1 \input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
4 @c @setfilename usegcc.info
5 @c @setfilename portgcc.info
6 @c To produce the full manual, use the "gcc.info" setfilename, and
7 @c make sure the following do NOT begin with '@c' (and the @clear lines DO)
10 @c To produce a user-only manual, use the "usegcc.info" setfilename, and
11 @c make sure the following does NOT begin with '@c':
13 @c To produce a porter-only manual, use the "portgcc.info" setfilename,
14 @c and make sure the following does NOT begin with '@c':
17 @c (For FSF printing, turn on smallbook, comment out finalout below;
18 @c that is all that is needed.)
20 @c 6/27/96 FSF DO wants smallbook fmt for 1st bound edition.
23 @c i also commented out the finalout command, so if there *are* any
24 @c overfulls, you'll (hopefully) see the rectangle in the right hand
25 @c margin. -mew 15june93
28 @c NOTE: checks/things to do:
30 @c -have bob do a search in all seven files for "mew" (ideally --mew,
31 @c but i may have forgotten the occasional "--"..).
32 @c Just checked... all have `--'! Bob 22Jul96
33 @c Use this to search: grep -n '\-\-mew' *.texi
34 @c -item/itemx, text after all (sub/sub)section titles, etc..
35 @c -consider putting the lists of options on pp 17--> etc in columns or
38 @c -continuity of phrasing; ie, bit-field vs bitfield in rtl.texi
39 @c -overfulls. do a search for "mew" in the files, and you will see
40 @c overfulls that i noted but could not deal with.
41 @c -have to add text: beginning of chapter 8
44 @c anything else? --mew 10feb93
46 @macro gcctabopt{body}
49 @macro gccoptlist{body}
54 @c Makeinfo handles the above macro OK, TeX needs manual line breaks;
55 @c they get lost at some point in handling the macro. But if @macro is
56 @c used here rather than @alias, it produces double line breaks.
67 @settitle Using and Porting the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC)
70 @c seems reasonable to assume at least one of INTERNALS or USING is set...
72 @settitle Using the GNU Compiler Collection
75 @settitle Porting the GNU Compiler Collection
82 @c Use with @@smallbook.
84 @c Cause even numbered pages to be printed on the left hand side of
85 @c the page and odd numbered pages to be printed on the right hand
86 @c side of the page. Using this, you can print on both sides of a
87 @c sheet of paper and have the text on the same part of the sheet.
89 @c The text on right hand pages is pushed towards the right hand
90 @c margin and the text on left hand pages is pushed toward the left
92 @c (To provide the reverse effect, set bindingoffset to -0.75in.)
95 @c \global\bindingoffset=0.75in
96 @c \global\normaloffset =0.75in
100 @dircategory Programming
102 * gcc: (gcc). The GNU Compiler Collection.
106 This file documents the use and the internals of the GNU compiler.
110 This file documents the internals of the GNU compiler.
113 This file documents the use of the GNU compiler.
116 Published by the Free Software Foundation@*
117 59 Temple Place - Suite 330@*
118 Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
120 @c When you update the list of years below, search for copyright{} and
121 @c update the other copy too.
122 Copyright (C) 1988, 1989, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998,
123 1999, 2000, 2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
125 Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
126 this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
127 are preserved on all copies.
130 Permission is granted to process this file through Tex and print the
131 results, provided the printed document carries copying permission
132 notice identical to this one except for the removal of this paragraph
133 (this paragraph not being relevant to the printed manual).
136 Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
137 manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also that the
138 sections entitled ``GNU General Public License'' and ``Funding for Free
139 Software'' are included exactly as in the original, and provided that
140 the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a
141 permission notice identical to this one.
143 Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
144 into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions,
145 except that the sections entitled ``GNU General Public License'' and
146 ``Funding for Free Software'', and this permission notice, may be
147 included in translations approved by the Free Software Foundation
148 instead of in the original English.
151 @setchapternewpage odd
156 @center @titlefont{Using and Porting the GNU Compiler Collection}
161 @title Using the GNU Compiler Collection
164 @title Porting the GNU Compiler Collection
167 @center Richard M. Stallman
169 @center Last updated 13 January 2001
171 @c The version number appears five times more in this file.
175 @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
176 Copyright @copyright{} 1988, 1989, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1998,
177 1999, 2000, 2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
179 For GCC Version 2.97@*
181 Published by the Free Software Foundation @*
182 59 Temple Place - Suite 330@*
183 Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA@*
184 Last printed April, 1998.@*
185 Printed copies are available for $50 each.@*
188 Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of
189 this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice
190 are preserved on all copies.
192 Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
193 manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided also that the
194 sections entitled ``GNU General Public License'' and ``Funding for Free
195 Software'' are included exactly as in the original, and provided that
196 the entire resulting derived work is distributed under the terms of a
197 permission notice identical to this one.
199 Permission is granted to copy and distribute translations of this manual
200 into another language, under the above conditions for modified versions,
201 except that the sections entitled ``GNU General Public License'' and
202 ``Funding for Free Software'', and this permission notice, may be
203 included in translations approved by the Free Software Foundation
204 instead of in the original English.
208 @node Top, G++ and GCC,, (DIR)
214 This manual documents how to run, install and port the GNU
215 compiler, as well as its new features and incompatibilities, and how to
216 report bugs. It corresponds to GCC version 2.97.
221 This manual documents how to run and install the GNU compiler,
222 as well as its new features and incompatibilities, and how to report
223 bugs. It corresponds to GCC version 2.97.
226 This manual documents how to port the GNU compiler,
227 as well as its new features and incompatibilities, and how to report
228 bugs. It corresponds to GCC version 2.97.
233 * G++ and GCC:: You can compile C or C++ programs.
234 * Standards:: Language standards supported by GCC.
235 * Invoking GCC:: Command options supported by @samp{gcc}.
236 * Installation:: How to configure, compile and install GCC.
237 * C Extensions:: GNU extensions to the C language family.
238 * C++ Extensions:: GNU extensions to the C++ language.
239 * Gcov:: gcov: a GCC test coverage program.
240 * Trouble:: If you have trouble installing GCC.
241 * Bugs:: How, why and where to report bugs.
242 * Service:: How to find suppliers of support for GCC.
243 * Contributing:: How to contribute to testing and developing GCC.
244 * VMS:: Using GCC on VMS.
245 * Makefile:: List of Makefile targets.
248 * Portability:: Goals of GCC's portability features.
249 * Interface:: Function-call interface of GCC output.
250 * Passes:: Order of passes, what they do, and what each file is for.
251 * RTL:: The intermediate representation that most passes work on.
252 * Machine Desc:: How to write machine description instruction patterns.
253 * Target Macros:: How to write the machine description C macros.
254 * Config:: Writing the @file{xm-@var{machine}.h} file.
255 * Fragments:: Writing the @file{t-@var{target}} and @file{x-@var{host}} files.
258 * Funding:: How to help assure funding for free software.
259 * GNU/Linux:: Linux and the GNU Project
261 * Copying:: GNU General Public License says
262 how you can copy and share GCC.
263 * Contributors:: People who have contributed to GCC.
265 * Index:: Index of concepts and symbol names.
270 @chapter Compile C, C++, Objective C, Fortran, Java or CHILL
273 Several versions of the compiler (C, C++, Objective C, Fortran, Java
274 and CHILL) are integrated; this is why we use the name
275 ``GNU Compiler Collection''. GCC can compile programs written in any of these
276 languages. The Fortran and CHILL compilers are described in
277 separate manuals. The Java compiler currently has no manual documenting it.
280 ``GCC'' is a common shorthand term for the GNU Compiler Collection. This is both
281 the most general name for the compiler, and the name used when the
282 emphasis is on compiling C programs (as the abbreviation formerly
283 stood for ``GNU C Compiler'').
287 When referring to C++ compilation, it is usual to call the compiler
288 ``G++''. Since there is only one compiler, it is also accurate to call
289 it ``GCC'' no matter what the language context; however, the term
290 ``G++'' is more useful when the emphasis is on compiling C++ programs.
292 We use the name ``GCC'' to refer to the compilation system as a
293 whole, and more specifically to the language-independent part of the
294 compiler. For example, we refer to the optimization options as
295 affecting the behavior of ``GCC'' or sometimes just ``the compiler''.
297 Front ends for other languages, such as Ada 95 and Pascal exist but
298 have not yet been integrated into GCC. These front-ends, like that for C++,
299 are built in subdirectories of GCC and link to it. The result is an
300 integrated compiler that can compile programs written in C, C++,
301 Objective C, or any of the languages for which you have installed front
304 In this manual, we only discuss the options for the C, Objective-C, and
305 C++ compilers and those of the GCC core. Consult the documentation
306 of the other front ends for the options to use when compiling programs
307 written in other languages.
309 @cindex compiler compared to C++ preprocessor
310 @cindex intermediate C version, nonexistent
311 @cindex C intermediate output, nonexistent
312 G++ is a @emph{compiler}, not merely a preprocessor. G++ builds object
313 code directly from your C++ program source. There is no intermediate C
314 version of the program. (By contrast, for example, some other
315 implementations use a program that generates a C program from your C++
316 source.) Avoiding an intermediate C representation of the program means
317 that you get better object code, and better debugging information. The
318 GNU debugger, GDB, works with this information in the object code to
319 give you comprehensive C++ source-level editing capabilities
320 (@pxref{C,,C and C++,gdb.info, Debugging with GDB}).
322 @c FIXME! Someone who knows something about Objective C ought to put in
323 @c a paragraph or two about it here, and move the index entry down when
324 @c there is more to point to than the general mention in the 1st par.
327 @chapter Language Standards Supported by GCC
330 @cindex ANSI C standard
334 @cindex ANSI X3.159-1989
336 @cindex ISO C standard
351 @cindex Technical Corrigenda
353 @cindex Technical Corrigendum 1
355 @cindex Technical Corrigendum 2
357 @cindex freestanding implementation
358 @cindex freestanding environment
359 @cindex hosted implementation
360 @cindex hosted environment
361 @findex __STDC_HOSTED__
363 For each language compiled by GCC for which there is a standard, GCC
364 attempts to follow one or more versions of that standard, possibly
365 with some exceptions, and possibly with some extensions.
367 GCC supports three versions of the C standard, although support for
368 the most recent version is not yet complete.
370 The original ANSI C standard (X3.159-1989) was ratified in 1989 and
371 published in 1990. This standard was ratified as an ISO standard
372 (ISO/IEC 9899:1990) later in 1990. There were no technical
373 differences between these publications, although the sections of the
374 ANSI standard were renumbered and became clauses in the ISO standard.
375 This standard, in both its forms, is commonly known as @dfn{C89}, or
376 occasionally as @dfn{C90}, from the dates of ratification. The ANSI
377 standard, but not the ISO standard, also came with a Rationale
378 document. To select this standard in GCC, use one of the options
379 @samp{-ansi}, @samp{-std=c89} or @samp{-std=iso9899:1990}; to obtain
380 all the diagnostics required by the standard, you should also specify
381 @samp{-pedantic} (or @samp{-pedantic-errors} if you want them to be
382 errors rather than warnings). @xref{C Dialect Options,,Options
383 Controlling C Dialect}.
385 Errors in the 1990 ISO C standard were corrected in two Technical
386 Corrigenda published in 1994 and 1996. GCC does not support the
389 An amendment to the 1990 standard was published in 1995. This
390 amendment added digraphs and @code{__STDC_VERSION__} to the language,
391 but otherwise concerned the library. This amendment is commonly known
392 as @dfn{AMD1}; the amended standard is sometimes known as @dfn{C94} or
393 @dfn{C95}. To select this standard in GCC, use the option
394 @samp{-std=iso9899:199409} (with, as for other standard versions,
395 @samp{-pedantic} to receive all required diagnostics).
397 A new edition of the ISO C standard was published in 1999 as ISO/IEC
398 9899:1999, and is commonly known as @dfn{C99}. GCC has incomplete
399 support for this standard version; see
400 @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/c99status.html} for details. To select this
401 standard, use @samp{-std=c99} or @samp{-std=iso9899:1999}. (While in
402 development, drafts of this standard version were referred to as
405 GCC also has some limited support for traditional (pre-ISO) C with the
406 @samp{-traditional} option. This support may be of use for compiling
407 some very old programs that have not been updated to ISO C, but should
408 not be used for new programs. It will not work with some modern C
409 libraries such as the GNU C library.
411 By default, GCC provides some extensions to the C language that on
412 rare occasions conflict with the C standard. @xref{C
413 Extensions,,Extensions to the C Language Family}. Use of the
414 @samp{-std} options listed above will disable these extensions where
415 they conflict with the C standard version selected. You may also
416 select an extended version of the C language explicitly with
417 @samp{-std=gnu89} (for C89 with GNU extensions) or @samp{-std=gnu99}
418 (for C99 with GNU extensions). The default, if no C language dialect
419 options are given, is @samp{-std=gnu89}; this will change to
420 @samp{-std=gnu99} in some future release when the C99 support is
421 complete. Some features that are part of the C99 standard are
422 accepted as extensions in C89 mode.
424 The ISO C standard defines (in clause 4) two classes of conforming
425 implementation. A @dfn{conforming hosted implementation} supports the
426 whole standard including all the library facilities; a @dfn{conforming
427 freestanding implementation} is only required to provide certain
428 library facilities: those in @code{<float.h>}, @code{<limits.h>},
429 @code{<stdarg.h>}, and @code{<stddef.h>}; since AMD1, also those in
430 @code{<iso646.h>}; and in C99, also those in @code{<stdbool.h>} and
431 @code{<stdint.h>}. In addition, complex types, added in C99, are not
432 required for freestanding implementations. The standard also defines
433 two environments for programs, a @dfn{freestanding environment},
434 required of all implementations and which may not have library
435 facilities beyond those required of freestanding implementations,
436 where the handling of program startup and termination are
437 implementation-defined, and a @dfn{hosted environment}, which is not
438 required, in which all the library facilities are provided and startup
439 is through a function @code{int main (void)} or @code{int main (int,
440 char *[])}. An OS kernel would be a freestanding environment; a
441 program using the facilities of an operating system would normally be
442 in a hosted implementation.
444 GNU CC aims towards being usable as a conforming freestanding
445 implementation, or as the compiler for a conforming hosted
446 implementation. By default, it will act as the compiler for a hosted
447 implementation, defining @code{__STDC_HOSTED__} as @code{1} and
448 presuming that when the names of ISO C functions are used, they have
449 the semantics defined in the standard. To make it act as a conforming
450 freestanding implementation for a freestanding environment, use the
451 option @samp{-ffreestanding}; it will then define
452 @code{__STDC_HOSTED__} to @code{0} and not make assumptions about the
453 meanings of function names from the standard library. To build an OS
454 kernel, you may well still need to make your own arrangements for
455 linking and startup. @xref{C Dialect Options,,Options Controlling C
458 GNU CC does not provide the library facilities required only of hosted
459 implementations, nor yet all the facilities required by C99 of
460 freestanding implementations; to use the facilities of a hosted
461 environment, you will need to find them elsewhere (for example, in the
462 GNU C library). @xref{Standard Libraries,,Standard Libraries}.
464 For references to Technical Corrigenda, Rationale documents and
465 information concerning the history of C that is available online, see
466 @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/readings.html}
468 @c FIXME: details of C++ standard.
469 @c FIXME: definitions of Java and Objective C.
471 @xref{Language,,The GNU Fortran Language, g77, Using and Porting GNU
472 Fortran}, for details of the Fortran language supported by GCC.
474 @xref{References,,Language Definition References, chill, GNU Chill},
475 for details of the CHILL standard.
479 @include install.texi
486 @chapter Known Causes of Trouble with GCC
488 @cindex installation trouble
489 @cindex known causes of trouble
491 This section describes known problems that affect users of GCC. Most
492 of these are not GCC bugs per se---if they were, we would fix them.
493 But the result for a user may be like the result of a bug.
495 Some of these problems are due to bugs in other software, some are
496 missing features that are too much work to add, and some are places
497 where people's opinions differ as to what is best.
500 * Actual Bugs:: Bugs we will fix later.
501 * Installation Problems:: Problems that manifest when you install GCC.
502 * Cross-Compiler Problems:: Common problems of cross compiling with GCC.
503 * Interoperation:: Problems using GCC with other compilers,
504 and with certain linkers, assemblers and debuggers.
505 * External Bugs:: Problems compiling certain programs.
506 * Incompatibilities:: GCC is incompatible with traditional C.
507 * Fixed Headers:: GNU C uses corrected versions of system header files.
508 This is necessary, but doesn't always work smoothly.
509 * Standard Libraries:: GNU C uses the system C library, which might not be
510 compliant with the ISO C standard.
511 * Disappointments:: Regrettable things we can't change, but not quite bugs.
512 * C++ Misunderstandings:: Common misunderstandings with GNU C++.
513 * Protoize Caveats:: Things to watch out for when using @code{protoize}.
514 * Non-bugs:: Things we think are right, but some others disagree.
515 * Warnings and Errors:: Which problems in your code get warnings,
516 and which get errors.
520 @section Actual Bugs We Haven't Fixed Yet
524 The @code{fixincludes} script interacts badly with automounters; if the
525 directory of system header files is automounted, it tends to be
526 unmounted while @code{fixincludes} is running. This would seem to be a
527 bug in the automounter. We don't know any good way to work around it.
530 The @code{fixproto} script will sometimes add prototypes for the
531 @code{sigsetjmp} and @code{siglongjmp} functions that reference the
532 @code{jmp_buf} type before that type is defined. To work around this,
533 edit the offending file and place the typedef in front of the
537 There are several obscure case of mis-using struct, union, and
538 enum tags that are not detected as errors by the compiler.
541 When @samp{-pedantic-errors} is specified, GCC will incorrectly give
542 an error message when a function name is specified in an expression
543 involving the comma operator.
