_Last : constant := +1.0 - My_Small;
28633 type F2 is delta My_Small range My_First .. My_Last;
28639 for F2'Small use my_Small;
28640 for F2'Size use 16;
28643 In practice all compilers will do the same thing here and will give you
28644 what you want, so the above declarations are fully portable. If you really
28645 want to play language lawyer and guard against ludicrous behavior by the
28646 compiler you could add
28649 Test1 : constant := 1 / Boolean'Pos (F2'First = My_First);
28650 Test2 : constant := 1 / Boolean'Pos (F2'Last = My_Last);
28653 One or other or both are allowed to be illegal if the compiler is
28654 behaving in a silly manner, but at least the silly compiler will not
28655 get away with silently messing with your (very clear) intentions.
28657 If you follow this scheme you will be guaranteed that your fixed-point
28658 types will be portable.
28660 @node Compatibility with Ada 83,Compatibility between Ada 95 and Ada 2005,Writing Portable Fixed-Point Declarations,Compatibility and Porting Guide
28661 @anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide compatibility-with-ada-83}@anchor{43a}@anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide id3}@anchor{43b}
28662 @section Compatibility with Ada 83
28665 @geindex Compatibility (between Ada 83 and Ada 95 / Ada 2005 / Ada 2012)
28667 Ada 95 and the subsequent revisions Ada 2005 and Ada 2012
28668 are highly upwards compatible with Ada 83. In
28669 particular, the design intention was that the difficulties associated
28670 with moving from Ada 83 to later versions of the standard should be no greater
28671 than those that occur when moving from one Ada 83 system to another.
28673 However, there are a number of points at which there are minor
28674 incompatibilities. The @cite{Ada 95 Annotated Reference Manual} contains
28675 full details of these issues as they relate to Ada 95,
28676 and should be consulted for a complete treatment.
28678 following subsections treat the most likely issues to be encountered.
28681 * Legal Ada 83 programs that are illegal in Ada 95::
28682 * More deterministic semantics::
28683 * Changed semantics::
28684 * Other language compatibility issues::
28688 @node Legal Ada 83 programs that are illegal in Ada 95,More deterministic semantics,,Compatibility with Ada 83
28689 @anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide id4}@anchor{43c}@anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide legal-ada-83-programs-that-are-illegal-in-ada-95}@anchor{43d}
28690 @subsection Legal Ada 83 programs that are illegal in Ada 95
28693 Some legal Ada 83 programs are illegal (i.e., they will fail to compile) in
28694 Ada 95 and later versions of the standard:
28700 @emph{Character literals}
28702 Some uses of character literals are ambiguous. Since Ada 95 has introduced
28703 @code{Wide_Character} as a new predefined character type, some uses of
28704 character literals that were legal in Ada 83 are illegal in Ada 95.
28708 for Char in 'A' .. 'Z' loop ... end loop;
28711 The problem is that 'A' and 'Z' could be from either
28712 @code{Character} or @code{Wide_Character}. The simplest correction
28713 is to make the type explicit; e.g.:
28716 for Char in Character range 'A' .. 'Z' loop ... end loop;
28720 @emph{New reserved words}
28722 The identifiers @code{abstract}, @code{aliased}, @code{protected},
28723 @code{requeue}, @code{tagged}, and @code{until} are reserved in Ada 95.
28724 Existing Ada 83 code using any of these identifiers must be edited to
28725 use some alternative name.
28728 @emph{Freezing rules}
28730 The rules in Ada 95 are slightly different with regard to the point at
28731 which entities are frozen, and representation pragmas and clauses are
28732 not permitted past the freeze point. This shows up most typically in
28733 the form of an error message complaining that a representation item
28734 appears too late, and the appropriate corrective action is to move
28735 the item nearer to the declaration of the entity to which it refers.
28737 A particular case is that representation pragmas
28738 cannot be applied to a subprogram body. If necessary, a separate subprogram
28739 declaration must be introduced to which the pragma can be applied.
28742 @emph{Optional bodies for library packages}
28744 In Ada 83, a package that did not require a package body was nevertheless
28745 allowed to have one. This lead to certain surprises in compiling large
28746 systems (situations in which the body could be unexpectedly ignored by the
28747 binder). In Ada 95, if a package does not require a body then it is not
28748 permitted to have a body. To fix this problem, simply remove a redundant
28749 body if it is empty, or, if it is non-empty, introduce a dummy declaration
28750 into the spec that makes the body required. One approach is to add a private
28751 part to the package declaration (if necessary), and define a parameterless
28752 procedure called @code{Requires_Body}, which must then be given a dummy
28753 procedure body in the package body, which then becomes required.
28754 Another approach (assuming that this does not introduce elaboration
28755 circularities) is to add an @code{Elaborate_Body} pragma to the package spec,
28756 since one effect of this pragma is to require the presence of a package body.
28759 @emph{Numeric_Error is the same exception as Constraint_Error}
28761 In Ada 95, the exception @code{Numeric_Error} is a renaming of @code{Constraint_Error}.
28762 This means that it is illegal to have separate exception handlers for
28763 the two exceptions. The fix is simply to remove the handler for the
28764 @code{Numeric_Error} case (since even in Ada 83, a compiler was free to raise
28765 @code{Constraint_Error} in place of @code{Numeric_Error} in all cases).
28768 @emph{Indefinite subtypes in generics}
28770 In Ada 83, it was permissible to pass an indefinite type (e.g, @code{String})
28771 as the actual for a generic formal private type, but then the instantiation
28772 would be illegal if there were any instances of declarations of variables
28773 of this type in the generic body. In Ada 95, to avoid this clear violation
28774 of the methodological principle known as the 'contract model',
28775 the generic declaration explicitly indicates whether
28776 or not such instantiations are permitted. If a generic formal parameter
28777 has explicit unknown discriminants, indicated by using @code{(<>)} after the
28778 subtype name, then it can be instantiated with indefinite types, but no
28779 stand-alone variables can be declared of this type. Any attempt to declare
28780 such a variable will result in an illegality at the time the generic is
28781 declared. If the @code{(<>)} notation is not used, then it is illegal
28782 to instantiate the generic with an indefinite type.