546 Loop unrolling doesn't work properly for certain C++ programs. This is
547 a bug in the C++ front end. It sometimes emits incorrect debug info, and
548 the loop unrolling code is unable to recover from this error.
551 @node Installation Problems
552 @section Installation Problems
554 This is a list of problems (and some apparent problems which don't
555 really mean anything is wrong) that show up during installation of GNU
560 On certain systems, defining certain environment variables such as
561 @code{CC} can interfere with the functioning of @code{make}.
564 If you encounter seemingly strange errors when trying to build the
565 compiler in a directory other than the source directory, it could be
566 because you have previously configured the compiler in the source
567 directory. Make sure you have done all the necessary preparations.
571 If you build GCC on a BSD system using a directory stored in a System
572 V file system, problems may occur in running @code{fixincludes} if the
573 System V file system doesn't support symbolic links. These problems
574 result in a failure to fix the declaration of @code{size_t} in
575 @file{sys/types.h}. If you find that @code{size_t} is a signed type and
576 that type mismatches occur, this could be the cause.
578 The solution is not to use such a directory for building GCC.
581 In previous versions of GCC, the @code{gcc} driver program looked for
582 @code{as} and @code{ld} in various places; for example, in files
583 beginning with @file{/usr/local/lib/gcc-}. GCC version 2 looks for
584 them in the directory
585 @file{/usr/local/lib/gcc-lib/@var{target}/@var{version}}.
587 Thus, to use a version of @code{as} or @code{ld} that is not the system
588 default, for example @code{gas} or GNU @code{ld}, you must put them in
589 that directory (or make links to them from that directory).
592 Some commands executed when making the compiler may fail (return a
593 non-zero status) and be ignored by @code{make}. These failures, which
594 are often due to files that were not found, are expected, and can safely
598 It is normal to have warnings in compiling certain files about
599 unreachable code and about enumeration type clashes. These files' names
600 begin with @samp{insn-}. Also, @file{real.c} may get some warnings that
604 Sometimes @code{make} recompiles parts of the compiler when installing
605 the compiler. In one case, this was traced down to a bug in
606 @code{make}. Either ignore the problem or switch to GNU Make.
609 If you have installed a program known as purify, you may find that it
610 causes errors while linking @code{enquire}, which is part of building
611 GCC. The fix is to get rid of the file @code{real-ld} which purify
612 installs---so that GCC won't try to use it.
615 On GNU/Linux SLS 1.01, there is a problem with @file{libc.a}: it does not
616 contain the obstack functions. However, GCC assumes that the obstack
617 functions are in @file{libc.a} when it is the GNU C library. To work
618 around this problem, change the @code{__GNU_LIBRARY__} conditional
619 around line 31 to @samp{#if 1}.
622 On some 386 systems, building the compiler never finishes because
623 @code{enquire} hangs due to a hardware problem in the motherboard---it
624 reports floating point exceptions to the kernel incorrectly. You can
625 install GCC except for @file{float.h} by patching out the command to
626 run @code{enquire}. You may also be able to fix the problem for real by
627 getting a replacement motherboard. This problem was observed in
628 Revision E of the Micronics motherboard, and is fixed in Revision F.
629 It has also been observed in the MYLEX MXA-33 motherboard.
631 If you encounter this problem, you may also want to consider removing
632 the FPU from the socket during the compilation. Alternatively, if you
633 are running SCO Unix, you can reboot and force the FPU to be ignored.
634 To do this, type @samp{hd(40)unix auto ignorefpu}.
637 On some 386 systems, GCC crashes trying to compile @file{enquire.c}.
638 This happens on machines that don't have a 387 FPU chip. On 386
639 machines, the system kernel is supposed to emulate the 387 when you
640 don't have one. The crash is due to a bug in the emulator.
642 One of these systems is the Unix from Interactive Systems: 386/ix.
643 On this system, an alternate emulator is provided, and it does work.
644 To use it, execute this command as super-user:
647 ln /etc/emulator.rel1 /etc/emulator
651 and then reboot the system. (The default emulator file remains present
652 under the name @file{emulator.dflt}.)
654 Try using @file{/etc/emulator.att}, if you have such a problem on the
657 Another system which has this problem is Esix. We don't know whether it
658 has an alternate emulator that works.
660 On NetBSD 0.8, a similar problem manifests itself as these error messages:
663 enquire.c: In function `fprop':
664 enquire.c:2328: floating overflow
668 On SCO systems, when compiling GCC with the system's compiler,
669 do not use @samp{-O}. Some versions of the system's compiler miscompile
672 @cindex @code{genflags}, crash on Sun 4
674 Sometimes on a Sun 4 you may observe a crash in the program
675 @code{genflags} or @code{genoutput} while building GCC. This is said to
676 be due to a bug in @code{sh}. You can probably get around it by running
677 @code{genflags} or @code{genoutput} manually and then retrying the
681 On Solaris 2, executables of GCC version 2.0.2 are commonly
682 available, but they have a bug that shows up when compiling current
683 versions of GCC: undefined symbol errors occur during assembly if you
686 The solution is to compile the current version of GCC without
687 @samp{-g}. That makes a working compiler which you can use to recompile
691 Solaris 2 comes with a number of optional OS packages. Some of these
692 packages are needed to use GCC fully. If you did not install all
693 optional packages when installing Solaris, you will need to verify that
694 the packages that GCC needs are installed.
696 To check whether an optional package is installed, use
697 the @code{pkginfo} command. To add an optional package, use the
698 @code{pkgadd} command. For further details, see the Solaris
701 For Solaris 2.0 and 2.1, GCC needs six packages: @samp{SUNWarc},
702 @samp{SUNWbtool}, @samp{SUNWesu}, @samp{SUNWhea}, @samp{SUNWlibm}, and
705 For Solaris 2.2, GCC needs an additional seventh package: @samp{SUNWsprot}.
708 On Solaris 2, trying to use the linker and other tools in
709 @file{/usr/ucb} to install GCC has been observed to cause trouble.
710 For example, the linker may hang indefinitely. The fix is to remove
711 @file{/usr/ucb} from your @code{PATH}.
714 If you use the 1.31 version of the MIPS assembler (such as was shipped
715 with Ultrix 3.1), you will need to use the -fno-delayed-branch switch
716 when optimizing floating point code. Otherwise, the assembler will
717 complain when the GCC compiler fills a branch delay slot with a
718 floating point instruction, such as @code{add.d}.
721 If on a MIPS system you get an error message saying ``does not have gp
722 sections for all it's [sic] sectons [sic]'', don't worry about it. This
723 happens whenever you use GAS with the MIPS linker, but there is not
724 really anything wrong, and it is okay to use the output file. You can
725 stop such warnings by installing the GNU linker.
727 It would be nice to extend GAS to produce the gp tables, but they are
728 optional, and there should not be a warning about their absence.
731 In Ultrix 4.0 on the MIPS machine, @file{stdio.h} does not work with GNU
732 CC at all unless it has been fixed with @code{fixincludes}. This causes
733 problems in building GCC. Once GCC is installed, the problems go
736 To work around this problem, when making the stage 1 compiler, specify
740 GCC_FOR_TARGET="./xgcc -B./ -I./include"
743 When making stage 2 and stage 3, specify this option:
746 CFLAGS="-g -I./include"
750 Users have reported some problems with version 2.0 of the MIPS
751 compiler tools that were shipped with Ultrix 4.1. Version 2.10
752 which came with Ultrix 4.2 seems to work fine.
754 Users have also reported some problems with version 2.20 of the
755 MIPS compiler tools that were shipped with RISC/os 4.x. The earlier
756 version 2.11 seems to work fine.
759 Some versions of the MIPS linker will issue an assertion failure
760 when linking code that uses @code{alloca} against shared
761 libraries on RISC-OS 5.0, and DEC's OSF/1 systems. This is a bug
762 in the linker, that is supposed to be fixed in future revisions.
763 To protect against this, GCC passes @samp{-non_shared} to the
764 linker unless you pass an explicit @samp{-shared} or
765 @samp{-call_shared} switch.
768 On System V release 3, you may get this error message
772 ld fatal: failed to write symbol name @var{something}
773 in strings table for file @var{whatever}
776 This probably indicates that the disk is full or your ULIMIT won't allow
777 the file to be as large as it needs to be.
779 This problem can also result because the kernel parameter @code{MAXUMEM}
780 is too small. If so, you must regenerate the kernel and make the value
781 much larger. The default value is reported to be 1024; a value of 32768
782 is said to work. Smaller values may also work.
785 On System V, if you get an error like this,
788 /usr/local/lib/bison.simple: In function `yyparse':
789 /usr/local/lib/bison.simple:625: virtual memory exhausted
793 that too indicates a problem with disk space, ULIMIT, or @code{MAXUMEM}.
796 Current GCC versions probably do not work on version 2 of the NeXT
800 On NeXTStep 3.0, the Objective C compiler does not work, due,
801 apparently, to a kernel bug that it happens to trigger. This problem
802 does not happen on 3.1.
805 On the Tower models 4@var{n}0 and 6@var{n}0, by default a process is not
806 allowed to have more than one megabyte of memory. GCC cannot compile
807 itself (or many other programs) with @samp{-O} in that much memory.
809 To solve this problem, reconfigure the kernel adding the following line
810 to the configuration file:
817 On HP 9000 series 300 or 400 running HP-UX release 8.0, there is a bug
818 in the assembler that must be fixed before GCC can be built. This
819 bug manifests itself during the first stage of compilation, while
820 building @file{libgcc2.a}:
824 cc1: warning: `-g' option not supported on this version of GCC
825 cc1: warning: `-g1' option not supported on this version of GCC
826 ./xgcc: Internal compiler error: program as got fatal signal 11
829 A patched version of the assembler is available as the file
830 @uref{ftp://altdorf.ai.mit.edu/archive/cph/hpux-8.0-assembler}. If you
831 have HP software support, the patch can also be obtained directly from
832 HP, as described in the following note:
835 This is the patched assembler, to patch SR#1653-010439, where the
836 assembler aborts on floating point constants.
838 The bug is not really in the assembler, but in the shared library
839 version of the function ``cvtnum(3c)''. The bug on ``cvtnum(3c)'' is
840 SR#4701-078451. Anyway, the attached assembler uses the archive
841 library version of ``cvtnum(3c)'' and thus does not exhibit the bug.
844 This patch is also known as PHCO_4484.
847 On HP-UX version 8.05, but not on 8.07 or more recent versions,
848 the @code{fixproto} shell script triggers a bug in the system shell.
849 If you encounter this problem, upgrade your operating system or
850 use BASH (the GNU shell) to run @code{fixproto}.
853 Some versions of the Pyramid C compiler are reported to be unable to
854 compile GCC. You must use an older version of GCC for
855 bootstrapping. One indication of this problem is if you get a crash
856 when GCC compiles the function @code{muldi3} in file @file{libgcc2.c}.
858 You may be able to succeed by getting GCC version 1, installing it,
859 and using it to compile GCC version 2. The bug in the Pyramid C
860 compiler does not seem to affect GCC version 1.
863 There may be similar problems on System V Release 3.1 on 386 systems.
866 On the Intel Paragon (an i860 machine), if you are using operating
867 system version 1.0, you will get warnings or errors about redefinition
868 of @code{va_arg} when you build GCC.
870 If this happens, then you need to link most programs with the library
871 @file{iclib.a}. You must also modify @file{stdio.h} as follows: before
875 #if defined(__i860__) && !defined(_VA_LIST)
890 extern int vprintf(const char *, va_list );
891 extern int vsprintf(char *, const char *, va_list );
902 These problems don't exist in operating system version 1.1.
905 On the Altos 3068, programs compiled with GCC won't work unless you
906 fix a kernel bug. This happens using system versions V.2.2 1.0gT1 and
907 V.2.2 1.0e and perhaps later versions as well. See the file
911 You will get several sorts of compilation and linking errors on the
912 we32k if you don't follow the special instructions. @xref{Configurations}.
915 A bug in the HP-UX 8.05 (and earlier) shell will cause the fixproto
916 program to report an error of the form:
919 ./fixproto: sh internal 1K buffer overflow
922 To fix this, change the first line of the fixproto script to look like:
929 @node Cross-Compiler Problems
930 @section Cross-Compiler Problems
932 You may run into problems with cross compilation on certain machines,
937 Cross compilation can run into trouble for certain machines because
938 some target machines' assemblers require floating point numbers to be
939 written as @emph{integer} constants in certain contexts.
941 The compiler writes these integer constants by examining the floating
942 point value as an integer and printing that integer, because this is
943 simple to write and independent of the details of the floating point
944 representation. But this does not work if the compiler is running on
945 a different machine with an incompatible floating point format, or
946 even a different byte-ordering.
948 In addition, correct constant folding of floating point values
949 requires representing them in the target machine's format.
950 (The C standard does not quite require this, but in practice
951 it is the only way to win.)
953 It is now possible to overcome these problems by defining macros such
954 as @code{REAL_VALUE_TYPE}. But doing so is a substantial amount of
955 work for each target machine.
957 @xref{Cross-compilation}.
960 @xref{Cross-compilation,,Cross Compilation and Floating Point Format,
961 gcc.info, Using and Porting GCC}.
965 At present, the program @file{mips-tfile} which adds debug
966 support to object files on MIPS systems does not work in a cross
971 @section Interoperation
973 This section lists various difficulties encountered in using GNU C or
974 GNU C++ together with other compilers or with the assemblers, linkers,
975 libraries and debuggers on certain systems.
979 Objective C does not work on the RS/6000.
982 GNU C++ does not do name mangling in the same way as other C++
983 compilers. This means that object files compiled with one compiler
984 cannot be used with another.
986 This effect is intentional, to protect you from more subtle problems.
987 Compilers differ as to many internal details of C++ implementation,
988 including: how class instances are laid out, how multiple inheritance is
989 implemented, and how virtual function calls are handled. If the name
990 encoding were made the same, your programs would link against libraries
991 provided from other compilers---but the programs would then crash when
992 run. Incompatible libraries are then detected at link time, rather than
996 Older GDB versions sometimes fail to read the output of GCC version
997 2. If you have trouble, get GDB version 4.4 or later.
1001 DBX rejects some files produced by GCC, though it accepts similar
1002 constructs in output from PCC. Until someone can supply a coherent
1003 description of what is valid DBX input and what is not, there is
1004 nothing I can do about these problems. You are on your own.
1007 The GNU assembler (GAS) does not support PIC. To generate PIC code, you
1008 must use some other assembler, such as @file{/bin/as}.
1011 On some BSD systems, including some versions of Ultrix, use of profiling
1012 causes static variable destructors (currently used only in C++) not to
1016 Use of @samp{-I/usr/include} may cause trouble.
1018 Many systems come with header files that won't work with GCC unless
1019 corrected by @code{fixincludes}. The corrected header files go in a new
1020 directory; GCC searches this directory before @file{/usr/include}.
1021 If you use @samp{-I/usr/include}, this tells GCC to search
1022 @file{/usr/include} earlier on, before the corrected headers. The
1023 result is that you get the uncorrected header files.
1025 Instead, you should use these options (when compiling C programs):
1028 -I/usr/local/lib/gcc-lib/@var{target}/@var{version}/include -I/usr/include
1031 For C++ programs, GCC also uses a special directory that defines C++
1032 interfaces to standard C subroutines. This directory is meant to be
1033 searched @emph{before} other standard include directories, so that it
1034 takes precedence. If you are compiling C++ programs and specifying
1035 include directories explicitly, use this option first, then the two
1039 -I/usr/local/lib/g++-include
1043 @cindex @code{vfork}, for the Sun-4
1045 There is a bug in @code{vfork} on the Sun-4 which causes the registers
1046 of the child process to clobber those of the parent. Because of this,
1047 programs that call @code{vfork} are likely to lose when compiled
1048 optimized with GCC when the child code alters registers which contain
1049 C variables in the parent. This affects variables which are live in the
1050 parent across the call to @code{vfork}.
1052 If you encounter this, you can work around the problem by declaring
1053 variables @code{volatile} in the function that calls @code{vfork}, until
1054 the problem goes away, or by not declaring them @code{register} and not
1055 using @samp{-O} for those source files.
1059 On some SGI systems, when you use @samp{-lgl_s} as an option,
1060 it gets translated magically to @samp{-lgl_s -lX11_s -lc_s}.
1061 Naturally, this does not happen when you use GCC.
1062 You must specify all three options explicitly.
1065 On a Sparc, GCC aligns all values of type @code{double} on an 8-byte
1066 boundary, and it expects every @code{double} to be so aligned. The Sun
1067 compiler usually gives @code{double} values 8-byte alignment, with one
1068 exception: function arguments of type @code{double} may not be aligned.
1070 As a result, if a function compiled with Sun CC takes the address of an
1071 argument of type @code{double} and passes this pointer of type
1072 @code{double *} to a function compiled with GCC, dereferencing the
1073 pointer may cause a fatal signal.
1075 One way to solve this problem is to compile your entire program with GNU
1076 CC. Another solution is to modify the function that is compiled with
1077 Sun CC to copy the argument into a local variable; local variables
1078 are always properly aligned. A third solution is to modify the function
1079 that uses the pointer to dereference it via the following function
1080 @code{access_double} instead of directly with @samp{*}:
1084 access_double (double *unaligned_ptr)
1086 union d2i @{ double d; int i[2]; @};
1088 union d2i *p = (union d2i *) unaligned_ptr;
1099 Storing into the pointer can be done likewise with the same union.
1102 On Solaris, the @code{malloc} function in the @file{libmalloc.a} library
1103 may allocate memory that is only 4 byte aligned. Since GCC on the
1104 Sparc assumes that doubles are 8 byte aligned, this may result in a
1105 fatal signal if doubles are stored in memory allocated by the
1106 @file{libmalloc.a} library.
1108 The solution is to not use the @file{libmalloc.a} library. Use instead
1109 @code{malloc} and related functions from @file{libc.a}; they do not have
1113 Sun forgot to include a static version of @file{libdl.a} with some
1114 versions of SunOS (mainly 4.1). This results in undefined symbols when
1115 linking static binaries (that is, if you use @samp{-static}). If you
1116 see undefined symbols @code{_dlclose}, @code{_dlsym} or @code{_dlopen}
1117 when linking, compile and link against the file
1118 @file{mit/util/misc/dlsym.c} from the MIT version of X windows.
1121 The 128-bit long double format that the Sparc port supports currently
1122 works by using the architecturally defined quad-word floating point
1123 instructions. Since there is no hardware that supports these
1124 instructions they must be emulated by the operating system. Long
1125 doubles do not work in Sun OS versions 4.0.3 and earlier, because the
1126 kernel emulator uses an obsolete and incompatible format. Long doubles
1127 do not work in Sun OS version 4.1.1 due to a problem in a Sun library.
1128 Long doubles do work on Sun OS versions 4.1.2 and higher, but GCC
1129 does not enable them by default. Long doubles appear to work in Sun OS
1133 On HP-UX version 9.01 on the HP PA, the HP compiler @code{cc} does not
1134 compile GCC correctly. We do not yet know why. However, GCC
1135 compiled on earlier HP-UX versions works properly on HP-UX 9.01 and can
1136 compile itself properly on 9.01.
1139 On the HP PA machine, ADB sometimes fails to work on functions compiled
1140 with GCC. Specifically, it fails to work on functions that use
1141 @code{alloca} or variable-size arrays. This is because GCC doesn't
1142 generate HP-UX unwind descriptors for such functions. It may even be
1143 impossible to generate them.
1146 Debugging (@samp{-g}) is not supported on the HP PA machine, unless you use
1147 the preliminary GNU tools (@pxref{Installation}).
1150 Taking the address of a label may generate errors from the HP-UX
1151 PA assembler. GAS for the PA does not have this problem.
1154 Using floating point parameters for indirect calls to static functions
1155 will not work when using the HP assembler. There simply is no way for GCC
1156 to specify what registers hold arguments for static functions when using
1157 the HP assembler. GAS for the PA does not have this problem.
1160 In extremely rare cases involving some very large functions you may
1161 receive errors from the HP linker complaining about an out of bounds
1162 unconditional branch offset. This used to occur more often in previous
1163 versions of GCC, but is now exceptionally rare. If you should run
1164 into it, you can work around by making your function smaller.
1167 GCC compiled code sometimes emits warnings from the HP-UX assembler of
1171 (warning) Use of GR3 when
1172 frame >= 8192 may cause conflict.
1175 These warnings are harmless and can be safely ignored.
1178 The current version of the assembler (@file{/bin/as}) for the RS/6000
1179 has certain problems that prevent the @samp{-g} option in GCC from
1180 working. Note that @file{Makefile.in} uses @samp{-g} by default when
1181 compiling @file{libgcc2.c}.
1183 IBM has produced a fixed version of the assembler. The upgraded
1184 assembler unfortunately was not included in any of the AIX 3.2 update
1185 PTF releases (3.2.2, 3.2.3, or 3.2.3e). Users of AIX 3.1 should request
1186 PTF U403044 from IBM and users of AIX 3.2 should request PTF U416277.
1187 See the file @file{README.RS6000} for more details on these updates.
1189 You can test for the presence of a fixed assembler by using the
1197 If the command exits normally, the assembler fix already is installed.
1198 If the assembler complains that "-u" is an unknown flag, you need to
1202 On the IBM RS/6000, compiling code of the form
1213 will cause the linker to report an undefined symbol @code{foo}.
1214 Although this behavior differs from most other systems, it is not a
1215 bug because redefining an @code{extern} variable as @code{static}
1216 is undefined in ISO C.
1219 AIX on the RS/6000 provides support (NLS) for environments outside of
1220 the United States. Compilers and assemblers use NLS to support
1221 locale-specific representations of various objects including
1222 floating-point numbers ("." vs "," for separating decimal fractions).
1223 There have been problems reported where the library linked with GCC does
1224 not produce the same floating-point formats that the assembler accepts.
1225 If you have this problem, set the LANG environment variable to "C" or
1229 Even if you specify @samp{-fdollars-in-identifiers},
1230 you cannot successfully use @samp{$} in identifiers on the RS/6000 due
1231 to a restriction in the IBM assembler. GAS supports these
1235 On the RS/6000, XLC version 1.3.0.0 will miscompile @file{jump.c}. XLC
1236 version 1.3.0.1 or later fixes this problem. You can obtain XLC-1.3.0.2
1237 by requesting PTF 421749 from IBM.
1240 There is an assembler bug in versions of DG/UX prior to 5.4.2.01 that
1241 occurs when the @samp{fldcr} instruction is used. GCC uses
1242 @samp{fldcr} on the 88100 to serialize volatile memory references. Use
1243 the option @samp{-mno-serialize-volatile} if your version of the
1244 assembler has this bug.
1247 On VMS, GAS versions 1.38.1 and earlier may cause spurious warning
1248 messages from the linker. These warning messages complain of mismatched
1249 psect attributes. You can ignore them. @xref{VMS Install}.
1252 On NewsOS version 3, if you include both of the files @file{stddef.h}
1253 and @file{sys/types.h}, you get an error because there are two typedefs
1254 of @code{size_t}. You should change @file{sys/types.h} by adding these
1255 lines around the definition of @code{size_t}:
1260 @var{actual typedef here}
1266 On the Alliant, the system's own convention for returning structures
1267 and unions is unusual, and is not compatible with GCC no matter
1268 what options are used.
1273 On the IBM RT PC, the MetaWare HighC compiler (hc) uses a different
1274 convention for structure and union returning. Use the option
1275 @samp{-mhc-struct-return} to tell GCC to use a convention compatible
1278 @cindex Vax calling convention
1279 @cindex Ultrix calling convention
1281 On Ultrix, the Fortran compiler expects registers 2 through 5 to be saved
1282 by function calls. However, the C compiler uses conventions compatible
1283 with BSD Unix: registers 2 through 5 may be clobbered by function calls.
1285 GCC uses the same convention as the Ultrix C compiler. You can use
1286 these options to produce code compatible with the Fortran compiler:
1289 -fcall-saved-r2 -fcall-saved-r3 -fcall-saved-r4 -fcall-saved-r5
1293 On the WE32k, you may find that programs compiled with GCC do not
1294 work with the standard shared C library. You may need to link with
1295 the ordinary C compiler. If you do so, you must specify the following
1299 -L/usr/local/lib/gcc-lib/we32k-att-sysv/2.8.1 -lgcc -lc_s
1302 The first specifies where to find the library @file{libgcc.a}
1303 specified with the @samp{-lgcc} option.
1305 GCC does linking by invoking @code{ld}, just as @code{cc} does, and
1306 there is no reason why it @emph{should} matter which compilation program
1307 you use to invoke @code{ld}. If someone tracks this problem down,
1308 it can probably be fixed easily.
1311 On the Alpha, you may get assembler errors about invalid syntax as a
1312 result of floating point constants. This is due to a bug in the C
1313 library functions @code{ecvt}, @code{fcvt} and @code{gcvt}. Given valid
1314 floating point numbers, they sometimes print @samp{NaN}.
1317 On Irix 4.0.5F (and perhaps in some other versions), an assembler bug
1318 sometimes reorders instructions incorrectly when optimization is turned
1319 on. If you think this may be happening to you, try using the GNU
1320 assembler; GAS version 2.1 supports ECOFF on Irix.
1322 Or use the @samp{-noasmopt} option when you compile GCC with itself,
1323 and then again when you compile your program. (This is a temporary
1324 kludge to turn off assembler optimization on Irix.) If this proves to
1325 be what you need, edit the assembler spec in the file @file{specs} so
1326 that it unconditionally passes @samp{-O0} to the assembler, and never
1327 passes @samp{-O2} or @samp{-O3}.
1331 @section Problems Compiling Certain Programs
1333 @c prevent bad page break with this line
1334 Certain programs have problems compiling.
1338 Parse errors may occur compiling X11 on a Decstation running Ultrix 4.2
1339 because of problems in DEC's versions of the X11 header files
1340 @file{X11/Xlib.h} and @file{X11/Xutil.h}. People recommend adding
1341 @samp{-I/usr/include/mit} to use the MIT versions of the header files,
1342 using the @samp{-traditional} switch to turn off ISO C, or fixing the
1343 header files by adding this:
1347 #define NeedFunctionPrototypes 0
1352 On various 386 Unix systems derived from System V, including SCO, ISC,
1353 and ESIX, you may get error messages about running out of virtual memory
1354 while compiling certain programs.
1356 You can prevent this problem by linking GCC with the GNU malloc
1357 (which thus replaces the malloc that comes with the system). GNU malloc
1358 is available as a separate package, and also in the file
1359 @file{src/gmalloc.c} in the GNU Emacs 19 distribution.
1361 If you have installed GNU malloc as a separate library package, use this
1362 option when you relink GCC:
1365 MALLOC=/usr/local/lib/libgmalloc.a
1368 Alternatively, if you have compiled @file{gmalloc.c} from Emacs 19, copy
1369 the object file to @file{gmalloc.o} and use this option when you relink
1377 @node Incompatibilities
1378 @section Incompatibilities of GCC
1379 @cindex incompatibilities of GCC
1381 There are several noteworthy incompatibilities between GNU C and K&R
1382 (non-ISO) versions of C. The @samp{-traditional} option
1383 eliminates many of these incompatibilities, @emph{but not all}, by
1384 telling GNU C to behave like a K&R C compiler.
1387 @cindex string constants
1388 @cindex read-only strings
1389 @cindex shared strings
1391 GCC normally makes string constants read-only. If several
1392 identical-looking string constants are used, GCC stores only one
1395 @cindex @code{mktemp}, and constant strings
1396 One consequence is that you cannot call @code{mktemp} with a string
1397 constant argument. The function @code{mktemp} always alters the
1398 string its argument points to.
1400 @cindex @code{sscanf}, and constant strings
1401 @cindex @code{fscanf}, and constant strings
1402 @cindex @code{scanf}, and constant strings
1403 Another consequence is that @code{sscanf} does not work on some systems
1404 when passed a string constant as its format control string or input.
1405 This is because @code{sscanf} incorrectly tries to write into the string
1406 constant. Likewise @code{fscanf} and @code{scanf}.
1408 The best solution to these problems is to change the program to use
1409 @code{char}-array variables with initialization strings for these
1410 purposes instead of string constants. But if this is not possible,
1411 you can use the @samp{-fwritable-strings} flag, which directs GCC
1412 to handle string constants the same way most C compilers do.
1413 @samp{-traditional} also has this effect, among others.
1416 @code{-2147483648} is positive.
1418 This is because 2147483648 cannot fit in the type @code{int}, so
1419 (following the ISO C rules) its data type is @code{unsigned long int}.
1420 Negating this value yields 2147483648 again.
1423 GCC does not substitute macro arguments when they appear inside of
1424 string constants. For example, the following macro in GCC
1431 will produce output @code{"a"} regardless of what the argument @var{a} is.
1433 The @samp{-traditional} option directs GCC to handle such cases
1434 (among others) in the old-fashioned (non-ISO) fashion.
1436 @cindex @code{setjmp} incompatibilities
1437 @cindex @code{longjmp} incompatibilities
1439 When you use @code{setjmp} and @code{longjmp}, the only automatic
1440 variables guaranteed to remain valid are those declared
1441 @code{volatile}. This is a consequence of automatic register
1442 allocation. Consider this function:
1456 /* @r{@code{longjmp (j)} may occur in @code{fun3}.} */
1461 Here @code{a} may or may not be restored to its first value when the
1462 @code{longjmp} occurs. If @code{a} is allocated in a register, then
1463 its first value is restored; otherwise, it keeps the last value stored
1466 If you use the @samp{-W} option with the @samp{-O} option, you will
1467 get a warning when GCC thinks such a problem might be possible.
1469 The @samp{-traditional} option directs GNU C to put variables in
1470 the stack by default, rather than in registers, in functions that
1471 call @code{setjmp}. This results in the behavior found in
1472 traditional C compilers.
1475 Programs that use preprocessing directives in the middle of macro
1476 arguments do not work with GCC. For example, a program like this
1485 ISO C does not permit such a construct. It would make sense to support
1486 it when @samp{-traditional} is used, but it is too much work to
1490 K&R compilers allow comments to cross over an inclusion boundary (i.e.
1491 started in an include file and ended in the including file). I think
1492 this would be quite ugly and can't imagine it could be needed.
1494 @cindex external declaration scope
1495 @cindex scope of external declarations
1496 @cindex declaration scope
1498 Declarations of external variables and functions within a block apply
1499 only to the block containing the declaration. In other words, they
1500 have the same scope as any other declaration in the same place.
1502 In some other C compilers, a @code{extern} declaration affects all the
1503 rest of the file even if it happens within a block.
1505 The @samp{-traditional} option directs GNU C to treat all @code{extern}
1506 declarations as global, like traditional compilers.
1509 In traditional C, you can combine @code{long}, etc., with a typedef name,
1514 typedef long foo bar;
1517 In ISO C, this is not allowed: @code{long} and other type modifiers
1518 require an explicit @code{int}. Because this criterion is expressed
1519 by Bison grammar rules rather than C code, the @samp{-traditional}
1520 flag cannot alter it.
1522 @cindex typedef names as function parameters
1524 PCC allows typedef names to be used as function parameters. The
1525 difficulty described immediately above applies here too.
1528 When in @samp{-traditional} mode, GCC allows the following erroneous
1529 pair of declarations to appear together in a given scope:
1537 GCC treats all characters of identifiers as significant, even when in
1538 @samp{-traditional} mode. According to K&R-1 (2.2), ``No more than the
1539 first eight characters are significant, although more may be used.''.
1540 Also according to K&R-1 (2.2), ``An identifier is a sequence of letters
1541 and digits; the first character must be a letter. The underscore _
1542 counts as a letter.'', but GCC also allows dollar signs in identifiers.
1546 PCC allows whitespace in the middle of compound assignment operators
1547 such as @samp{+=}. GCC, following the ISO standard, does not
1548 allow this. The difficulty described immediately above applies here
1554 GCC complains about unterminated character constants inside of
1555 preprocessing conditionals that fail. Some programs have English
1556 comments enclosed in conditionals that are guaranteed to fail; if these
1557 comments contain apostrophes, GCC will probably report an error. For
1558 example, this code would produce an error:
1562 You can't expect this to work.
1566 The best solution to such a problem is to put the text into an actual
1567 C comment delimited by @samp{/*@dots{}*/}. However,
1568 @samp{-traditional} suppresses these error messages.
1571 Many user programs contain the declaration @samp{long time ();}. In the
1572 past, the system header files on many systems did not actually declare
1573 @code{time}, so it did not matter what type your program declared it to
1574 return. But in systems with ISO C headers, @code{time} is declared to
1575 return @code{time_t}, and if that is not the same as @code{long}, then
1576 @samp{long time ();} is erroneous.
1578 The solution is to change your program to use appropriate system headers
1579 (@code{<time.h>} on systems with ISO C headers) and not to declare
1580 @code{time} if the system header files declare it, or failing that to
1581 use @code{time_t} as the return type of @code{time}.
1583 @cindex @code{float} as function value type
1585 When compiling functions that return @code{float}, PCC converts it to
1586 a double. GCC actually returns a @code{float}. If you are concerned
1587 with PCC compatibility, you should declare your functions to return
1588 @code{double}; you might as well say what you mean.
1593 When compiling functions that return structures or unions, GCC
1594 output code normally uses a method different from that used on most
1595 versions of Unix. As a result, code compiled with GCC cannot call
1596 a structure-returning function compiled with PCC, and vice versa.
1598 The method used by GCC is as follows: a structure or union which is
1599 1, 2, 4 or 8 bytes long is returned like a scalar. A structure or union
1600 with any other size is stored into an address supplied by the caller
1601 (usually in a special, fixed register, but on some machines it is passed
1602 on the stack). The machine-description macros @code{STRUCT_VALUE} and
1603 @code{STRUCT_INCOMING_VALUE} tell GCC where to pass this address.
1605 By contrast, PCC on most target machines returns structures and unions
1606 of any size by copying the data into an area of static storage, and then
1607 returning the address of that storage as if it were a pointer value.
1608 The caller must copy the data from that memory area to the place where
1609 the value is wanted. GCC does not use this method because it is
1610 slower and nonreentrant.
1612 On some newer machines, PCC uses a reentrant convention for all
1613 structure and union returning. GCC on most of these machines uses a
1614 compatible convention when returning structures and unions in memory,
1615 but still returns small structures and unions in registers.
1617 You can tell GCC to use a compatible convention for all structure and
1618 union returning with the option @samp{-fpcc-struct-return}.
1620 @cindex preprocessing tokens
1621 @cindex preprocessing numbers
1623 GNU C complains about program fragments such as @samp{0x74ae-0x4000}
1624 which appear to be two hexadecimal constants separated by the minus
1625 operator. Actually, this string is a single @dfn{preprocessing token}.
1626 Each such token must correspond to one token in C. Since this does not,
1627 GNU C prints an error message. Although it may appear obvious that what
1628 is meant is an operator and two values, the ISO C standard specifically
1629 requires that this be treated as erroneous.
1631 A @dfn{preprocessing token} is a @dfn{preprocessing number} if it
1632 begins with a digit and is followed by letters, underscores, digits,
1633 periods and @samp{e+}, @samp{e-}, @samp{E+}, or @samp{E-} character
1636 To make the above program fragment valid, place whitespace in front of
1637 the minus sign. This whitespace will end the preprocessing number.