28783 This is the potential incompatibility issue when porting Ada 83 code to Ada 95.
28784 It will show up as a compile time error, and
28785 the fix is usually simply to add the @code{(<>)} to the generic declaration.
28788 @node More deterministic semantics,Changed semantics,Legal Ada 83 programs that are illegal in Ada 95,Compatibility with Ada 83
28789 @anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide more-deterministic-semantics}@anchor{43e}@anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide id5}@anchor{43f}
28790 @subsection More deterministic semantics
28799 Conversions from real types to integer types round away from 0. In Ada 83
28800 the conversion Integer(2.5) could deliver either 2 or 3 as its value. This
28801 implementation freedom was intended to support unbiased rounding in
28802 statistical applications, but in practice it interfered with portability.
28803 In Ada 95 the conversion semantics are unambiguous, and rounding away from 0
28804 is required. Numeric code may be affected by this change in semantics.
28805 Note, though, that this issue is no worse than already existed in Ada 83
28806 when porting code from one vendor to another.
28811 The Real-Time Annex introduces a set of policies that define the behavior of
28812 features that were implementation dependent in Ada 83, such as the order in
28813 which open select branches are executed.
28816 @node Changed semantics,Other language compatibility issues,More deterministic semantics,Compatibility with Ada 83
28817 @anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide id6}@anchor{440}@anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide changed-semantics}@anchor{441}
28818 @subsection Changed semantics
28821 The worst kind of incompatibility is one where a program that is legal in
28822 Ada 83 is also legal in Ada 95 but can have an effect in Ada 95 that was not
28823 possible in Ada 83. Fortunately this is extremely rare, but the one
28824 situation that you should be alert to is the change in the predefined type
28825 @code{Character} from 7-bit ASCII to 8-bit Latin-1.
28836 @emph{Range of type `@w{`}Character`@w{`}}
28838 The range of @code{Standard.Character} is now the full 256 characters
28839 of Latin-1, whereas in most Ada 83 implementations it was restricted
28840 to 128 characters. Although some of the effects of
28841 this change will be manifest in compile-time rejection of legal
28842 Ada 83 programs it is possible for a working Ada 83 program to have
28843 a different effect in Ada 95, one that was not permitted in Ada 83.
28844 As an example, the expression
28845 @code{Character'Pos(Character'Last)} returned @code{127} in Ada 83 and now
28846 delivers @code{255} as its value.
28847 In general, you should look at the logic of any
28848 character-processing Ada 83 program and see whether it needs to be adapted
28849 to work correctly with Latin-1. Note that the predefined Ada 95 API has a
28850 character handling package that may be relevant if code needs to be adapted
28851 to account for the additional Latin-1 elements.
28852 The desirable fix is to
28853 modify the program to accommodate the full character set, but in some cases
28854 it may be convenient to define a subtype or derived type of Character that
28855 covers only the restricted range.
28858 @node Other language compatibility issues,,Changed semantics,Compatibility with Ada 83
28859 @anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide other-language-compatibility-issues}@anchor{442}@anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide id7}@anchor{443}
28860 @subsection Other language compatibility issues
28867 @emph{-gnat83} switch
28869 All implementations of GNAT provide a switch that causes GNAT to operate
28870 in Ada 83 mode. In this mode, some but not all compatibility problems
28871 of the type described above are handled automatically. For example, the
28872 new reserved words introduced in Ada 95 and Ada 2005 are treated simply
28873 as identifiers as in Ada 83. However,
28874 in practice, it is usually advisable to make the necessary modifications
28875 to the program to remove the need for using this switch.
28876 See the @code{Compiling Different Versions of Ada} section in
28877 the @cite{GNAT User's Guide}.
28880 Support for removed Ada 83 pragmas and attributes
28882 A number of pragmas and attributes from Ada 83 were removed from Ada 95,
28883 generally because they were replaced by other mechanisms. Ada 95 and Ada 2005
28884 compilers are allowed, but not required, to implement these missing
28885 elements. In contrast with some other compilers, GNAT implements all
28886 such pragmas and attributes, eliminating this compatibility concern. These
28887 include @code{pragma Interface} and the floating point type attributes
28888 (@code{Emax}, @code{Mantissa}, etc.), among other items.
28891 @node Compatibility between Ada 95 and Ada 2005,Implementation-dependent characteristics,Compatibility with Ada 83,Compatibility and Porting Guide
28892 @anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide compatibility-between-ada-95-and-ada-2005}@anchor{444}@anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide id8}@anchor{445}
28893 @section Compatibility between Ada 95 and Ada 2005
28896 @geindex Compatibility between Ada 95 and Ada 2005
28898 Although Ada 2005 was designed to be upwards compatible with Ada 95, there are
28899 a number of incompatibilities. Several are enumerated below;
28900 for a complete description please see the
28901 @cite{Annotated Ada 2005 Reference Manual}, or section 9.1.1 in
28902 @cite{Rationale for Ada 2005}.
28908 @emph{New reserved words.}
28910 The words @code{interface}, @code{overriding} and @code{synchronized} are
28911 reserved in Ada 2005.
28912 A pre-Ada 2005 program that uses any of these as an identifier will be
28916 @emph{New declarations in predefined packages.}
28918 A number of packages in the predefined environment contain new declarations:
28919 @code{Ada.Exceptions}, @code{Ada.Real_Time}, @code{Ada.Strings},
28920 @code{Ada.Strings.Fixed}, @code{Ada.Strings.Bounded},
28921 @code{Ada.Strings.Unbounded}, @code{Ada.Strings.Wide_Fixed},
28922 @code{Ada.Strings.Wide_Bounded}, @code{Ada.Strings.Wide_Unbounded},
28923 @code{Ada.Tags}, @code{Ada.Text_IO}, and @code{Interfaces.C}.