1641 @section Fixed Header Files
1643 GCC needs to install corrected versions of some system header files.
1644 This is because most target systems have some header files that won't
1645 work with GCC unless they are changed. Some have bugs, some are
1646 incompatible with ISO C, and some depend on special features of other
1649 Installing GCC automatically creates and installs the fixed header
1650 files, by running a program called @code{fixincludes} (or for certain
1651 targets an alternative such as @code{fixinc.svr4}). Normally, you
1652 don't need to pay attention to this. But there are cases where it
1653 doesn't do the right thing automatically.
1657 If you update the system's header files, such as by installing a new
1658 system version, the fixed header files of GCC are not automatically
1659 updated. The easiest way to update them is to reinstall GCC. (If
1660 you want to be clever, look in the makefile and you can find a
1664 On some systems, in particular SunOS 4, header file directories contain
1665 machine-specific symbolic links in certain places. This makes it
1666 possible to share most of the header files among hosts running the
1667 same version of SunOS 4 on different machine models.
1669 The programs that fix the header files do not understand this special
1670 way of using symbolic links; therefore, the directory of fixed header
1671 files is good only for the machine model used to build it.
1673 In SunOS 4, only programs that look inside the kernel will notice the
1674 difference between machine models. Therefore, for most purposes, you
1675 need not be concerned about this.
1677 It is possible to make separate sets of fixed header files for the
1678 different machine models, and arrange a structure of symbolic links so
1679 as to use the proper set, but you'll have to do this by hand.
1682 On Lynxos, GCC by default does not fix the header files. This is
1683 because bugs in the shell cause the @code{fixincludes} script to fail.
1685 This means you will encounter problems due to bugs in the system header
1686 files. It may be no comfort that they aren't GCC's fault, but it
1687 does mean that there's nothing for us to do about them.
1690 @node Standard Libraries
1691 @section Standard Libraries
1693 GCC by itself attempts to be a conforming freestanding implementation.
1694 @xref{Standards,,Language Standards Supported by GCC}, for details of
1695 what this means. Beyond the library facilities required of such an
1696 implementation, the rest of the C library is supplied by the vendor of
1697 the operating system. If that C library doesn't conform to the C
1698 standards, then your programs might get warnings (especially when using
1699 @samp{-Wall}) that you don't expect.
1701 For example, the @code{sprintf} function on SunOS 4.1.3 returns
1702 @code{char *} while the C standard says that @code{sprintf} returns an
1703 @code{int}. The @code{fixincludes} program could make the prototype for
1704 this function match the Standard, but that would be wrong, since the
1705 function will still return @code{char *}.
1707 If you need a Standard compliant library, then you need to find one, as
1708 GCC does not provide one. The GNU C library (called @code{glibc})
1709 provides ISO C, POSIX, BSD, SystemV and X/Open compatibility for
1710 GNU/Linux and HURD-based GNU systems; no recent version of it supports
1711 other systems, though some very old versions did. Version 2.2 of the
1712 GNU C library includes nearly complete C99 support. You could also ask
1713 your operating system vendor if newer libraries are available.
1715 @node Disappointments
1716 @section Disappointments and Misunderstandings
1718 These problems are perhaps regrettable, but we don't know any practical
1723 Certain local variables aren't recognized by debuggers when you compile
1726 This occurs because sometimes GCC optimizes the variable out of
1727 existence. There is no way to tell the debugger how to compute the
1728 value such a variable ``would have had'', and it is not clear that would
1729 be desirable anyway. So GCC simply does not mention the eliminated
1730 variable when it writes debugging information.
1732 You have to expect a certain amount of disagreement between the
1733 executable and your source code, when you use optimization.
1735 @cindex conflicting types
1736 @cindex scope of declaration
1738 Users often think it is a bug when GCC reports an error for code
1742 int foo (struct mumble *);
1744 struct mumble @{ @dots{} @};
1746 int foo (struct mumble *x)
1750 This code really is erroneous, because the scope of @code{struct
1751 mumble} in the prototype is limited to the argument list containing it.
1752 It does not refer to the @code{struct mumble} defined with file scope
1753 immediately below---they are two unrelated types with similar names in
1756 But in the definition of @code{foo}, the file-scope type is used
1757 because that is available to be inherited. Thus, the definition and
1758 the prototype do not match, and you get an error.
1760 This behavior may seem silly, but it's what the ISO standard specifies.
1761 It is easy enough for you to make your code work by moving the
1762 definition of @code{struct mumble} above the prototype. It's not worth
1763 being incompatible with ISO C just to avoid an error for the example
1767 Accesses to bitfields even in volatile objects works by accessing larger
1768 objects, such as a byte or a word. You cannot rely on what size of
1769 object is accessed in order to read or write the bitfield; it may even
1770 vary for a given bitfield according to the precise usage.
1772 If you care about controlling the amount of memory that is accessed, use
1773 volatile but do not use bitfields.
1776 GCC comes with shell scripts to fix certain known problems in system
1777 header files. They install corrected copies of various header files in
1778 a special directory where only GCC will normally look for them. The
1779 scripts adapt to various systems by searching all the system header
1780 files for the problem cases that we know about.
1782 If new system header files are installed, nothing automatically arranges
1783 to update the corrected header files. You will have to reinstall GCC
1784 to fix the new header files. More specifically, go to the build
1785 directory and delete the files @file{stmp-fixinc} and
1786 @file{stmp-headers}, and the subdirectory @code{include}; then do
1787 @samp{make install} again.
1790 @cindex floating point precision
1791 On 68000 and x86 systems, for instance, you can get paradoxical results
1792 if you test the precise values of floating point numbers. For example,
1793 you can find that a floating point value which is not a NaN is not equal
1794 to itself. This results from the fact that the floating point registers
1795 hold a few more bits of precision than fit in a @code{double} in memory.
1796 Compiled code moves values between memory and floating point registers
1797 at its convenience, and moving them into memory truncates them.
1799 You can partially avoid this problem by using the @samp{-ffloat-store}
1800 option (@pxref{Optimize Options}).
1803 On the MIPS, variable argument functions using @file{varargs.h}
1804 cannot have a floating point value for the first argument. The
1805 reason for this is that in the absence of a prototype in scope,
1806 if the first argument is a floating point, it is passed in a
1807 floating point register, rather than an integer register.
1809 If the code is rewritten to use the ISO standard @file{stdarg.h}
1810 method of variable arguments, and the prototype is in scope at
1811 the time of the call, everything will work fine.
1814 On the H8/300 and H8/300H, variable argument functions must be
1815 implemented using the ISO standard @file{stdarg.h} method of
1816 variable arguments. Furthermore, calls to functions using @file{stdarg.h}
1817 variable arguments must have a prototype for the called function
1818 in scope at the time of the call.
1821 @node C++ Misunderstandings
1822 @section Common Misunderstandings with GNU C++
1824 @cindex misunderstandings in C++
1825 @cindex surprises in C++
1826 @cindex C++ misunderstandings
1827 C++ is a complex language and an evolving one, and its standard
1828 definition (the ISO C++ standard) was only recently completed. As a
1829 result, your C++ compiler may occasionally surprise you, even when its
1830 behavior is correct. This section discusses some areas that frequently
1831 give rise to questions of this sort.
1834 * Static Definitions:: Static member declarations are not definitions
1835 * Temporaries:: Temporaries may vanish before you expect
1836 * Copy Assignment:: Copy Assignment operators copy virtual bases twice
1839 @node Static Definitions
1840 @subsection Declare @emph{and} Define Static Members
1842 @cindex C++ static data, declaring and defining
1843 @cindex static data in C++, declaring and defining
1844 @cindex declaring static data in C++
1845 @cindex defining static data in C++
1846 When a class has static data members, it is not enough to @emph{declare}
1847 the static member; you must also @emph{define} it. For example:
1858 This declaration only establishes that the class @code{Foo} has an
1859 @code{int} named @code{Foo::bar}, and a member function named
1860 @code{Foo::method}. But you still need to define @emph{both}
1861 @code{method} and @code{bar} elsewhere. According to the ISO
1862 standard, you must supply an initializer in one (and only one) source
1869 Other C++ compilers may not correctly implement the standard behavior.
1870 As a result, when you switch to @code{g++} from one of these compilers,
1871 you may discover that a program that appeared to work correctly in fact
1872 does not conform to the standard: @code{g++} reports as undefined
1873 symbols any static data members that lack definitions.
1876 @subsection Temporaries May Vanish Before You Expect
1878 @cindex temporaries, lifetime of
1879 @cindex portions of temporary objects, pointers to
1880 It is dangerous to use pointers or references to @emph{portions} of a
1881 temporary object. The compiler may very well delete the object before
1882 you expect it to, leaving a pointer to garbage. The most common place
1883 where this problem crops up is in classes like string classes,
1884 especially ones that define a conversion function to type @code{char *}
1885 or @code{const char *} -- which is one reason why the standard
1886 @code{string} class requires you to call the @code{c_str} member
1887 function. However, any class that returns a pointer to some internal
1888 structure is potentially subject to this problem.
1890 For example, a program may use a function @code{strfunc} that returns
1891 @code{string} objects, and another function @code{charfunc} that
1892 operates on pointers to @code{char}:
1896 void charfunc (const char *);
1901 const char *p = strfunc().c_str();
1910 In this situation, it may seem reasonable to save a pointer to the C
1911 string returned by the @code{c_str} member function and use that rather
1912 than call @code{c_str} repeatedly. However, the temporary string
1913 created by the call to @code{strfunc} is destroyed after @code{p} is
1914 initialized, at which point @code{p} is left pointing to freed memory.
1916 Code like this may run successfully under some other compilers,
1917 particularly obsolete cfront-based compilers that delete temporaries
1918 along with normal local variables. However, the GNU C++ behavior is
1919 standard-conforming, so if your program depends on late destruction of
1920 temporaries it is not portable.
1922 The safe way to write such code is to give the temporary a name, which
1923 forces it to remain until the end of the scope of the name. For
1927 string& tmp = strfunc ();
1928 charfunc (tmp.c_str ());
1931 @node Copy Assignment
1932 @subsection Implicit Copy-Assignment for Virtual Bases
1934 When a base class is virtual, only one subobject of the base class
1935 belongs to each full object. Also, the constructors and destructors are
1936 invoked only once, and called from the most-derived class. However, such
1937 objects behave unspecified when being assigned. For example:
1942 Base(char *n) : name(strdup(n))@{@}
1943 Base& operator= (const Base& other)@{
1945 name = strdup (other.name);
1949 struct A:virtual Base@{
1954 struct B:virtual Base@{
1959 struct Derived:public A, public B@{
1960 Derived():Base("Derived")@{@}
1963 void func(Derived &d1, Derived &d2)
1969 The C++ standard specifies that @samp{Base::Base} is only called once
1970 when constructing or copy-constructing a Derived object. It is
1971 unspecified whether @samp{Base::operator=} is called more than once when
1972 the implicit copy-assignment for Derived objects is invoked (as it is
1973 inside @samp{func} in the example).
1975 g++ implements the "intuitive" algorithm for copy-assignment: assign all
1976 direct bases, then assign all members. In that algorithm, the virtual
1977 base subobject can be encountered many times. In the example, copying
1978 proceeds in the following order: @samp{val}, @samp{name} (via
1979 @code{strdup}), @samp{bval}, and @samp{name} again.
1981 If application code relies on copy-assignment, a user-defined
1982 copy-assignment operator removes any uncertainties. With such an
1983 operator, the application can define whether and how the virtual base
1984 subobject is assigned.
1986 @node Protoize Caveats
1987 @section Caveats of using @code{protoize}
1989 The conversion programs @code{protoize} and @code{unprotoize} can
1990 sometimes change a source file in a way that won't work unless you
1995 @code{protoize} can insert references to a type name or type tag before
1996 the definition, or in a file where they are not defined.
1998 If this happens, compiler error messages should show you where the new
1999 references are, so fixing the file by hand is straightforward.
2002 There are some C constructs which @code{protoize} cannot figure out.
2003 For example, it can't determine argument types for declaring a
2004 pointer-to-function variable; this you must do by hand. @code{protoize}
2005 inserts a comment containing @samp{???} each time it finds such a
2006 variable; so you can find all such variables by searching for this
2007 string. ISO C does not require declaring the argument types of
2008 pointer-to-function types.
2011 Using @code{unprotoize} can easily introduce bugs. If the program
2012 relied on prototypes to bring about conversion of arguments, these
2013 conversions will not take place in the program without prototypes.
2014 One case in which you can be sure @code{unprotoize} is safe is when
2015 you are removing prototypes that were made with @code{protoize}; if
2016 the program worked before without any prototypes, it will work again
2019 You can find all the places where this problem might occur by compiling
2020 the program with the @samp{-Wconversion} option. It prints a warning
2021 whenever an argument is converted.
2024 Both conversion programs can be confused if there are macro calls in and
2025 around the text to be converted. In other words, the standard syntax
2026 for a declaration or definition must not result from expanding a macro.
2027 This problem is inherent in the design of C and cannot be fixed. If
2028 only a few functions have confusing macro calls, you can easily convert
2032 @code{protoize} cannot get the argument types for a function whose
2033 definition was not actually compiled due to preprocessing conditionals.
2034 When this happens, @code{protoize} changes nothing in regard to such
2035 a function. @code{protoize} tries to detect such instances and warn
2038 You can generally work around this problem by using @code{protoize} step
2039 by step, each time specifying a different set of @samp{-D} options for
2040 compilation, until all of the functions have been converted. There is
2041 no automatic way to verify that you have got them all, however.
2044 Confusion may result if there is an occasion to convert a function
2045 declaration or definition in a region of source code where there is more
2046 than one formal parameter list present. Thus, attempts to convert code
2047 containing multiple (conditionally compiled) versions of a single
2048 function header (in the same vicinity) may not produce the desired (or
2051 If you plan on converting source files which contain such code, it is
2052 recommended that you first make sure that each conditionally compiled
2053 region of source code which contains an alternative function header also
2054 contains at least one additional follower token (past the final right
2055 parenthesis of the function header). This should circumvent the
2059 @code{unprotoize} can become confused when trying to convert a function
2060 definition or declaration which contains a declaration for a
2061 pointer-to-function formal argument which has the same name as the
2062 function being defined or declared. We recommend you avoid such choices
2063 of formal parameter names.
2066 You might also want to correct some of the indentation by hand and break
2067 long lines. (The conversion programs don't write lines longer than
2068 eighty characters in any case.)
2072 @section Certain Changes We Don't Want to Make
2074 This section lists changes that people frequently request, but which
2075 we do not make because we think GCC is better without them.
2079 Checking the number and type of arguments to a function which has an
2080 old-fashioned definition and no prototype.
2082 Such a feature would work only occasionally---only for calls that appear
2083 in the same file as the called function, following the definition. The
2084 only way to check all calls reliably is to add a prototype for the
2085 function. But adding a prototype eliminates the motivation for this
2086 feature. So the feature is not worthwhile.
2089 Warning about using an expression whose type is signed as a shift count.
2091 Shift count operands are probably signed more often than unsigned.
2092 Warning about this would cause far more annoyance than good.
2095 Warning about assigning a signed value to an unsigned variable.
2097 Such assignments must be very common; warning about them would cause
2098 more annoyance than good.
2101 Warning when a non-void function value is ignored.
2103 Coming as I do from a Lisp background, I balk at the idea that there is
2104 something dangerous about discarding a value. There are functions that
2105 return values which some callers may find useful; it makes no sense to
2106 clutter the program with a cast to @code{void} whenever the value isn't
2110 Assuming (for optimization) that the address of an external symbol is
2113 This assumption is false on certain systems when @samp{#pragma weak} is
2117 Making @samp{-fshort-enums} the default.
2119 This would cause storage layout to be incompatible with most other C
2120 compilers. And it doesn't seem very important, given that you can get
2121 the same result in other ways. The case where it matters most is when
2122 the enumeration-valued object is inside a structure, and in that case
2123 you can specify a field width explicitly.
2126 Making bitfields unsigned by default on particular machines where ``the
2127 ABI standard'' says to do so.
2129 The ISO C standard leaves it up to the implementation whether a bitfield
2130 declared plain @code{int} is signed or not. This in effect creates two
2131 alternative dialects of C.
2133 The GNU C compiler supports both dialects; you can specify the signed
2134 dialect with @samp{-fsigned-bitfields} and the unsigned dialect with
2135 @samp{-funsigned-bitfields}. However, this leaves open the question of
2136 which dialect to use by default.
2138 Currently, the preferred dialect makes plain bitfields signed, because
2139 this is simplest. Since @code{int} is the same as @code{signed int} in
2140 every other context, it is cleanest for them to be the same in bitfields
2143 Some computer manufacturers have published Application Binary Interface
2144 standards which specify that plain bitfields should be unsigned. It is
2145 a mistake, however, to say anything about this issue in an ABI. This is
2146 because the handling of plain bitfields distinguishes two dialects of C.
2147 Both dialects are meaningful on every type of machine. Whether a
2148 particular object file was compiled using signed bitfields or unsigned
2149 is of no concern to other object files, even if they access the same
2150 bitfields in the same data structures.
2152 A given program is written in one or the other of these two dialects.
2153 The program stands a chance to work on most any machine if it is
2154 compiled with the proper dialect. It is unlikely to work at all if
2155 compiled with the wrong dialect.
2157 Many users appreciate the GNU C compiler because it provides an
2158 environment that is uniform across machines. These users would be
2159 inconvenienced if the compiler treated plain bitfields differently on
2162 Occasionally users write programs intended only for a particular machine
2163 type. On these occasions, the users would benefit if the GNU C compiler
2164 were to support by default the same dialect as the other compilers on
2165 that machine. But such applications are rare. And users writing a
2166 program to run on more than one type of machine cannot possibly benefit
2167 from this kind of compatibility.