28924 If an Ada 95 program does a @code{with} and @code{use} of any of these
28925 packages, the new declarations may cause name clashes.
28928 @emph{Access parameters.}
28930 A nondispatching subprogram with an access parameter cannot be renamed
28931 as a dispatching operation. This was permitted in Ada 95.
28934 @emph{Access types, discriminants, and constraints.}
28936 Rule changes in this area have led to some incompatibilities; for example,
28937 constrained subtypes of some access types are not permitted in Ada 2005.
28940 @emph{Aggregates for limited types.}
28942 The allowance of aggregates for limited types in Ada 2005 raises the
28943 possibility of ambiguities in legal Ada 95 programs, since additional types
28944 now need to be considered in expression resolution.
28947 @emph{Fixed-point multiplication and division.}
28949 Certain expressions involving '*' or '/' for a fixed-point type, which
28950 were legal in Ada 95 and invoked the predefined versions of these operations,
28952 The ambiguity may be resolved either by applying a type conversion to the
28953 expression, or by explicitly invoking the operation from package
28957 @emph{Return-by-reference types.}
28959 The Ada 95 return-by-reference mechanism has been removed. Instead, the user
28960 can declare a function returning a value from an anonymous access type.
28963 @node Implementation-dependent characteristics,Compatibility with Other Ada Systems,Compatibility between Ada 95 and Ada 2005,Compatibility and Porting Guide
28964 @anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide implementation-dependent-characteristics}@anchor{446}@anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide id9}@anchor{447}
28965 @section Implementation-dependent characteristics
28968 Although the Ada language defines the semantics of each construct as
28969 precisely as practical, in some situations (for example for reasons of
28970 efficiency, or where the effect is heavily dependent on the host or target
28971 platform) the implementation is allowed some freedom. In porting Ada 83
28972 code to GNAT, you need to be aware of whether / how the existing code
28973 exercised such implementation dependencies. Such characteristics fall into
28974 several categories, and GNAT offers specific support in assisting the
28975 transition from certain Ada 83 compilers.
28978 * Implementation-defined pragmas::
28979 * Implementation-defined attributes::
28981 * Elaboration order::
28982 * Target-specific aspects::
28986 @node Implementation-defined pragmas,Implementation-defined attributes,,Implementation-dependent characteristics
28987 @anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide implementation-defined-pragmas}@anchor{448}@anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide id10}@anchor{449}
28988 @subsection Implementation-defined pragmas
28991 Ada compilers are allowed to supplement the language-defined pragmas, and
28992 these are a potential source of non-portability. All GNAT-defined pragmas
28993 are described in @ref{7,,Implementation Defined Pragmas},
28994 and these include several that are specifically
28995 intended to correspond to other vendors' Ada 83 pragmas.
28996 For migrating from VADS, the pragma @code{Use_VADS_Size} may be useful.
28997 For compatibility with HP Ada 83, GNAT supplies the pragmas
28998 @code{Extend_System}, @code{Ident}, @code{Inline_Generic},
28999 @code{Interface_Name}, @code{Passive}, @code{Suppress_All},
29000 and @code{Volatile}.
29001 Other relevant pragmas include @code{External} and @code{Link_With}.
29002 Some vendor-specific
29003 Ada 83 pragmas (@code{Share_Generic}, @code{Subtitle}, and @code{Title}) are
29005 avoiding compiler rejection of units that contain such pragmas; they are not
29006 relevant in a GNAT context and hence are not otherwise implemented.
29008 @node Implementation-defined attributes,Libraries,Implementation-defined pragmas,Implementation-dependent characteristics
29009 @anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide id11}@anchor{44a}@anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide implementation-defined-attributes}@anchor{44b}
29010 @subsection Implementation-defined attributes
29013 Analogous to pragmas, the set of attributes may be extended by an
29014 implementation. All GNAT-defined attributes are described in
29015 @ref{8,,Implementation Defined Attributes},
29016 and these include several that are specifically intended
29017 to correspond to other vendors' Ada 83 attributes. For migrating from VADS,
29018 the attribute @code{VADS_Size} may be useful. For compatibility with HP
29019 Ada 83, GNAT supplies the attributes @code{Bit}, @code{Machine_Size} and
29022 @node Libraries,Elaboration order,Implementation-defined attributes,Implementation-dependent characteristics
29023 @anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide libraries}@anchor{44c}@anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide id12}@anchor{44d}
29024 @subsection Libraries
29027 Vendors may supply libraries to supplement the standard Ada API. If Ada 83
29028 code uses vendor-specific libraries then there are several ways to manage
29029 this in Ada 95 and later versions of the standard:
29035 If the source code for the libraries (specs and bodies) are
29036 available, then the libraries can be migrated in the same way as the
29040 If the source code for the specs but not the bodies are
29041 available, then you can reimplement the bodies.
29044 Some features introduced by Ada 95 obviate the need for library support. For
29045 example most Ada 83 vendors supplied a package for unsigned integers. The
29046 Ada 95 modular type feature is the preferred way to handle this need, so
29047 instead of migrating or reimplementing the unsigned integer package it may
29048 be preferable to retrofit the application using modular types.