2169 This is why GCC does and will treat plain bitfields in the same
2170 fashion on all types of machines (by default).
2172 There are some arguments for making bitfields unsigned by default on all
2173 machines. If, for example, this becomes a universal de facto standard,
2174 it would make sense for GCC to go along with it. This is something
2175 to be considered in the future.
2177 (Of course, users strongly concerned about portability should indicate
2178 explicitly in each bitfield whether it is signed or not. In this way,
2179 they write programs which have the same meaning in both C dialects.)
2182 Undefining @code{__STDC__} when @samp{-ansi} is not used.
2184 Currently, GCC defines @code{__STDC__} as long as you don't use
2185 @samp{-traditional}. This provides good results in practice.
2187 Programmers normally use conditionals on @code{__STDC__} to ask whether
2188 it is safe to use certain features of ISO C, such as function
2189 prototypes or ISO token concatenation. Since plain @samp{gcc} supports
2190 all the features of ISO C, the correct answer to these questions is
2193 Some users try to use @code{__STDC__} to check for the availability of
2194 certain library facilities. This is actually incorrect usage in an ISO
2195 C program, because the ISO C standard says that a conforming
2196 freestanding implementation should define @code{__STDC__} even though it
2197 does not have the library facilities. @samp{gcc -ansi -pedantic} is a
2198 conforming freestanding implementation, and it is therefore required to
2199 define @code{__STDC__}, even though it does not come with an ISO C
2202 Sometimes people say that defining @code{__STDC__} in a compiler that
2203 does not completely conform to the ISO C standard somehow violates the
2204 standard. This is illogical. The standard is a standard for compilers
2205 that claim to support ISO C, such as @samp{gcc -ansi}---not for other
2206 compilers such as plain @samp{gcc}. Whatever the ISO C standard says
2207 is relevant to the design of plain @samp{gcc} without @samp{-ansi} only
2208 for pragmatic reasons, not as a requirement.
2210 GCC normally defines @code{__STDC__} to be 1, and in addition
2211 defines @code{__STRICT_ANSI__} if you specify the @option{-ansi} option,
2212 or a @option{-std} option for strict conformance to some version of ISO C.
2213 On some hosts, system include files use a different convention, where
2214 @code{__STDC__} is normally 0, but is 1 if the user specifies strict
2215 conformance to the C Standard. GCC follows the host convention when
2216 processing system include files, but when processing user files it follows
2217 the usual GNU C convention.
2220 Undefining @code{__STDC__} in C++.
2222 Programs written to compile with C++-to-C translators get the
2223 value of @code{__STDC__} that goes with the C compiler that is
2224 subsequently used. These programs must test @code{__STDC__}
2225 to determine what kind of C preprocessor that compiler uses:
2226 whether they should concatenate tokens in the ISO C fashion
2227 or in the traditional fashion.
2229 These programs work properly with GNU C++ if @code{__STDC__} is defined.
2230 They would not work otherwise.
2232 In addition, many header files are written to provide prototypes in ISO
2233 C but not in traditional C. Many of these header files can work without
2234 change in C++ provided @code{__STDC__} is defined. If @code{__STDC__}
2235 is not defined, they will all fail, and will all need to be changed to
2236 test explicitly for C++ as well.
2239 Deleting ``empty'' loops.
2241 Historically, GCC has not deleted ``empty'' loops under the
2242 assumption that the most likely reason you would put one in a program is
2243 to have a delay, so deleting them will not make real programs run any
2246 However, the rationale here is that optimization of a nonempty loop
2247 cannot produce an empty one, which holds for C but is not always the
2250 Moreover, with @samp{-funroll-loops} small ``empty'' loops are already
2251 removed, so the current behavior is both sub-optimal and inconsistent
2252 and will change in the future.
2255 Making side effects happen in the same order as in some other compiler.
2257 @cindex side effects, order of evaluation
2258 @cindex order of evaluation, side effects
2259 It is never safe to depend on the order of evaluation of side effects.
2260 For example, a function call like this may very well behave differently
2261 from one compiler to another:
2264 void func (int, int);
2270 There is no guarantee (in either the C or the C++ standard language
2271 definitions) that the increments will be evaluated in any particular
2272 order. Either increment might happen first. @code{func} might get the
2273 arguments @samp{2, 3}, or it might get @samp{3, 2}, or even @samp{2, 2}.
2276 Not allowing structures with volatile fields in registers.
2278 Strictly speaking, there is no prohibition in the ISO C standard
2279 against allowing structures with volatile fields in registers, but
2280 it does not seem to make any sense and is probably not what you wanted
2281 to do. So the compiler will give an error message in this case.
2284 Making certain warnings into errors by default.
2286 Some ISO C testsuites report failure when the compiler does not produce
2287 an error message for a certain program.
2289 ISO C requires a ``diagnostic'' message for certain kinds of invalid
2290 programs, but a warning is defined by GCC to count as a diagnostic. If
2291 GCC produces a warning but not an error, that is correct ISO C support.
2292 If test suites call this ``failure'', they should be run with the GCC
2293 option @samp{-pedantic-errors}, which will turn these warnings into
2298 @node Warnings and Errors
2299 @section Warning Messages and Error Messages
2301 @cindex error messages
2302 @cindex warnings vs errors
2303 @cindex messages, warning and error
2304 The GNU compiler can produce two kinds of diagnostics: errors and
2305 warnings. Each kind has a different purpose:
2309 @emph{Errors} report problems that make it impossible to compile your
2310 program. GCC reports errors with the source file name and line
2311 number where the problem is apparent.
2314 @emph{Warnings} report other unusual conditions in your code that
2315 @emph{may} indicate a problem, although compilation can (and does)
2316 proceed. Warning messages also report the source file name and line
2317 number, but include the text @samp{warning:} to distinguish them
2318 from error messages.
2321 Warnings may indicate danger points where you should check to make sure
2322 that your program really does what you intend; or the use of obsolete
2323 features; or the use of nonstandard features of GNU C or C++. Many
2324 warnings are issued only if you ask for them, with one of the @samp{-W}
2325 options (for instance, @samp{-Wall} requests a variety of useful
2328 GCC always tries to compile your program if possible; it never
2329 gratuitously rejects a program whose meaning is clear merely because
2330 (for instance) it fails to conform to a standard. In some cases,
2331 however, the C and C++ standards specify that certain extensions are
2332 forbidden, and a diagnostic @emph{must} be issued by a conforming
2333 compiler. The @samp{-pedantic} option tells GCC to issue warnings in
2334 such cases; @samp{-pedantic-errors} says to make them errors instead.
2335 This does not mean that @emph{all} non-ISO constructs get warnings
2338 @xref{Warning Options,,Options to Request or Suppress Warnings}, for
2339 more detail on these and related command-line options.
2342 @chapter Reporting Bugs
2344 @cindex reporting bugs
2346 Your bug reports play an essential role in making GCC reliable.
2348 When you encounter a problem, the first thing to do is to see if it is
2349 already known. @xref{Trouble}. If it isn't known, then you should
2352 Reporting a bug may help you by bringing a solution to your problem, or
2353 it may not. (If it does not, look in the service directory; see
2354 @ref{Service}.) In any case, the principal function of a bug report is
2355 to help the entire community by making the next version of GCC work
2356 better. Bug reports are your contribution to the maintenance of GCC.
2358 Since the maintainers are very overloaded, we cannot respond to every
2359 bug report. However, if the bug has not been fixed, we are likely to
2360 send you a patch and ask you to tell us whether it works.
2362 In order for a bug report to serve its purpose, you must include the
2363 information that makes for fixing the bug.
2366 * Criteria: Bug Criteria. Have you really found a bug?
2367 * Where: Bug Lists. Where to send your bug report.
2368 * Reporting: Bug Reporting. How to report a bug effectively.
2369 * GNATS: gccbug. You can use a bug reporting tool.
2370 * Patches: Sending Patches. How to send a patch for GCC.
2371 * Known: Trouble. Known problems.
2372 * Help: Service. Where to ask for help.
2375 @node Bug Criteria,Bug Lists,,Bugs
2376 @section Have You Found a Bug?
2377 @cindex bug criteria
2379 If you are not sure whether you have found a bug, here are some guidelines:
2382 @cindex fatal signal
2385 If the compiler gets a fatal signal, for any input whatever, that is a
2386 compiler bug. Reliable compilers never crash.
2388 @cindex invalid assembly code
2389 @cindex assembly code, invalid
2391 If the compiler produces invalid assembly code, for any input whatever
2392 (except an @code{asm} statement), that is a compiler bug, unless the
2393 compiler reports errors (not just warnings) which would ordinarily
2394 prevent the assembler from being run.
2396 @cindex undefined behavior
2397 @cindex undefined function value
2398 @cindex increment operators
2400 If the compiler produces valid assembly code that does not correctly
2401 execute the input source code, that is a compiler bug.
2403 However, you must double-check to make sure, because you may have run
2404 into an incompatibility between GNU C and traditional C
2405 (@pxref{Incompatibilities}). These incompatibilities might be considered
2406 bugs, but they are inescapable consequences of valuable features.
2408 Or you may have a program whose behavior is undefined, which happened
2409 by chance to give the desired results with another C or C++ compiler.
2411 For example, in many nonoptimizing compilers, you can write @samp{x;}
2412 at the end of a function instead of @samp{return x;}, with the same
2413 results. But the value of the function is undefined if @code{return}
2414 is omitted; it is not a bug when GCC produces different results.
2416 Problems often result from expressions with two increment operators,
2417 as in @code{f (*p++, *p++)}. Your previous compiler might have
2418 interpreted that expression the way you intended; GCC might
2419 interpret it another way. Neither compiler is wrong. The bug is
2422 After you have localized the error to a single source line, it should
2423 be easy to check for these things. If your program is correct and
2424 well defined, you have found a compiler bug.
2427 If the compiler produces an error message for valid input, that is a
2430 @cindex invalid input
2432 If the compiler does not produce an error message for invalid input,
2433 that is a compiler bug. However, you should note that your idea of
2434 ``invalid input'' might be my idea of ``an extension'' or ``support
2435 for traditional practice''.
2438 If you are an experienced user of one of the languages GCC supports, your
2439 suggestions for improvement of GCC are welcome in any case.
2442 @node Bug Lists,Bug Reporting,Bug Criteria,Bugs
2443 @section Where to Report Bugs
2444 @cindex bug report mailing lists
2445 @kindex gcc-bugs@@gcc.gnu.org or bug-gcc@@gnu.org
2446 Send bug reports for the GNU Compiler Collection to
2447 @email{gcc-bugs@@gcc.gnu.org}. In accordance with the GNU-wide
2448 convention, in which bug reports for tool ``foo'' are sent
2449 to @samp{bug-foo@@gnu.org}, the address @email{bug-gcc@@gnu.org}
2450 may also be used; it will forward to the address given above.
2452 Please read @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html} for additional and/or
2453 more up-to-date bug reporting instructions before you post a bug report.
2455 @node Bug Reporting,gccbug,Bug Lists,Bugs
2456 @section How to Report Bugs
2457 @cindex compiler bugs, reporting
2459 The fundamental principle of reporting bugs usefully is this:
2460 @strong{report all the facts}. If you are not sure whether to state a
2461 fact or leave it out, state it!
2463 Often people omit facts because they think they know what causes the
2464 problem and they conclude that some details don't matter. Thus, you might
2465 assume that the name of the variable you use in an example does not matter.
2466 Well, probably it doesn't, but one cannot be sure. Perhaps the bug is a
2467 stray memory reference which happens to fetch from the location where that
2468 name is stored in memory; perhaps, if the name were different, the contents
2469 of that location would fool the compiler into doing the right thing despite
2470 the bug. Play it safe and give a specific, complete example. That is the
2471 easiest thing for you to do, and the most helpful.
2473 Keep in mind that the purpose of a bug report is to enable someone to
2474 fix the bug if it is not known. It isn't very important what happens if
2475 the bug is already known. Therefore, always write your bug reports on
2476 the assumption that the bug is not known.
2478 Sometimes people give a few sketchy facts and ask, ``Does this ring a
2479 bell?'' This cannot help us fix a bug, so it is basically useless. We
2480 respond by asking for enough details to enable us to investigate.
2481 You might as well expedite matters by sending them to begin with.
2483 Try to make your bug report self-contained. If we have to ask you for
2484 more information, it is best if you include all the previous information
2485 in your response, as well as the information that was missing.
2487 Please report each bug in a separate message. This makes it easier for
2488 us to track which bugs have been fixed and to forward your bugs reports
2489 to the appropriate maintainer.
2491 To enable someone to investigate the bug, you should include all these
2496 The version of GCC. You can get this by running it with the
2499 Without this, we won't know whether there is any point in looking for
2500 the bug in the current version of GCC.
2503 A complete input file that will reproduce the bug. If the bug is in the
2504 C preprocessor, send a source file and any header files that it
2505 requires. If the bug is in the compiler proper (@file{cc1}), send the
2506 preprocessor output generated by adding @samp{-save-temps} to the
2507 compilation command (@pxref{Debugging Options}). When you do this, use
2508 the same @samp{-I}, @samp{-D} or @samp{-U} options that you used in
2509 actual compilation. Then send the @var{input}.i or @var{input}.ii files
2512 A single statement is not enough of an example. In order to compile it,
2513 it must be embedded in a complete file of compiler input; and the bug
2514 might depend on the details of how this is done.
2516 Without a real example one can compile, all anyone can do about your bug
2517 report is wish you luck. It would be futile to try to guess how to
2518 provoke the bug. For example, bugs in register allocation and reloading
2519 frequently depend on every little detail of the function they happen in.
2521 Even if the input file that fails comes from a GNU program, you should
2522 still send the complete test case. Don't ask the GCC maintainers to
2523 do the extra work of obtaining the program in question---they are all
2524 overworked as it is. Also, the problem may depend on what is in the
2525 header files on your system; it is unreliable for the GCC maintainers
2526 to try the problem with the header files available to them. By sending
2527 CPP output, you can eliminate this source of uncertainty and save us
2528 a certain percentage of wild goose chases.
2531 The command arguments you gave GCC to compile that example
2532 and observe the bug. For example, did you use @samp{-O}? To guarantee
2533 you won't omit something important, list all the options.
2535 If we were to try to guess the arguments, we would probably guess wrong
2536 and then we would not encounter the bug.
2539 The type of machine you are using, and the operating system name and
2543 The operands you gave to the @code{configure} command when you installed
2547 A complete list of any modifications you have made to the compiler
2548 source. (We don't promise to investigate the bug unless it happens in
2549 an unmodified compiler. But if you've made modifications and don't tell
2550 us, then you are sending us on a wild goose chase.)
2552 Be precise about these changes. A description in English is not
2553 enough---send a context diff for them.
2555 Adding files of your own (such as a machine description for a machine we
2556 don't support) is a modification of the compiler source.
2559 Details of any other deviations from the standard procedure for installing
2563 A description of what behavior you observe that you believe is
2564 incorrect. For example, ``The compiler gets a fatal signal,'' or,
2565 ``The assembler instruction at line 208 in the output is incorrect.''
2567 Of course, if the bug is that the compiler gets a fatal signal, then one
2568 can't miss it. But if the bug is incorrect output, the maintainer might
2569 not notice unless it is glaringly wrong. None of us has time to study
2570 all the assembler code from a 50-line C program just on the chance that
2571 one instruction might be wrong. We need @emph{you} to do this part!
2573 Even if the problem you experience is a fatal signal, you should still
2574 say so explicitly. Suppose something strange is going on, such as, your
2575 copy of the compiler is out of synch, or you have encountered a bug in
2576 the C library on your system. (This has happened!) Your copy might
2577 crash and the copy here would not. If you @i{said} to expect a crash,
2578 then when the compiler here fails to crash, we would know that the bug
2579 was not happening. If you don't say to expect a crash, then we would
2580 not know whether the bug was happening. We would not be able to draw
2581 any conclusion from our observations.
2583 If the problem is a diagnostic when compiling GCC with some other
2584 compiler, say whether it is a warning or an error.
2586 Often the observed symptom is incorrect output when your program is run.
2587 Sad to say, this is not enough information unless the program is short
2588 and simple. None of us has time to study a large program to figure out
2589 how it would work if compiled correctly, much less which line of it was
2590 compiled wrong. So you will have to do that. Tell us which source line
2591 it is, and what incorrect result happens when that line is executed. A
2592 person who understands the program can find this as easily as finding a
2593 bug in the program itself.
2596 If you send examples of assembler code output from GCC,
2597 please use @samp{-g} when you make them. The debugging information
2598 includes source line numbers which are essential for correlating the
2599 output with the input.
2602 If you wish to mention something in the GCC source, refer to it by
2603 context, not by line number.
2605 The line numbers in the development sources don't match those in your
2606 sources. Your line numbers would convey no useful information to the
2610 Additional information from a debugger might enable someone to find a
2611 problem on a machine which he does not have available. However, you
2612 need to think when you collect this information if you want it to have
2613 any chance of being useful.
2615 @cindex backtrace for bug reports
2616 For example, many people send just a backtrace, but that is never
2617 useful by itself. A simple backtrace with arguments conveys little
2618 about GCC because the compiler is largely data-driven; the same
2619 functions are called over and over for different RTL insns, doing
2620 different things depending on the details of the insn.
2622 Most of the arguments listed in the backtrace are useless because they
2623 are pointers to RTL list structure. The numeric values of the
2624 pointers, which the debugger prints in the backtrace, have no
2625 significance whatever; all that matters is the contents of the objects
2626 they point to (and most of the contents are other such pointers).
2628 In addition, most compiler passes consist of one or more loops that
2629 scan the RTL insn sequence. The most vital piece of information about
2630 such a loop---which insn it has reached---is usually in a local variable,
2634 What you need to provide in addition to a backtrace are the values of
2635 the local variables for several stack frames up. When a local
2636 variable or an argument is an RTX, first print its value and then use
2637 the GDB command @code{pr} to print the RTL expression that it points
2638 to. (If GDB doesn't run on your machine, use your debugger to call
2639 the function @code{debug_rtx} with the RTX as an argument.) In
2640 general, whenever a variable is a pointer, its value is no use
2641 without the data it points to.
2644 Here are some things that are not necessary:
2648 A description of the envelope of the bug.
2650 Often people who encounter a bug spend a lot of time investigating
2651 which changes to the input file will make the bug go away and which
2652 changes will not affect it.
2654 This is often time consuming and not very useful, because the way we
2655 will find the bug is by running a single example under the debugger with
2656 breakpoints, not by pure deduction from a series of examples. You might
2657 as well save your time for something else.
2659 Of course, if you can find a simpler example to report @emph{instead} of
2660 the original one, that is a convenience. Errors in the output will be
2661 easier to spot, running under the debugger will take less time, etc.
2662 Most GCC bugs involve just one function, so the most straightforward
2663 way to simplify an example is to delete all the function definitions
2664 except the one where the bug occurs. Those earlier in the file may be
2665 replaced by external declarations if the crucial function depends on
2666 them. (Exception: inline functions may affect compilation of functions
2667 defined later in the file.)
2669 However, simplification is not vital; if you don't want to do this,
2670 report the bug anyway and send the entire test case you used.
2673 In particular, some people insert conditionals @samp{#ifdef BUG} around
2674 a statement which, if removed, makes the bug not happen. These are just
2675 clutter; we won't pay any attention to them anyway. Besides, you should
2676 send us cpp output, and that can't have conditionals.
2679 A patch for the bug.
2681 A patch for the bug is useful if it is a good one. But don't omit the
2682 necessary information, such as the test case, on the assumption that a
2683 patch is all we need. We might see problems with your patch and decide
2684 to fix the problem another way, or we might not understand it at all.
2686 Sometimes with a program as complicated as GCC it is very hard to
2687 construct an example that will make the program follow a certain path
2688 through the code. If you don't send the example, we won't be able to
2689 construct one, so we won't be able to verify that the bug is fixed.
2691 And if we can't understand what bug you are trying to fix, or why your
2692 patch should be an improvement, we won't install it. A test case will
2693 help us to understand.
2695 @xref{Sending Patches}, for guidelines on how to make it easy for us to
2696 understand and install your patches.
2699 A guess about what the bug is or what it depends on.
2701 Such guesses are usually wrong. Even I can't guess right about such
2702 things without first using the debugger to find the facts.
2707 We have no way of examining a core dump for your type of machine
2708 unless we have an identical system---and if we do have one,
2709 we should be able to reproduce the crash ourselves.
2712 @node gccbug,Sending Patches, Bug Reporting, Bugs
2713 @section The gccbug script
2714 @cindex gccbug script
2716 To simplify creation of bug reports, and to allow better tracking of
2717 reports, we use the GNATS bug tracking system. Part of that system is
2718 the @code{gccbug} script. This is a Unix shell script, so you need a
2719 shell to run it. It is normally installed in the same directory where
2720 @code{gcc} is installed.
2722 The gccbug script is derived from send-pr, @pxref{using
2723 send-pr,,Creating new Problem Reports,send-pr,Reporting Problems}. When
2724 invoked, it starts a text editor so you can fill out the various fields
2725 of the report. When the you quit the editor, the report is automatically
2726 send to the bug reporting address.
2728 A number of fields in this bug report form are specific to GCC, and are
2733 @cindex @code{Category} field
2734 @cindex @code{>Category:}
2736 The category of a GCC problem can be one of the following:
2740 A problem with the C compiler proper.
2744 A problem with the C++ compiler.
2748 A problem with the Fortran 77.
2751 A problem with the Java compiler.
2754 A problem with the Objective C compiler.
2757 A problem with the C++ standard library.
2760 A problem with the Fortran 77 library.
2763 A problem with the Objective C library.
2766 The problem occurs only when generating optimized code.
2769 The problem occurs only when generating code for debugging.
2772 The problem is specific to the target architecture.
2775 The problem is independent from target architecture and programming
2779 It is a problem in some other part of the GCC software.
2782 There is a problem with the GCC home page.
2786 @cindex @code{Class} field
2787 @cindex @code{>Class:}
2789 The class of a problem can be one of the following:
2792 @cindex @emph{doc-bug} class
2794 A problem with the documentation.
2796 @cindex @emph{accepts-illegal} class
2797 @item accepts-illegal
2798 GCC fails to reject erroneous code.
2800 @cindex @emph{rejects-legal} class
2802 GCC gives an error message for correct code.
2804 @cindex @emph{wrong-code} class
2806 The machine code generated by gcc is incorrect.
2808 @cindex @emph{ice-on-legal-code} class
2809 @item ice-on-legal-code
2810 GCC gives an Internal Compiler Error (ICE) for correct code.
2812 @cindex @emph{ice-on-illegal-code} class
2813 @item ice-on-illegal-code
2814 GCC gives an ICE instead of reporting an error
2816 @cindex @emph{pessimizes-code} class
2817 @item pessimizes-code
2818 GCC misses an important optimization opportunity.
2820 @cindex @emph{sw-bug} class
2822 A general product problem. (@samp{sw} stands for ``software''.)
2824 @cindex @emph{change-request} class
2825 @item change-request
2826 A request for a change in behavior, etc.
2828 @cindex @emph{support} class
2830 A support problem or question.
2832 @cindex @emph{duplicate} class
2833 @item duplicate (@var{pr-number})
2834 Duplicate PR. @var{pr-number} should be the number of the original PR.
2837 The default is @samp{sw-bug}.
2843 @node Sending Patches,, gccbug, Bugs
2844 @section Sending Patches for GCC
2846 If you would like to write bug fixes or improvements for the GNU C
2847 compiler, that is very helpful. Send suggested fixes to the patches
2848 mailing list, @email{gcc-patches@@gcc.gnu.org}.
2850 Please follow these guidelines so we can study your patches efficiently.
2851 If you don't follow these guidelines, your information might still be
2852 useful, but using it will take extra work. Maintaining GNU C is a lot
2853 of work in the best of circumstances, and we can't keep up unless you do
2858 Send an explanation with your changes of what problem they fix or what
2859 improvement they bring about. For a bug fix, just include a copy of the
2860 bug report, and explain why the change fixes the bug.
2862 (Referring to a bug report is not as good as including it, because then
2863 we will have to look it up, and we have probably already deleted it if
2864 we've already fixed the bug.)
2867 Always include a proper bug report for the problem you think you have
2868 fixed. We need to convince ourselves that the change is right before
2869 installing it. Even if it is right, we might have trouble judging it if
2870 we don't have a way to reproduce the problem.
2873 Include all the comments that are appropriate to help people reading the
2874 source in the future understand why this change was needed.
2877 Don't mix together changes made for different reasons.
2878 Send them @emph{individually}.
2880 If you make two changes for separate reasons, then we might not want to
2881 install them both. We might want to install just one. If you send them
2882 all jumbled together in a single set of diffs, we have to do extra work
2883 to disentangle them---to figure out which parts of the change serve
2884 which purpose. If we don't have time for this, we might have to ignore
2885 your changes entirely.
2887 If you send each change as soon as you have written it, with its own
2888 explanation, then the two changes never get tangled up, and we can
2889 consider each one properly without any extra work to disentangle them.
2891 Ideally, each change you send should be impossible to subdivide into
2892 parts that we might want to consider separately, because each of its
2893 parts gets its motivation from the other parts.
2896 Send each change as soon as that change is finished. Sometimes people
2897 think they are helping us by accumulating many changes to send them all
2898 together. As explained above, this is absolutely the worst thing you
2901 Since you should send each change separately, you might as well send it
2902 right away. That gives us the option of installing it immediately if it
2906 Use @samp{diff -c} to make your diffs. Diffs without context are hard
2907 for us to install reliably. More than that, they make it hard for us to
2908 study the diffs to decide whether we want to install them. Unidiff
2909 format is better than contextless diffs, but not as easy to read as
2912 If you have GNU diff, use @samp{diff -cp}, which shows the name of the
2913 function that each change occurs in.
2916 Write the change log entries for your changes. We get lots of changes,
2917 and we don't have time to do all the change log writing ourselves.
2919 Read the @file{ChangeLog} file to see what sorts of information to put
2920 in, and to learn the style that we use. The purpose of the change log
2921 is to show people where to find what was changed. So you need to be
2922 specific about what functions you changed; in large functions, it's
2923 often helpful to indicate where within the function the change was.
2925 On the other hand, once you have shown people where to find the change,
2926 you need not explain its purpose. Thus, if you add a new function, all
2927 you need to say about it is that it is new. If you feel that the
2928 purpose needs explaining, it probably does---but the explanation will be
2929 much more useful if you put it in comments in the code.
2931 If you would like your name to appear in the header line for who made
2932 the change, send us the header line.
2935 When you write the fix, keep in mind that we can't install a change that
2936 would break other systems.
2938 People often suggest fixing a problem by changing machine-independent
2939 files such as @file{toplev.c} to do something special that a particular
2940 system needs. Sometimes it is totally obvious that such changes would
2941 break GCC for almost all users. We can't possibly make a change like
2942 that. At best it might tell us how to write another patch that would
2943 solve the problem acceptably.
2945 Sometimes people send fixes that @emph{might} be an improvement in
2946 general---but it is hard to be sure of this. It's hard to install
2947 such changes because we have to study them very carefully. Of course,
2948 a good explanation of the reasoning by which you concluded the change
2949 was correct can help convince us.
2951 The safest changes are changes to the configuration files for a
2952 particular machine. These are safe because they can't create new bugs
2955 Please help us keep up with the workload by designing the patch in a
2956 form that is good to install.
2960 @chapter How To Get Help with GCC
2962 If you need help installing, using or changing GCC, there are two
2967 Send a message to a suitable network mailing list. First try
2968 @email{gcc-help@@gcc.gnu.org} (for help installing or using GCC), and if
2969 that brings no response, try @email{gcc@@gcc.gnu.org}. For help
2970 changing GCC, ask @email{gcc@@gcc.gnu.org}. If you think you have found
2971 a bug in GCC, please report it following the instructions at
2972 @pxref{Bug Reporting}.
2975 Look in the service directory for someone who might help you for a fee.
2976 The service directory is found at
2977 @uref{http://www.gnu.org/prep/service.html}.
2980 @c For further information, see
2981 @c @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/cgi-bin/fom.cgi?file=12}.
2982 @c FIXME: this URL may be too volatile, this FAQ entry needs to move to
2983 @c the regular web pages before we can uncomment the reference.
2986 @chapter Contributing to GCC Development
2988 If you would like to help pretest GCC releases to assure they work well,
2989 our current development sources are available by CVS (see
2990 @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/cvs.html}). Source and binary snapshots are
2991 also available for FTP; see @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/snapshots.html}.
2993 If you would like to work on improvements to GCC, please read
2994 @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/contribute.html} and
2995 @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/contributewhy.html} for information on how to
2996 make useful contributions and avoid duplication of effort. Suggested
2997 projects are listed at @uref{http://gcc.gnu.org/projects/}.
3000 @chapter Using GCC on VMS
3002 @c prevent bad page break with this line
3003 Here is how to use GCC on VMS.
3006 * Include Files and VMS:: Where the preprocessor looks for the include files.
3007 * Global Declarations:: How to do globaldef, globalref and globalvalue with
3009 * VMS Misc:: Misc information.
3012 @node Include Files and VMS
3013 @section Include Files and VMS
3015 @cindex include files and VMS
3016 @cindex VMS and include files
3017 @cindex header files and VMS
3018 Due to the differences between the filesystems of Unix and VMS, GCC
3019 attempts to translate file names in @samp{#include} into names that VMS
3020 will understand. The basic strategy is to prepend a prefix to the
3021 specification of the include file, convert the whole filename to a VMS
3022 filename, and then try to open the file. GCC tries various prefixes
3023 one by one until one of them succeeds:
3027 The first prefix is the @samp{GNU_CC_INCLUDE:} logical name: this is
3028 where GNU C header files are traditionally stored. If you wish to store
3029 header files in non-standard locations, then you can assign the logical
3030 @samp{GNU_CC_INCLUDE} to be a search list, where each element of the
3031 list is suitable for use with a rooted logical.
3034 The next prefix tried is @samp{SYS$SYSROOT:[SYSLIB.]}. This is where
3035 VAX-C header files are traditionally stored.
3038 If the include file specification by itself is a valid VMS filename, the
3039 preprocessor then uses this name with no prefix in an attempt to open
3043 If the file specification is not a valid VMS filename (i.e. does not
3044 contain a device or a directory specifier, and contains a @samp{/}
3045 character), the preprocessor tries to convert it from Unix syntax to
3048 Conversion works like this: the first directory name becomes a device,
3049 and the rest of the directories are converted into VMS-format directory
3050 names. For example, the name @file{X11/foobar.h} is
3051 translated to @file{X11:[000000]foobar.h} or @file{X11:foobar.h},
3052 whichever one can be opened. This strategy allows you to assign a
3053 logical name to point to the actual location of the header files.
3056 If none of these strategies succeeds, the @samp{#include} fails.
3059 Include directives of the form:
3066 are a common source of incompatibility between VAX-C and GCC. VAX-C
3067 treats this much like a standard @code{#include <foobar.h>} directive.
3068 That is incompatible with the ISO C behavior implemented by GCC: to
3069 expand the name @code{foobar} as a macro. Macro expansion should
3070 eventually yield one of the two standard formats for @code{#include}:
3073 #include "@var{file}"
3074 #include <@var{file}>
3077 If you have this problem, the best solution is to modify the source to
3078 convert the @code{#include} directives to one of the two standard forms.
3079 That will work with either compiler. If you want a quick and dirty fix,
3080 define the file names as macros with the proper expansion, like this:
3083 #define stdio <stdio.h>
3087 This will work, as long as the name doesn't conflict with anything else
3090 Another source of incompatibility is that VAX-C assumes that:
3097 is actually asking for the file @file{foobar.h}. GCC does not
3098 make this assumption, and instead takes what you ask for literally;
3099 it tries to read the file @file{foobar}. The best way to avoid this
3100 problem is to always specify the desired file extension in your include
3103 GCC for VMS is distributed with a set of include files that is
3104 sufficient to compile most general purpose programs. Even though the
3105 GCC distribution does not contain header files to define constants
3106 and structures for some VMS system-specific functions, there is no
3107 reason why you cannot use GCC with any of these functions. You first
3108 may have to generate or create header files, either by using the public
3109 domain utility @code{UNSDL} (which can be found on a DECUS tape), or by
3110 extracting the relevant modules from one of the system macro libraries,
3111 and using an editor to construct a C header file.
3113 A @code{#include} file name cannot contain a DECNET node name. The
3114 preprocessor reports an I/O error if you attempt to use a node name,
3115 whether explicitly, or implicitly via a logical name.
3117 @node Global Declarations
3118 @section Global Declarations and VMS
3122 @findex GLOBALVALUEDEF
3123 @findex GLOBALVALUEREF
3124 GCC does not provide the @code{globalref}, @code{globaldef} and
3125 @code{globalvalue} keywords of VAX-C. You can get the same effect with
3126 an obscure feature of GAS, the GNU assembler. (This requires GAS
3127 version 1.39 or later.) The following macros allow you to use this
3128 feature in a fairly natural way:
3132 #define GLOBALREF(TYPE,NAME) \
3134 asm ("_$$PsectAttributes_GLOBALSYMBOL$$" #NAME)
3135 #define GLOBALDEF(TYPE,NAME,VALUE) \
3137 asm ("_$$PsectAttributes_GLOBALSYMBOL$$" #NAME) \
3139 #define GLOBALVALUEREF(TYPE,NAME) \
3140 const TYPE NAME[1] \
3141 asm ("_$$PsectAttributes_GLOBALVALUE$$" #NAME)
3142 #define GLOBALVALUEDEF(TYPE,NAME,VALUE) \
3143 const TYPE NAME[1] \
3144 asm ("_$$PsectAttributes_GLOBALVALUE$$" #NAME) \
3147 #define GLOBALREF(TYPE,NAME) \
3149 #define GLOBALDEF(TYPE,NAME,VALUE) \
3150 globaldef TYPE NAME = VALUE
3151 #define GLOBALVALUEDEF(TYPE,NAME,VALUE) \
3152 globalvalue TYPE NAME = VALUE
3153 #define GLOBALVALUEREF(TYPE,NAME) \
3154 globalvalue TYPE NAME
3159 (The @code{_$$PsectAttributes_GLOBALSYMBOL} prefix at the start of the
3160 name is removed by the assembler, after it has modified the attributes
3161 of the symbol). These macros are provided in the VMS binaries
3162 distribution in a header file @file{GNU_HACKS.H}. An example of the
3166 GLOBALREF (int, ijk);
3167 GLOBALDEF (int, jkl, 0);
3170 The macros @code{GLOBALREF} and @code{GLOBALDEF} cannot be used
3171 straightforwardly for arrays, since there is no way to insert the array
3172 dimension into the declaration at the right place. However, you can
3173 declare an array with these macros if you first define a typedef for the
3174 array type, like this:
3177 typedef int intvector[10];
3178 GLOBALREF (intvector, foo);
3181 Array and structure initializers will also break the macros; you can
3182 define the initializer to be a macro of its own, or you can expand the
3183 @code{GLOBALDEF} macro by hand. You may find a case where you wish to
3184 use the @code{GLOBALDEF} macro with a large array, but you are not
3185 interested in explicitly initializing each element of the array. In
3186 such cases you can use an initializer like: @code{@{0,@}}, which will
3187 initialize the entire array to @code{0}.