29051 @node Elaboration order,Target-specific aspects,Libraries,Implementation-dependent characteristics
29052 @anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide elaboration-order}@anchor{44e}@anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide id13}@anchor{44f}
29053 @subsection Elaboration order
29056 The implementation can choose any elaboration order consistent with the unit
29057 dependency relationship. This freedom means that some orders can result in
29058 Program_Error being raised due to an 'Access Before Elaboration': an attempt
29059 to invoke a subprogram before its body has been elaborated, or to instantiate
29060 a generic before the generic body has been elaborated. By default GNAT
29061 attempts to choose a safe order (one that will not encounter access before
29062 elaboration problems) by implicitly inserting @code{Elaborate} or
29063 @code{Elaborate_All} pragmas where
29064 needed. However, this can lead to the creation of elaboration circularities
29065 and a resulting rejection of the program by gnatbind. This issue is
29066 thoroughly described in the @emph{Elaboration Order Handling in GNAT} appendix
29067 in the @cite{GNAT User's Guide}.
29068 In brief, there are several
29069 ways to deal with this situation:
29075 Modify the program to eliminate the circularities, e.g., by moving
29076 elaboration-time code into explicitly-invoked procedures
29079 Constrain the elaboration order by including explicit @code{Elaborate_Body} or
29080 @code{Elaborate} pragmas, and then inhibit the generation of implicit
29081 @code{Elaborate_All}
29082 pragmas either globally (as an effect of the @emph{-gnatE} switch) or locally
29083 (by selectively suppressing elaboration checks via pragma
29084 @code{Suppress(Elaboration_Check)} when it is safe to do so).
29087 @node Target-specific aspects,,Elaboration order,Implementation-dependent characteristics
29088 @anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide target-specific-aspects}@anchor{450}@anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide id14}@anchor{451}
29089 @subsection Target-specific aspects
29092 Low-level applications need to deal with machine addresses, data
29093 representations, interfacing with assembler code, and similar issues. If
29094 such an Ada 83 application is being ported to different target hardware (for
29095 example where the byte endianness has changed) then you will need to
29096 carefully examine the program logic; the porting effort will heavily depend
29097 on the robustness of the original design. Moreover, Ada 95 (and thus
29098 Ada 2005 and Ada 2012) are sometimes
29099 incompatible with typical Ada 83 compiler practices regarding implicit
29100 packing, the meaning of the Size attribute, and the size of access values.
29101 GNAT's approach to these issues is described in @ref{452,,Representation Clauses}.
29103 @node Compatibility with Other Ada Systems,Representation Clauses,Implementation-dependent characteristics,Compatibility and Porting Guide
29104 @anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide id15}@anchor{453}@anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide compatibility-with-other-ada-systems}@anchor{454}
29105 @section Compatibility with Other Ada Systems
29108 If programs avoid the use of implementation dependent and
29109 implementation defined features, as documented in the
29110 @cite{Ada Reference Manual}, there should be a high degree of portability between
29111 GNAT and other Ada systems. The following are specific items which
29112 have proved troublesome in moving Ada 95 programs from GNAT to other Ada 95
29113 compilers, but do not affect porting code to GNAT.
29114 (As of January 2007, GNAT is the only compiler available for Ada 2005;
29115 the following issues may or may not arise for Ada 2005 programs
29116 when other compilers appear.)
29122 @emph{Ada 83 Pragmas and Attributes}
29124 Ada 95 compilers are allowed, but not required, to implement the missing
29125 Ada 83 pragmas and attributes that are no longer defined in Ada 95.
29126 GNAT implements all such pragmas and attributes, eliminating this as
29127 a compatibility concern, but some other Ada 95 compilers reject these
29128 pragmas and attributes.
29131 @emph{Specialized Needs Annexes}
29133 GNAT implements the full set of special needs annexes. At the
29134 current time, it is the only Ada 95 compiler to do so. This means that
29135 programs making use of these features may not be portable to other Ada
29136 95 compilation systems.
29139 @emph{Representation Clauses}
29141 Some other Ada 95 compilers implement only the minimal set of
29142 representation clauses required by the Ada 95 reference manual. GNAT goes
29143 far beyond this minimal set, as described in the next section.
29146 @node Representation Clauses,Compatibility with HP Ada 83,Compatibility with Other Ada Systems,Compatibility and Porting Guide
29147 @anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide representation-clauses}@anchor{452}@anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide id16}@anchor{455}
29148 @section Representation Clauses
29151 The Ada 83 reference manual was quite vague in describing both the minimal
29152 required implementation of representation clauses, and also their precise
29153 effects. Ada 95 (and thus also Ada 2005) are much more explicit, but the
29154 minimal set of capabilities required is still quite limited.
29156 GNAT implements the full required set of capabilities in
29157 Ada 95 and Ada 2005, but also goes much further, and in particular
29158 an effort has been made to be compatible with existing Ada 83 usage to the
29159 greatest extent possible.
29161 A few cases exist in which Ada 83 compiler behavior is incompatible with
29162 the requirements in Ada 95 (and thus also Ada 2005). These are instances of
29163 intentional or accidental dependence on specific implementation dependent
29164 characteristics of these Ada 83 compilers. The following is a list of
29165 the cases most likely to arise in existing Ada 83 code.
29171 @emph{Implicit Packing}
29173 Some Ada 83 compilers allowed a Size specification to cause implicit
29174 packing of an array or record. This could cause expensive implicit
29175 conversions for change of representation in the presence of derived
29176 types, and the Ada design intends to avoid this possibility.
29177 Subsequent AI's were issued to make it clear that such implicit
29178 change of representation in response to a Size clause is inadvisable,
29179 and this recommendation is represented explicitly in the Ada 95 (and Ada 2005)
29180 Reference Manuals as implementation advice that is followed by GNAT.
29181 The problem will show up as an error
29182 message rejecting the size clause. The fix is simply to provide
29183 the explicit pragma @code{Pack}, or for more fine tuned control, provide
29184 a Component_Size clause.
29187 @emph{Meaning of Size Attribute}
29189 The Size attribute in Ada 95 (and Ada 2005) for discrete types is defined as
29190 the minimal number of bits required to hold values of the type. For example,
29191 on a 32-bit machine, the size of @code{Natural} will typically be 31 and not
29192 32 (since no sign bit is required). Some Ada 83 compilers gave 31, and
29193 some 32 in this situation. This problem will usually show up as a compile
29194 time error, but not always. It is a good idea to check all uses of the
29195 'Size attribute when porting Ada 83 code. The GNAT specific attribute
29196 Object_Size can provide a useful way of duplicating the behavior of
29197 some Ada 83 compiler systems.
29200 @emph{Size of Access Types}
29202 A common assumption in Ada 83 code is that an access type is in fact a pointer,
29203 and that therefore it will be the same size as a System.Address value. This
29204 assumption is true for GNAT in most cases with one exception. For the case of
29205 a pointer to an unconstrained array type (where the bounds may vary from one
29206 value of the access type to another), the default is to use a 'fat pointer',
29207 which is represented as two separate pointers, one to the bounds, and one to
29208 the array. This representation has a number of advantages, including improved
29209 efficiency. However, it may cause some difficulties in porting existing Ada 83
29210 code which makes the assumption that, for example, pointers fit in 32 bits on
29211 a machine with 32-bit addressing.
29213 To get around this problem, GNAT also permits the use of 'thin pointers' for
29214 access types in this case (where the designated type is an unconstrained array
29215 type). These thin pointers are indeed the same size as a System.Address value.
29216 To specify a thin pointer, use a size clause for the type, for example:
29219 type X is access all String;
29220 for X'Size use Standard'Address_Size;
29223 which will cause the type X to be represented using a single pointer.
29224 When using this representation, the bounds are right behind the array.
29225 This representation is slightly less efficient, and does not allow quite
29226 such flexibility in the use of foreign pointers or in using the
29227 Unrestricted_Access attribute to create pointers to non-aliased objects.
29228 But for any standard portable use of the access type it will work in
29229 a functionally correct manner and allow porting of existing code.
29230 Note that another way of forcing a thin pointer representation
29231 is to use a component size clause for the element size in an array,
29232 or a record representation clause for an access field in a record.
29234 See the documentation of Unrestricted_Access in the GNAT RM for a
29235 full discussion of possible problems using this attribute in conjunction
29236 with thin pointers.
29239 @node Compatibility with HP Ada 83,,Representation Clauses,Compatibility and Porting Guide
29240 @anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide compatibility-with-hp-ada-83}@anchor{456}@anchor{gnat_rm/compatibility_and_porting_guide id17}@anchor{457}
29241 @section Compatibility with HP Ada 83
29244 All the HP Ada 83 pragmas and attributes are recognized, although only a subset
29245 of them can sensibly be implemented. The description of pragmas in
29246 @ref{7,,Implementation Defined Pragmas} indicates whether or not they are
29247 applicable to GNAT.
29253 @emph{Default floating-point representation}
29255 In GNAT, the default floating-point format is IEEE, whereas in HP Ada 83,
29261 the package System in GNAT exactly corresponds to the definition in the
29262 Ada 95 reference manual, which means that it excludes many of the
29263 HP Ada 83 extensions. However, a separate package Aux_DEC is provided
29264 that contains the additional definitions, and a special pragma,
29265 Extend_System allows this package to be treated transparently as an
29266 extension of package System.
29269 @node GNU Free Documentation License,Index,Compatibility and Porting Guide,Top
29270 @anchor{share/gnu_free_documentation_license gnu-fdl}@anchor{1}@anchor{share/gnu_free_documentation_license doc}@anchor{458}@anchor{share/gnu_free_documentation_license gnu-free-documentation-license}@anchor{459}
29271 @chapter GNU Free Documentation License
29274 Version 1.3, 3 November 2008
29276 Copyright 2000, 2001, 2002, 2007, 2008 Free Software Foundation, Inc
29277 @indicateurl{http://fsf.org/}
29279 Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this
29280 license document, but changing it is not allowed.
29284 The purpose of this License is to make a manual, textbook, or other
29285 functional and useful document "free" in the sense of freedom: to
29286 assure everyone the effective freedom to copy and redistribute it,
29287 with or without modifying it, either commercially or noncommercially.
29288 Secondarily, this License preserves for the author and publisher a way
29289 to get credit for their work, while not being considered responsible
29290 for modifications made by others.
29292 This License is a kind of "copyleft", which means that derivative
29293 works of the document must themselves be free in the same sense. It
29294 complements the GNU General Public License, which is a copyleft
29295 license designed for free software.
29297 We have designed this License in order to use it for manuals for free
29298 software, because free software needs free documentation: a free
29299 program should come with manuals providing the same freedoms that the
29300 software does. But this License is not limited to software manuals;
29301 it can be used for any textual work, regardless of subject matter or
29302 whether it is published as a printed book. We recommend this License
29303 principally for works whose purpose is instruction or reference.
29305 @strong{1. APPLICABILITY AND DEFINITIONS}
29307 This License applies to any manual or other work, in any medium, that
29308 contains a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it can be
29309 distributed under the terms of this License. Such a notice grants a
29310 world-wide, royalty-free license, unlimited in duration, to use that
29311 work under the conditions stated herein. The @strong{Document}, below,
29312 refers to any such manual or work. Any member of the public is a
29313 licensee, and is addressed as "@strong{you}". You accept the license if you
29314 copy, modify or distribute the work in a way requiring permission
29315 under copyright law.
29317 A "@strong{Modified Version}" of the Document means any work containing the
29318 Document or a portion of it, either copied verbatim, or with
29319 modifications and/or translated into another language.