3189 A shortcoming of this implementation is that a variable declared with
3190 @code{GLOBALVALUEREF} or @code{GLOBALVALUEDEF} is always an array. For
3191 example, the declaration:
3194 GLOBALVALUEREF(int, ijk);
3198 declares the variable @code{ijk} as an array of type @code{int [1]}.
3199 This is done because a globalvalue is actually a constant; its ``value''
3200 is what the linker would normally consider an address. That is not how
3201 an integer value works in C, but it is how an array works. So treating
3202 the symbol as an array name gives consistent results---with the
3203 exception that the value seems to have the wrong type. @strong{Don't
3204 try to access an element of the array.} It doesn't have any elements.
3205 The array ``address'' may not be the address of actual storage.
3207 The fact that the symbol is an array may lead to warnings where the
3208 variable is used. Insert type casts to avoid the warnings. Here is an
3209 example; it takes advantage of the ISO C feature allowing macros that
3210 expand to use the same name as the macro itself.
3213 GLOBALVALUEREF (int, ss$_normal);
3214 GLOBALVALUEDEF (int, xyzzy,123);
3216 #define ss$_normal ((int) ss$_normal)
3217 #define xyzzy ((int) xyzzy)
3221 Don't use @code{globaldef} or @code{globalref} with a variable whose
3222 type is an enumeration type; this is not implemented. Instead, make the
3223 variable an integer, and use a @code{globalvaluedef} for each of the
3224 enumeration values. An example of this would be:
3228 GLOBALDEF (int, color, 0);
3229 GLOBALVALUEDEF (int, RED, 0);
3230 GLOBALVALUEDEF (int, BLUE, 1);
3231 GLOBALVALUEDEF (int, GREEN, 3);
3233 enum globaldef color @{RED, BLUE, GREEN = 3@};
3238 @section Other VMS Issues
3240 @cindex exit status and VMS
3241 @cindex return value of @code{main}
3242 @cindex @code{main} and the exit status
3243 GCC automatically arranges for @code{main} to return 1 by default if
3244 you fail to specify an explicit return value. This will be interpreted
3245 by VMS as a status code indicating a normal successful completion.
3246 Version 1 of GCC did not provide this default.
3248 GCC on VMS works only with the GNU assembler, GAS. You need version
3249 1.37 or later of GAS in order to produce value debugging information for
3250 the VMS debugger. Use the ordinary VMS linker with the object files
3253 @cindex shared VMS run time system
3254 @cindex @file{VAXCRTL}
3255 Under previous versions of GCC, the generated code would occasionally
3256 give strange results when linked to the sharable @file{VAXCRTL} library.
3257 Now this should work.
3259 A caveat for use of @code{const} global variables: the @code{const}
3260 modifier must be specified in every external declaration of the variable
3261 in all of the source files that use that variable. Otherwise the linker
3262 will issue warnings about conflicting attributes for the variable. Your
3263 program will still work despite the warnings, but the variable will be
3264 placed in writable storage.
3266 @cindex name augmentation
3267 @cindex case sensitivity and VMS
3268 @cindex VMS and case sensitivity
3269 Although the VMS linker does distinguish between upper and lower case
3270 letters in global symbols, most VMS compilers convert all such symbols
3271 into upper case and most run-time library routines also have upper case
3272 names. To be able to reliably call such routines, GCC (by means of
3273 the assembler GAS) converts global symbols into upper case like other
3274 VMS compilers. However, since the usual practice in C is to distinguish
3275 case, GCC (via GAS) tries to preserve usual C behavior by augmenting
3276 each name that is not all lower case. This means truncating the name
3277 to at most 23 characters and then adding more characters at the end
3278 which encode the case pattern of those 23. Names which contain at
3279 least one dollar sign are an exception; they are converted directly into
3280 upper case without augmentation.
3282 Name augmentation yields bad results for programs that use precompiled
3283 libraries (such as Xlib) which were generated by another compiler. You
3284 can use the compiler option @samp{/NOCASE_HACK} to inhibit augmentation;
3285 it makes external C functions and variables case-independent as is usual
3286 on VMS. Alternatively, you could write all references to the functions
3287 and variables in such libraries using lower case; this will work on VMS,
3288 but is not portable to other systems. The compiler option @samp{/NAMES}
3289 also provides control over global name handling.
3291 Function and variable names are handled somewhat differently with GNU
3292 C++. The GNU C++ compiler performs @dfn{name mangling} on function
3293 names, which means that it adds information to the function name to
3294 describe the data types of the arguments that the function takes. One
3295 result of this is that the name of a function can become very long.
3296 Since the VMS linker only recognizes the first 31 characters in a name,
3297 special action is taken to ensure that each function and variable has a
3298 unique name that can be represented in 31 characters.
3300 If the name (plus a name augmentation, if required) is less than 32
3301 characters in length, then no special action is performed. If the name
3302 is longer than 31 characters, the assembler (GAS) will generate a
3303 hash string based upon the function name, truncate the function name to
3304 23 characters, and append the hash string to the truncated name. If the
3305 @samp{/VERBOSE} compiler option is used, the assembler will print both
3306 the full and truncated names of each symbol that is truncated.
3308 The @samp{/NOCASE_HACK} compiler option should not be used when you are
3309 compiling programs that use libg++. libg++ has several instances of
3310 objects (i.e. @code{Filebuf} and @code{filebuf}) which become
3311 indistinguishable in a case-insensitive environment. This leads to
3312 cases where you need to inhibit augmentation selectively (if you were
3313 using libg++ and Xlib in the same program, for example). There is no
3314 special feature for doing this, but you can get the result by defining a
3315 macro for each mixed case symbol for which you wish to inhibit
3316 augmentation. The macro should expand into the lower case equivalent of
3317 itself. For example:
3320 #define StuDlyCapS studlycaps
3323 These macro definitions can be placed in a header file to minimize the
3324 number of changes to your source code.
3327 @chapter Makefile Targets
3328 @cindex makefile targets
3329 @cindex targets, makefile
3333 This is the default target. Depending on what your build/host/target
3334 configuration is, it coordinates all the things that need to be built.
3337 Produce info-formatted documentation. Also, @code{make dvi} is
3338 available for DVI-formatted documentation, and @code{make
3339 generated-manpages} to generate man pages.
3342 Delete the files made while building the compiler.
3345 That, and all the other files built by @code{make all}.
3348 That, and all the files created by @code{configure}.
3351 That, and any temporary or intermediate files, like emacs backup files.
3353 @item maintainer-clean
3354 Distclean plus any file that can be generated from other files. Note
3355 that additional tools may be required beyond what is normally needed to
3362 Deletes installed files.
3365 Run the testsuite. This creates a @file{testsuite} subdirectory that
3366 has various @file{.sum} and @file{.log} files containing the results of
3367 the testing. You can run subsets with, for example, @code{make check-gcc}.
3368 You can specify specific tests by setting RUNTESTFLAGS to be the name
3369 of the @file{.exp} file, optionally followed by (for some tests) an equals
3370 and a file wildcard, like:
3373 make check-gcc RUNTESTFLAGS="execute.exp=19980413-*"
3376 Note that running the testsuite may require additional tools be
3377 installed, such as TCL or dejagnu.
3380 Builds gcc three times - once with the native compiler, once with the
3381 native-built compiler it just built, and once with the compiler it built
3382 the second time. In theory, the last two should produce the same
3383 results, which @code{make compare} can check. Each step of this process
3384 is called a "stage", and the results of each stage N (N=1..3) are copied
3385 to a subdirectory @file{stageN/}.
3387 @item bootstrap-lean
3388 Like @code{bootstrap}, except that the various stages are removed once
3389 they're no longer needed. This saves disk space.
3392 Once bootstrapped, this incrementally rebuilds each of the three stages,
3393 one at a time. It does this by "bubbling" the stages up from their
3394 stubdirectories, rebuilding them, and copying them back to their
3395 subdirectories. This will allow you to, for example, quickly rebuild a
3396 bootstrapped compiler after changing the sources, without having to do a
3400 Rebuilds the most recently built stage. Since each stage requires
3401 special invocation, using this target means you don't have to keep track
3402 of which stage you're on or what invocation that stage needs.
3405 Removed everything (@code{make clean}) and rebuilds (@code{make bootstrap}).
3407 @item stageN (N=1..4)
3408 For each stage, moves the appropriate files to the stageN subdirectory.
3410 @item unstageN (N=1..4)
3411 Undoes the corresponding @code{stageN}.
3413 @item restageN (N=1..4)
3414 Undoes the corresponding @code{stageN} and rebuilds it with the
3418 Compares the results of stages 2 and 3. This ensures that the compiler
3419 is running properly, since it should produce the same object files
3420 regardless of how it itself was compiled.
3428 @chapter GCC and Portability
3430 @cindex GCC and portability
3432 The main goal of GCC was to make a good, fast compiler for machines in
3433 the class that the GNU system aims to run on: 32-bit machines that address
3434 8-bit bytes and have several general registers. Elegance, theoretical
3435 power and simplicity are only secondary.
3437 GCC gets most of the information about the target machine from a machine
3438 description which gives an algebraic formula for each of the machine's
3439 instructions. This is a very clean way to describe the target. But when
3440 the compiler needs information that is difficult to express in this
3441 fashion, I have not hesitated to define an ad-hoc parameter to the machine
3442 description. The purpose of portability is to reduce the total work needed
3443 on the compiler; it was not of interest for its own sake.
3446 @cindex autoincrement addressing, availability
3448 GCC does not contain machine dependent code, but it does contain code
3449 that depends on machine parameters such as endianness (whether the most
3450 significant byte has the highest or lowest address of the bytes in a word)
3451 and the availability of autoincrement addressing. In the RTL-generation
3452 pass, it is often necessary to have multiple strategies for generating code
3453 for a particular kind of syntax tree, strategies that are usable for different
3454 combinations of parameters. Often I have not tried to address all possible
3455 cases, but only the common ones or only the ones that I have encountered.
3456 As a result, a new target may require additional strategies. You will know
3457 if this happens because the compiler will call @code{abort}. Fortunately,
3458 the new strategies can be added in a machine-independent fashion, and will
3459 affect only the target machines that need them.
3464 @chapter Interfacing to GCC Output
3465 @cindex interfacing to GCC output
3466 @cindex run-time conventions
3467 @cindex function call conventions
3468 @cindex conventions, run-time
3470 GCC is normally configured to use the same function calling convention
3471 normally in use on the target system. This is done with the
3472 machine-description macros described (@pxref{Target Macros}).
3474 @cindex unions, returning
3475 @cindex structures, returning
3476 @cindex returning structures and unions
3477 However, returning of structure and union values is done differently on
3478 some target machines. As a result, functions compiled with PCC
3479 returning such types cannot be called from code compiled with GCC,
3480 and vice versa. This does not cause trouble often because few Unix
3481 library routines return structures or unions.
3483 GCC code returns structures and unions that are 1, 2, 4 or 8 bytes
3484 long in the same registers used for @code{int} or @code{double} return
3485 values. (GCC typically allocates variables of such types in
3486 registers also.) Structures and unions of other sizes are returned by
3487 storing them into an address passed by the caller (usually in a
3488 register). The machine-description macros @code{STRUCT_VALUE} and
3489 @code{STRUCT_INCOMING_VALUE} tell GCC where to pass this address.
3491 By contrast, PCC on most target machines returns structures and unions
3492 of any size by copying the data into an area of static storage, and then
3493 returning the address of that storage as if it were a pointer value.
3494 The caller must copy the data from that memory area to the place where
3495 the value is wanted. This is slower than the method used by GCC, and
3496 fails to be reentrant.
3498 On some target machines, such as RISC machines and the 80386, the
3499 standard system convention is to pass to the subroutine the address of
3500 where to return the value. On these machines, GCC has been
3501 configured to be compatible with the standard compiler, when this method
3502 is used. It may not be compatible for structures of 1, 2, 4 or 8 bytes.
3504 @cindex argument passing
3505 @cindex passing arguments
3506 GCC uses the system's standard convention for passing arguments. On
3507 some machines, the first few arguments are passed in registers; in
3508 others, all are passed on the stack. It would be possible to use
3509 registers for argument passing on any machine, and this would probably
3510 result in a significant speedup. But the result would be complete
3511 incompatibility with code that follows the standard convention. So this
3512 change is practical only if you are switching to GCC as the sole C
3513 compiler for the system. We may implement register argument passing on
3514 certain machines once we have a complete GNU system so that we can
3515 compile the libraries with GCC.
3517 On some machines (particularly the Sparc), certain types of arguments
3518 are passed ``by invisible reference''. This means that the value is
3519 stored in memory, and the address of the memory location is passed to
3522 @cindex @code{longjmp} and automatic variables
3523 If you use @code{longjmp}, beware of automatic variables. ISO C says that
3524 automatic variables that are not declared @code{volatile} have undefined
3525 values after a @code{longjmp}. And this is all GCC promises to do,
3526 because it is very difficult to restore register variables correctly, and
3527 one of GCC's features is that it can put variables in registers without
3530 If you want a variable to be unaltered by @code{longjmp}, and you don't
3531 want to write @code{volatile} because old C compilers don't accept it,
3532 just take the address of the variable. If a variable's address is ever
3533 taken, even if just to compute it and ignore it, then the variable cannot
3544 @cindex arithmetic libraries
3545 @cindex math libraries
3546 Code compiled with GCC may call certain library routines. Most of
3547 them handle arithmetic for which there are no instructions. This
3548 includes multiply and divide on some machines, and floating point
3549 operations on any machine for which floating point support is disabled
3550 with @samp{-msoft-float}. Some standard parts of the C library, such as
3551 @code{bcopy} or @code{memcpy}, are also called automatically. The usual
3552 function call interface is used for calling the library routines.
3554 These library routines should be defined in the library @file{libgcc.a},
3555 which GCC automatically searches whenever it links a program. On
3556 machines that have multiply and divide instructions, if hardware
3557 floating point is in use, normally @file{libgcc.a} is not needed, but it
3558 is searched just in case.
3560 Each arithmetic function is defined in @file{libgcc1.c} to use the
3561 corresponding C arithmetic operator. As long as the file is compiled
3562 with another C compiler, which supports all the C arithmetic operators,
3563 this file will work portably. However, @file{libgcc1.c} does not work if
3564 compiled with GCC, because each arithmetic function would compile
3565 into a call to itself!
3570 @chapter Passes and Files of the Compiler
3571 @cindex passes and files of the compiler
3572 @cindex files and passes of the compiler
3573 @cindex compiler passes and files
3575 @cindex top level of compiler
3576 The overall control structure of the compiler is in @file{toplev.c}. This
3577 file is responsible for initialization, decoding arguments, opening and
3578 closing files, and sequencing the passes.
3580 @cindex parsing pass
3581 The parsing pass is invoked only once, to parse the entire input. The RTL
3582 intermediate code for a function is generated as the function is parsed, a
3583 statement at a time. Each statement is read in as a syntax tree and then
3584 converted to RTL; then the storage for the tree for the statement is
3585 reclaimed. Storage for types (and the expressions for their sizes),
3586 declarations, and a representation of the binding contours and how they nest,
3587 remain until the function is finished being compiled; these are all needed
3588 to output the debugging information.
3590 @findex rest_of_compilation
3591 @findex rest_of_decl_compilation
3592 Each time the parsing pass reads a complete function definition or
3593 top-level declaration, it calls either the function
3594 @code{rest_of_compilation}, or the function
3595 @code{rest_of_decl_compilation} in @file{toplev.c}, which are
3596 responsible for all further processing necessary, ending with output of
3597 the assembler language. All other compiler passes run, in sequence,
3598 within @code{rest_of_compilation}. When that function returns from
3599 compiling a function definition, the storage used for that function
3600 definition's compilation is entirely freed, unless it is an inline
3603 (@pxref{Inline,,An Inline Function is As Fast As a Macro}).
3606 (@pxref{Inline,,An Inline Function is As Fast As a Macro,gcc.texi,Using GCC}).
3609 Here is a list of all the passes of the compiler and their source files.
3610 Also included is a description of where debugging dumps can be requested
3611 with @samp{-d} options.
3615 Parsing. This pass reads the entire text of a function definition,
3616 constructing partial syntax trees. This and RTL generation are no longer
3617 truly separate passes (formerly they were), but it is easier to think
3618 of them as separate.
3620 The tree representation does not entirely follow C syntax, because it is
3621 intended to support other languages as well.
3623 Language-specific data type analysis is also done in this pass, and every
3624 tree node that represents an expression has a data type attached.
3625 Variables are represented as declaration nodes.
3627 @cindex constant folding
3628 @cindex arithmetic simplifications
3629 @cindex simplifications, arithmetic
3630 Constant folding and some arithmetic simplifications are also done
3633 The language-independent source files for parsing are
3634 @file{stor-layout.c}, @file{fold-const.c}, and @file{tree.c}.
3635 There are also header files @file{tree.h} and @file{tree.def}
3636 which define the format of the tree representation.@refill
3638 @c Avoiding overfull is tricky here.
3639 The source files to parse C are
3643 @file{c-aux-info.c},
3646 along with header files
3650 The source files for parsing C++ are in @file{cp/}.
3651 They are @file{parse.y},
3653 @file{cvt.c}, @file{decl.c}, @file{decl2.c},
3655 @file{expr.c}, @file{init.c}, @file{lex.c},
3656 @file{method.c}, @file{ptree.c},@*
3657 @file{search.c}, @file{tree.c},
3658 @file{typeck2.c}, and
3659 @file{typeck.c}, along with header files @file{cp-tree.def},
3660 @file{cp-tree.h}, and @file{decl.h}.
3662 The special source files for parsing Objective C are in @file{objc/}.
3663 They are @file{objc-parse.y}, @file{objc-act.c}, @file{objc-tree.def}, and
3664 @file{objc-act.h}. Certain C-specific files are used for this as
3667 The file @file{c-common.c} is also used for all of the above languages.
3669 @cindex RTL generation
3671 RTL generation. This is the conversion of syntax tree into RTL code.
3672 It is actually done statement-by-statement during parsing, but for
3673 most purposes it can be thought of as a separate pass.