29321 A "@strong{Secondary Section}" is a named appendix or a front-matter section of
29322 the Document that deals exclusively with the relationship of the
29323 publishers or authors of the Document to the Document's overall subject
29324 (or to related matters) and contains nothing that could fall directly
29325 within that overall subject. (Thus, if the Document is in part a
29326 textbook of mathematics, a Secondary Section may not explain any
29327 mathematics.) The relationship could be a matter of historical
29328 connection with the subject or with related matters, or of legal,
29329 commercial, philosophical, ethical or political position regarding
29332 The "@strong{Invariant Sections}" are certain Secondary Sections whose titles
29333 are designated, as being those of Invariant Sections, in the notice
29334 that says that the Document is released under this License. If a
29335 section does not fit the above definition of Secondary then it is not
29336 allowed to be designated as Invariant. The Document may contain zero
29337 Invariant Sections. If the Document does not identify any Invariant
29338 Sections then there are none.
29340 The "@strong{Cover Texts}" are certain short passages of text that are listed,
29341 as Front-Cover Texts or Back-Cover Texts, in the notice that says that
29342 the Document is released under this License. A Front-Cover Text may
29343 be at most 5 words, and a Back-Cover Text may be at most 25 words.
29345 A "@strong{Transparent}" copy of the Document means a machine-readable copy,
29346 represented in a format whose specification is available to the
29347 general public, that is suitable for revising the document
29348 straightforwardly with generic text editors or (for images composed of
29349 pixels) generic paint programs or (for drawings) some widely available
29350 drawing editor, and that is suitable for input to text formatters or
29351 for automatic translation to a variety of formats suitable for input
29352 to text formatters. A copy made in an otherwise Transparent file
29353 format whose markup, or absence of markup, has been arranged to thwart
29354 or discourage subsequent modification by readers is not Transparent.
29355 An image format is not Transparent if used for any substantial amount
29356 of text. A copy that is not "Transparent" is called @strong{Opaque}.
29358 Examples of suitable formats for Transparent copies include plain
29359 ASCII without markup, Texinfo input format, LaTeX input format, SGML
29360 or XML using a publicly available DTD, and standard-conforming simple
29361 HTML, PostScript or PDF designed for human modification. Examples of
29362 transparent image formats include PNG, XCF and JPG. Opaque formats
29363 include proprietary formats that can be read and edited only by
29364 proprietary word processors, SGML or XML for which the DTD and/or
29365 processing tools are not generally available, and the
29366 machine-generated HTML, PostScript or PDF produced by some word
29367 processors for output purposes only.
29369 The "@strong{Title Page}" means, for a printed book, the title page itself,
29370 plus such following pages as are needed to hold, legibly, the material
29371 this License requires to appear in the title page. For works in
29372 formats which do not have any title page as such, "Title Page" means
29373 the text near the most prominent appearance of the work's title,
29374 preceding the beginning of the body of the text.
29376 The "@strong{publisher}" means any person or entity that distributes
29377 copies of the Document to the public.
29379 A section "@strong{Entitled XYZ}" means a named subunit of the Document whose
29380 title either is precisely XYZ or contains XYZ in parentheses following
29381 text that translates XYZ in another language. (Here XYZ stands for a
29382 specific section name mentioned below, such as "@strong{Acknowledgements}",
29383 "@strong{Dedications}", "@strong{Endorsements}", or "@strong{History}".)
29384 To "@strong{Preserve the Title}"
29385 of such a section when you modify the Document means that it remains a
29386 section "Entitled XYZ" according to this definition.
29388 The Document may include Warranty Disclaimers next to the notice which
29389 states that this License applies to the Document. These Warranty
29390 Disclaimers are considered to be included by reference in this
29391 License, but only as regards disclaiming warranties: any other
29392 implication that these Warranty Disclaimers may have is void and has
29393 no effect on the meaning of this License.
29395 @strong{2. VERBATIM COPYING}
29397 You may copy and distribute the Document in any medium, either
29398 commercially or noncommercially, provided that this License, the
29399 copyright notices, and the license notice saying this License applies
29400 to the Document are reproduced in all copies, and that you add no other
29401 conditions whatsoever to those of this License. You may not use
29402 technical measures to obstruct or control the reading or further
29403 copying of the copies you make or distribute. However, you may accept
29404 compensation in exchange for copies. If you distribute a large enough
29405 number of copies you must also follow the conditions in section 3.
29407 You may also lend copies, under the same conditions stated above, and
29408 you may publicly display copies.
29410 @strong{3. COPYING IN QUANTITY}
29412 If you publish printed copies (or copies in media that commonly have
29413 printed covers) of the Document, numbering more than 100, and the
29414 Document's license notice requires Cover Texts, you must enclose the
29415 copies in covers that carry, clearly and legibly, all these Cover
29416 Texts: Front-Cover Texts on the front cover, and Back-Cover Texts on
29417 the back cover. Both covers must also clearly and legibly identify
29418 you as the publisher of these copies. The front cover must present
29419 the full title with all words of the title equally prominent and
29420 visible. You may add other material on the covers in addition.
29421 Copying with changes limited to the covers, as long as they preserve
29422 the title of the Document and satisfy these conditions, can be treated
29423 as verbatim copying in other respects.
29425 If the required texts for either cover are too voluminous to fit
29426 legibly, you should put the first ones listed (as many as fit
29427 reasonably) on the actual cover, and continue the rest onto adjacent
29430 If you publish or distribute Opaque copies of the Document numbering
29431 more than 100, you must either include a machine-readable Transparent
29432 copy along with each Opaque copy, or state in or with each Opaque copy
29433 a computer-network location from which the general network-using
29434 public has access to download using public-standard network protocols
29435 a complete Transparent copy of the Document, free of added material.
29436 If you use the latter option, you must take reasonably prudent steps,
29437 when you begin distribution of Opaque copies in quantity, to ensure
29438 that this Transparent copy will remain thus accessible at the stated
29439 location until at least one year after the last time you distribute an
29440 Opaque copy (directly or through your agents or retailers) of that
29441 edition to the public.
29443 It is requested, but not required, that you contact the authors of the
29444 Document well before redistributing any large number of copies, to give
29445 them a chance to provide you with an updated version of the Document.
29447 @strong{4. MODIFICATIONS}
29449 You may copy and distribute a Modified Version of the Document under
29450 the conditions of sections 2 and 3 above, provided that you release
29451 the Modified Version under precisely this License, with the Modified
29452 Version filling the role of the Document, thus licensing distribution
29453 and modification of the Modified Version to whoever possesses a copy
29454 of it. In addition, you must do these things in the Modified Version:
29460 Use in the Title Page (and on the covers, if any) a title distinct
29461 from that of the Document, and from those of previous versions
29462 (which should, if there were any, be listed in the History section
29463 of the Document). You may use the same title as a previous version
29464 if the original publisher of that version gives permission.
29467 List on the Title Page, as authors, one or more persons or entities
29468 responsible for authorship of the modifications in the Modified
29469 Version, together with at least five of the principal authors of the
29470 Document (all of its principal authors, if it has fewer than five),
29471 unless they release you from this requirement.
29474 State on the Title page the name of the publisher of the
29475 Modified Version, as the publisher.
29478 Preserve all the copyright notices of the Document.
29481 Add an appropriate copyright notice for your modifications
29482 adjacent to the other copyright notices.
29485 Include, immediately after the copyright notices, a license notice
29486 giving the public permission to use the Modified Version under the
29487 terms of this License, in the form shown in the Addendum below.
29490 Preserve in that license notice the full lists of Invariant Sections
29491 and required Cover Texts given in the Document's license notice.
29494 Include an unaltered copy of this License.
29497 Preserve the section Entitled "History", Preserve its Title, and add
29498 to it an item stating at least the title, year, new authors, and
29499 publisher of the Modified Version as given on the Title Page. If
29500 there is no section Entitled "History" in the Document, create one
29501 stating the title, year, authors, and publisher of the Document as
29502 given on its Title Page, then add an item describing the Modified
29503 Version as stated in the previous sentence.
29506 Preserve the network location, if any, given in the Document for
29507 public access to a Transparent copy of the Document, and likewise
29508 the network locations given in the Document for previous versions
29509 it was based on. These may be placed in the "History" section.
29510 You may omit a network location for a work that was published at
29511 least four years before the Document itself, or if the original
29512 publisher of the version it refers to gives permission.
29515 For any section Entitled "Acknowledgements" or "Dedications",
29516 Preserve the Title of the section, and preserve in the section all
29517 the substance and tone of each of the contributor acknowledgements
29518 and/or dedications given therein.
29521 Preserve all the Invariant Sections of the Document,
29522 unaltered in their text and in their titles. Section numbers
29523 or the equivalent are not considered part of the section titles.
29526 Delete any section Entitled "Endorsements". Such a section
29527 may not be included in the Modified Version.
29530 Do not retitle any existing section to be Entitled "Endorsements"
29531 or to conflict in title with any Invariant Section.
29534 Preserve any Warranty Disclaimers.
29537 If the Modified Version includes new front-matter sections or
29538 appendices that qualify as Secondary Sections and contain no material
29539 copied from the Document, you may at your option designate some or all
29540 of these sections as invariant. To do this, add their titles to the
29541 list of Invariant Sections in the Modified Version's license notice.
29542 These titles must be distinct from any other section titles.
29544 You may add a section Entitled "Endorsements", provided it contains
29545 nothing but endorsements of your Modified Version by various
29546 parties---for example, statements of peer review or that the text has
29547 been approved by an organization as the authoritative definition of a
29550 You may add a passage of up to five words as a Front-Cover Text, and a
29551 passage of up to 25 words as a Back-Cover Text, to the end of the list
29552 of Cover Texts in the Modified Version. Only one passage of
29553 Front-Cover Text and one of Back-Cover Text may be added by (or
29554 through arrangements made by) any one entity. If the Document already
29555 includes a cover text for the same cover, previously added by you or
29556 by arrangement made by the same entity you are acting on behalf of,
29557 you may not add another; but you may replace the old one, on explicit
29558 permission from the previous publisher that added the old one.
29560 The author(s) and publisher(s) of the Document do not by this License
29561 give permission to use their names for publicity for or to assert or
29562 imply endorsement of any Modified Version.
29564 @strong{5. COMBINING DOCUMENTS}
29566 You may combine the Document with other documents released under this
29567 License, under the terms defined in section 4 above for modified
29568 versions, provided that you include in the combination all of the
29569 Invariant Sections of all of the original documents, unmodified, and
29570 list them all as Invariant Sections of your combined work in its
29571 license notice, and that you preserve all their Warranty Disclaimers.
29573 The combined work need only contain one copy of this License, and
29574 multiple identical Invariant Sections may be replaced with a single
29575 copy. If there are multiple Invariant Sections with the same name but
29576 different contents, make the title of each such section unique by
29577 adding at the end of it, in parentheses, the name of the original
29578 author or publisher of that section if known, or else a unique number.
29579 Make the same adjustment to the section titles in the list of
29580 Invariant Sections in the license notice of the combined work.
29582 In the combination, you must combine any sections Entitled "History"
29583 in the various original documents, forming one section Entitled
29584 "History"; likewise combine any sections Entitled "Acknowledgements",
29585 and any sections Entitled "Dedications". You must delete all sections
29586 Entitled "Endorsements".
29588 @strong{6. COLLECTIONS OF DOCUMENTS}
29590 You may make a collection consisting of the Document and other documents
29591 released under this License, and replace the individual copies of this
29592 License in the various documents with a single copy that is included in
29593 the collection, provided that you follow the rules of this License for
29594 verbatim copying of each of the documents in all other respects.
29596 You may extract a single document from such a collection, and distribute
29597 it individually under this License, provided you insert a copy of this
29598 License into the extracted document, and follow this License in all
29599 other respects regarding verbatim copying of that document.
29601 @strong{7. AGGREGATION WITH INDEPENDENT WORKS}
29603 A compilation of the Document or its derivatives with other separate
29604 and independent documents or works, in or on a volume of a storage or
29605 distribution medium, is called an "aggregate" if the copyright
29606 resulting from the compilation is not used to limit the legal rights
29607 of the compilation's users beyond what the individual works permit.
29608 When the Document is included in an aggregate, this License does not
29609 apply to the other works in the aggregate which are not themselves
29610 derivative works of the Document.
29612 If the Cover Text requirement of section 3 is applicable to these
29613 copies of the Document, then if the Document is less than one half of
29614 the entire aggregate, the Document's Cover Texts may be placed on
29615 covers that bracket the Document within the aggregate, or the
29616 electronic equivalent of covers if the Document is in electronic form.
29617 Otherwise they must appear on printed covers that bracket the whole
29620 @strong{8. TRANSLATION}
29622 Translation is considered a kind of modification, so you may
29623 distribute translations of the Document under the terms of section 4.
29624 Replacing Invariant Sections with translations requires special
29625 permission from their copyright holders, but you may include
29626 translations of some or all Invariant Sections in addition to the
29627 original versions of these Invariant Sections. You may include a
29628 translation of this License, and all the license notices in the
29629 Document, and any Warranty Disclaimers, provided that you also include
29630 the original English version of this License and the original versions
29631 of those notices and disclaimers. In case of a disagreement between
29632 the translation and the original version of this License or a notice
29633 or disclaimer, the original version will prevail.
29635 If a section in the Document is Entitled "Acknowledgements",
29636 "Dedications", or "History", the requirement (section 4) to Preserve
29637 its Title (section 1) will typically require changing the actual
29640 @strong{9. TERMINATION}
29642 You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Document
29643 except as expressly provided under this License. Any attempt
29644 otherwise to copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute it is void, and
29645 will automatically terminate your rights under this License.
29647 However, if you cease all violation of this License, then your license
29648 from a particular copyright holder is reinstated (a) provisionally,
29649 unless and until the copyright holder explicitly and finally
29650 terminates your license, and (b) permanently, if the copyright holder
29651 fails to notify you of the violation by some reasonable means prior to
29652 60 days after the cessation.
29654 Moreover, your license from a particular copyright holder is
29655 reinstated permanently if the copyright holder notifies you of the
29656 violation by some reasonable means, this is the first time you have
29657 received notice of violation of this License (for any work) from that
29658 copyright holder, and you cure the violation prior to 30 days after
29659 your receipt of the notice.
29661 Termination of your rights under this section does not terminate the
29662 licenses of parties who have received copies or rights from you under
29663 this License. If your rights have been terminated and not permanently
29664 reinstated, receipt of a copy of some or all of the same material does
29665 not give you any rights to use it.
29667 @strong{10. FUTURE REVISIONS OF THIS LICENSE}
29669 The Free Software Foundation may publish new, revised versions
29670 of the GNU Free Documentation License from time to time. Such new
29671 versions will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may
29672 differ in detail to address new problems or concerns. See
29673 @indicateurl{http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/}.
29675 Each version of the License is given a distinguishing version number.
29676 If the Document specifies that a particular numbered version of this
29677 License "or any later version" applies to it, you have the option of
29678 following the terms and conditions either of that specified version or
29679 of any later version that has been published (not as a draft) by the
29680 Free Software Foundation. If the Document does not specify a version
29681 number of this License, you may choose any version ever published (not
29682 as a draft) by the Free Software Foundation. If the Document
29683 specifies that a proxy can decide which future versions of this
29684 License can be used, that proxy's public statement of acceptance of a
29685 version permanently authorizes you to choose that version for the
29688 @strong{11. RELICENSING}
29690 "Massive Multiauthor Collaboration Site" (or "MMC Site") means any
29691 World Wide Web server that publishes copyrightable works and also
29692 provides prominent facilities for anybody to edit those works. A
29693 public wiki that anybody can edit is an example of such a server. A
29694 "Massive Multiauthor Collaboration" (or "MMC") contained in the
29695 site means any set of copyrightable works thus published on the MMC
29698 "CC-BY-SA" means the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0
29699 license published by Creative Commons Corporation, a not-for-profit
29700 corporation with a principal place of business in San Francisco,
29701 California, as well as future copyleft versions of that license
29702 published by that same organization.
29704 "Incorporate" means to publish or republish a Document, in whole or
29705 in part, as part of another Document.
29707 An MMC is "eligible for relicensing" if it is licensed under this
29708 License, and if all works that were first published under this License
29709 somewhere other than this MMC, and subsequently incorporated in whole
29710 or in part into the MMC, (1) had no cover texts or invariant sections,
29711 and (2) were thus incorporated prior to November 1, 2008.
29713 The operator of an MMC Site may republish an MMC contained in the site
29714 under CC-BY-SA on the same site at any time before August 1, 2009,
29715 provided the MMC is eligible for relicensing.
29717 @strong{ADDENDUM: How to use this License for your documents}
29719 To use this License in a document you have written, include a copy of
29720 the License in the document and put the following copyright and
29721 license notices just after the title page:
29725 Copyright © YEAR YOUR NAME.
29726 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
29727 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3
29728 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation;
29729 with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts.
29730 A copy of the license is included in the section entitled "GNU
29731 Free Documentation License".
29734 If you have Invariant Sections, Front-Cover Texts and Back-Cover Texts,
29735 replace the "with ... Texts." line with this:
29739 with the Invariant Sections being LIST THEIR TITLES, with the
29740 Front-Cover Texts being LIST, and with the Back-Cover Texts being LIST.
29743 If you have Invariant Sections without Cover Texts, or some other
29744 combination of the three, merge those two alternatives to suit the
29747 If your document contains nontrivial examples of program code, we
29748 recommend releasing these examples in parallel under your choice of
29749 free software license, such as the GNU General Public License,
29750 to permit their use in free software.
29752 @node Index,,GNU Free Documentation License,Top