3675 @cindex target-parameter-dependent code
3676 This is where the bulk of target-parameter-dependent code is found,
3677 since often it is necessary for strategies to apply only when certain
3678 standard kinds of instructions are available. The purpose of named
3679 instruction patterns is to provide this information to the RTL
3682 @cindex tail recursion optimization
3683 Optimization is done in this pass for @code{if}-conditions that are
3684 comparisons, boolean operations or conditional expressions. Tail
3685 recursion is detected at this time also. Decisions are made about how
3686 best to arrange loops and how to output @code{switch} statements.
3688 @c Avoiding overfull is tricky here.
3689 The source files for RTL generation include
3697 and @file{emit-rtl.c}.
3699 @file{insn-emit.c}, generated from the machine description by the
3700 program @code{genemit}, is used in this pass. The header file
3701 @file{expr.h} is used for communication within this pass.@refill
3705 The header files @file{insn-flags.h} and @file{insn-codes.h},
3706 generated from the machine description by the programs @code{genflags}
3707 and @code{gencodes}, tell this pass which standard names are available
3708 for use and which patterns correspond to them.@refill
3710 Aside from debugging information output, none of the following passes
3711 refers to the tree structure representation of the function (only
3712 part of which is saved).
3714 @cindex inline, automatic
3715 The decision of whether the function can and should be expanded inline
3716 in its subsequent callers is made at the end of rtl generation. The
3717 function must meet certain criteria, currently related to the size of
3718 the function and the types and number of parameters it has. Note that
3719 this function may contain loops, recursive calls to itself
3720 (tail-recursive functions can be inlined!), gotos, in short, all
3721 constructs supported by GCC. The file @file{integrate.c} contains
3722 the code to save a function's rtl for later inlining and to inline that
3723 rtl when the function is called. The header file @file{integrate.h}
3724 is also used for this purpose.
3726 The option @samp{-dr} causes a debugging dump of the RTL code after
3727 this pass. This dump file's name is made by appending @samp{.rtl} to
3728 the input file name.
3730 @cindex jump optimization
3731 @cindex unreachable code
3734 Jump optimization. This pass simplifies jumps to the following
3735 instruction, jumps across jumps, and jumps to jumps. It deletes
3736 unreferenced labels and unreachable code, except that unreachable code
3737 that contains a loop is not recognized as unreachable in this pass.
3738 (Such loops are deleted later in the basic block analysis.) It also
3739 converts some code originally written with jumps into sequences of
3740 instructions that directly set values from the results of comparisons,
3741 if the machine has such instructions.
3743 Jump optimization is performed two or three times. The first time is
3744 immediately following RTL generation. The second time is after CSE,
3745 but only if CSE says repeated jump optimization is needed. The
3746 last time is right before the final pass. That time, cross-jumping
3747 and deletion of no-op move instructions are done together with the
3748 optimizations described above.
3750 The source file of this pass is @file{jump.c}.
3752 The option @samp{-dj} causes a debugging dump of the RTL code after
3753 this pass is run for the first time. This dump file's name is made by
3754 appending @samp{.jump} to the input file name.
3756 @cindex register use analysis
3758 Register scan. This pass finds the first and last use of each
3759 register, as a guide for common subexpression elimination. Its source
3760 is in @file{regclass.c}.
3762 @cindex jump threading
3764 Jump threading. This pass detects a condition jump that branches to an
3765 identical or inverse test. Such jumps can be @samp{threaded} through
3766 the second conditional test. The source code for this pass is in
3767 @file{jump.c}. This optimization is only performed if
3768 @samp{-fthread-jumps} is enabled.
3770 @cindex common subexpression elimination
3771 @cindex constant propagation
3773 Common subexpression elimination. This pass also does constant
3774 propagation. Its source file is @file{cse.c}. If constant
3775 propagation causes conditional jumps to become unconditional or to
3776 become no-ops, jump optimization is run again when CSE is finished.
3778 The option @samp{-ds} causes a debugging dump of the RTL code after
3779 this pass. This dump file's name is made by appending @samp{.cse} to
3780 the input file name.
3782 @cindex global common subexpression elimination
3783 @cindex constant propagation
3784 @cindex copy propagation
3786 Global common subexpression elimination. This pass performs GCSE
3787 using Morel-Renvoise Partial Redundancy Elimination, with the exception
3788 that it does not try to move invariants out of loops - that is left to
3789 the loop optimization pass. This pass also performs global constant
3790 and copy propagation.
3792 The source file for this pass is gcse.c.
3794 The option @samp{-dG} causes a debugging dump of the RTL code after
3795 this pass. This dump file's name is made by appending @samp{.gcse} to
3796 the input file name.
3798 @cindex loop optimization
3800 @cindex strength-reduction
3802 Loop optimization. This pass moves constant expressions out of loops,
3803 and optionally does strength-reduction and loop unrolling as well.
3804 Its source files are @file{loop.c} and @file{unroll.c}, plus the header
3805 @file{loop.h} used for communication between them. Loop unrolling uses
3806 some functions in @file{integrate.c} and the header @file{integrate.h}.
3808 The option @samp{-dL} causes a debugging dump of the RTL code after
3809 this pass. This dump file's name is made by appending @samp{.loop} to
3810 the input file name.
3813 If @samp{-frerun-cse-after-loop} was enabled, a second common
3814 subexpression elimination pass is performed after the loop optimization
3815 pass. Jump threading is also done again at this time if it was specified.
3817 The option @samp{-dt} causes a debugging dump of the RTL code after
3818 this pass. This dump file's name is made by appending @samp{.cse2} to
3819 the input file name.
3821 @cindex data flow analysis
3822 @cindex analysis, data flow
3823 @cindex basic blocks
3825 Data flow analysis (@file{flow.c}). This pass divides the program
3826 into basic blocks (and in the process deletes unreachable loops); then
3827 it computes which pseudo-registers are live at each point in the
3828 program, and makes the first instruction that uses a value point at
3829 the instruction that computed the value.
3831 @cindex autoincrement/decrement analysis
3832 This pass also deletes computations whose results are never used, and
3833 combines memory references with add or subtract instructions to make
3834 autoincrement or autodecrement addressing.
3836 The option @samp{-df} causes a debugging dump of the RTL code after
3837 this pass. This dump file's name is made by appending @samp{.flow} to
3838 the input file name. If stupid register allocation is in use, this
3839 dump file reflects the full results of such allocation.
3841 @cindex instruction combination
3843 Instruction combination (@file{combine.c}). This pass attempts to
3844 combine groups of two or three instructions that are related by data
3845 flow into single instructions. It combines the RTL expressions for
3846 the instructions by substitution, simplifies the result using algebra,
3847 and then attempts to match the result against the machine description.
3849 The option @samp{-dc} causes a debugging dump of the RTL code after
3850 this pass. This dump file's name is made by appending @samp{.combine}
3851 to the input file name.
3853 @cindex register movement
3855 Register movement (@file{regmove.c}). This pass looks for cases where
3856 matching constraints would force an instruction to need a reload, and
3857 this reload would be a register to register move. It then attempts
3858 to change the registers used by the instruction to avoid the move
3861 The option @samp{-dN} causes a debugging dump of the RTL code after
3862 this pass. This dump file's name is made by appending @samp{.regmove}
3863 to the input file name.
3865 @cindex instruction scheduling
3866 @cindex scheduling, instruction
3868 Instruction scheduling (@file{sched.c}). This pass looks for
3869 instructions whose output will not be available by the time that it is
3870 used in subsequent instructions. (Memory loads and floating point
3871 instructions often have this behavior on RISC machines). It re-orders
3872 instructions within a basic block to try to separate the definition and
3873 use of items that otherwise would cause pipeline stalls.
3875 Instruction scheduling is performed twice. The first time is immediately
3876 after instruction combination and the second is immediately after reload.
3878 The option @samp{-dS} causes a debugging dump of the RTL code after this
3879 pass is run for the first time. The dump file's name is made by
3880 appending @samp{.sched} to the input file name.
3882 @cindex register class preference pass
3884 Register class preferencing. The RTL code is scanned to find out
3885 which register class is best for each pseudo register. The source
3886 file is @file{regclass.c}.
3888 @cindex register allocation
3889 @cindex local register allocation
3891 Local register allocation (@file{local-alloc.c}). This pass allocates
3892 hard registers to pseudo registers that are used only within one basic
3893 block. Because the basic block is linear, it can use fast and
3894 powerful techniques to do a very good job.
3896 The option @samp{-dl} causes a debugging dump of the RTL code after
3897 this pass. This dump file's name is made by appending @samp{.lreg} to
3898 the input file name.
3900 @cindex global register allocation
3902 Global register allocation (@file{global.c}). This pass
3903 allocates hard registers for the remaining pseudo registers (those
3904 whose life spans are not contained in one basic block).
3908 Reloading. This pass renumbers pseudo registers with the hardware
3909 registers numbers they were allocated. Pseudo registers that did not
3910 get hard registers are replaced with stack slots. Then it finds
3911 instructions that are invalid because a value has failed to end up in
3912 a register, or has ended up in a register of the wrong kind. It fixes
3913 up these instructions by reloading the problematical values
3914 temporarily into registers. Additional instructions are generated to
3917 The reload pass also optionally eliminates the frame pointer and inserts
3918 instructions to save and restore call-clobbered registers around calls.
3920 Source files are @file{reload.c} and @file{reload1.c}, plus the header
3921 @file{reload.h} used for communication between them.
3923 The option @samp{-dg} causes a debugging dump of the RTL code after
3924 this pass. This dump file's name is made by appending @samp{.greg} to
3925 the input file name.
3927 @cindex instruction scheduling
3928 @cindex scheduling, instruction
3930 Instruction scheduling is repeated here to try to avoid pipeline stalls
3931 due to memory loads generated for spilled pseudo registers.
3933 The option @samp{-dR} causes a debugging dump of the RTL code after
3934 this pass. This dump file's name is made by appending @samp{.sched2}
3935 to the input file name.
3937 @cindex cross-jumping
3938 @cindex no-op move instructions
3940 Jump optimization is repeated, this time including cross-jumping
3941 and deletion of no-op move instructions.
3943 The option @samp{-dJ} causes a debugging dump of the RTL code after
3944 this pass. This dump file's name is made by appending @samp{.jump2}
3945 to the input file name.
3947 @cindex delayed branch scheduling
3948 @cindex scheduling, delayed branch
3950 Delayed branch scheduling. This optional pass attempts to find
3951 instructions that can go into the delay slots of other instructions,
3952 usually jumps and calls. The source file name is @file{reorg.c}.
3954 The option @samp{-dd} causes a debugging dump of the RTL code after
3955 this pass. This dump file's name is made by appending @samp{.dbr}
3956 to the input file name.
3958 @cindex branch shortening
3960 Branch shortening. On many RISC machines, branch instructions have a
3961 limited range. Thus, longer sequences of instructions must be used for
3962 long branches. In this pass, the compiler figures out what how far each
3963 instruction will be from each other instruction, and therefore whether
3964 the usual instructions, or the longer sequences, must be used for each
3967 @cindex register-to-stack conversion
3969 Conversion from usage of some hard registers to usage of a register
3970 stack may be done at this point. Currently, this is supported only
3971 for the floating-point registers of the Intel 80387 coprocessor. The
3972 source file name is @file{reg-stack.c}.
3974 The options @samp{-dk} causes a debugging dump of the RTL code after
3975 this pass. This dump file's name is made by appending @samp{.stack}
3976 to the input file name.
3979 @cindex peephole optimization
3981 Final. This pass outputs the assembler code for the function. It is
3982 also responsible for identifying spurious test and compare
3983 instructions. Machine-specific peephole optimizations are performed
3984 at the same time. The function entry and exit sequences are generated
3985 directly as assembler code in this pass; they never exist as RTL.
3987 The source files are @file{final.c} plus @file{insn-output.c}; the
3988 latter is generated automatically from the machine description by the
3989 tool @file{genoutput}. The header file @file{conditions.h} is used
3990 for communication between these files.
3992 @cindex debugging information generation
3994 Debugging information output. This is run after final because it must
3995 output the stack slot offsets for pseudo registers that did not get
3996 hard registers. Source files are @file{dbxout.c} for DBX symbol table
3997 format, @file{sdbout.c} for SDB symbol table format, and
3998 @file{dwarfout.c} for DWARF symbol table format.
4001 Some additional files are used by all or many passes:
4005 Every pass uses @file{machmode.def} and @file{machmode.h} which define
4009 Several passes use @file{real.h}, which defines the default
4010 representation of floating point constants and how to operate on them.
4013 All the passes that work with RTL use the header files @file{rtl.h}
4014 and @file{rtl.def}, and subroutines in file @file{rtl.c}. The tools
4015 @code{gen*} also use these files to read and work with the machine
4020 Several passes refer to the header file @file{insn-config.h} which
4021 contains a few parameters (C macro definitions) generated
4022 automatically from the machine description RTL by the tool
4025 @cindex instruction recognizer
4027 Several passes use the instruction recognizer, which consists of
4028 @file{recog.c} and @file{recog.h}, plus the files @file{insn-recog.c}
4029 and @file{insn-extract.c} that are generated automatically from the
4030 machine description by the tools @file{genrecog} and
4031 @file{genextract}.@refill
4034 Several passes use the header files @file{regs.h} which defines the
4035 information recorded about pseudo register usage, and @file{basic-block.h}
4036 which defines the information recorded about basic blocks.
4039 @file{hard-reg-set.h} defines the type @code{HARD_REG_SET}, a bit-vector
4040 with a bit for each hard register, and some macros to manipulate it.
4041 This type is just @code{int} if the machine has few enough hard registers;
4042 otherwise it is an array of @code{int} and some of the macros expand
4046 Several passes use instruction attributes. A definition of the
4047 attributes defined for a particular machine is in file
4048 @file{insn-attr.h}, which is generated from the machine description by
4049 the program @file{genattr}. The file @file{insn-attrtab.c} contains
4050 subroutines to obtain the attribute values for insns. It is generated
4051 from the machine description by the program @file{genattrtab}.@refill
4063 @chapter The Configuration File
4064 @cindex configuration file
4065 @cindex @file{xm-@var{machine}.h}
4067 The configuration file @file{xm-@var{machine}.h} contains macro
4068 definitions that describe the machine and system on which the compiler
4069 is running, unlike the definitions in @file{@var{machine}.h}, which
4070 describe the machine for which the compiler is producing output. Most
4071 of the values in @file{xm-@var{machine}.h} are actually the same on all
4072 machines that GCC runs on, so large parts of all configuration files
4073 are identical. But there are some macros that vary:
4078 Define this macro if the host system is System V.
4082 Define this macro if the host system is VMS.
4084 @findex FATAL_EXIT_CODE
4085 @item FATAL_EXIT_CODE
4086 A C expression for the status code to be returned when the compiler
4087 exits after serious errors.
4089 @findex SUCCESS_EXIT_CODE
4090 @item SUCCESS_EXIT_CODE
4091 A C expression for the status code to be returned when the compiler
4092 exits without serious errors.
4094 @findex HOST_WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN
4095 @item HOST_WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN
4096 Defined if the host machine stores words of multi-word values in
4097 big-endian order. (GCC does not depend on the host byte ordering
4100 @findex HOST_FLOAT_WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN
4101 @item HOST_FLOAT_WORDS_BIG_ENDIAN
4102 Define this macro to be 1 if the host machine stores @code{DFmode},
4103 @code{XFmode} or @code{TFmode} floating point numbers in memory with the
4104 word containing the sign bit at the lowest address; otherwise, define it
4107 This macro need not be defined if the ordering is the same as for
4108 multi-word integers.
4110 @findex HOST_FLOAT_FORMAT
4111 @item HOST_FLOAT_FORMAT
4112 A numeric code distinguishing the floating point format for the host
4113 machine. See @code{TARGET_FLOAT_FORMAT} in @ref{Storage Layout} for the
4114 alternatives and default.
4116 @findex HOST_BITS_PER_CHAR
4117 @item HOST_BITS_PER_CHAR
4118 A C expression for the number of bits in @code{char} on the host
4121 @findex HOST_BITS_PER_SHORT
4122 @item HOST_BITS_PER_SHORT
4123 A C expression for the number of bits in @code{short} on the host
4126 @findex HOST_BITS_PER_INT
4127 @item HOST_BITS_PER_INT
4128 A C expression for the number of bits in @code{int} on the host
4131 @findex HOST_BITS_PER_LONG
4132 @item HOST_BITS_PER_LONG
4133 A C expression for the number of bits in @code{long} on the host
4136 @findex ONLY_INT_FIELDS
4137 @item ONLY_INT_FIELDS
4138 Define this macro to indicate that the host compiler only supports
4139 @code{int} bit fields, rather than other integral types, including
4140 @code{enum}, as do most C compilers.
4142 @findex OBSTACK_CHUNK_SIZE
4143 @item OBSTACK_CHUNK_SIZE
4144 A C expression for the size of ordinary obstack chunks.
4145 If you don't define this, a usually-reasonable default is used.
4147 @findex OBSTACK_CHUNK_ALLOC
4148 @item OBSTACK_CHUNK_ALLOC
4149 The function used to allocate obstack chunks.
4150 If you don't define this, @code{xmalloc} is used.
4152 @findex OBSTACK_CHUNK_FREE
4153 @item OBSTACK_CHUNK_FREE
4154 The function used to free obstack chunks.
4155 If you don't define this, @code{free} is used.
4157 @findex USE_C_ALLOCA
4159 Define this macro to indicate that the compiler is running with the
4160 @code{alloca} implemented in C. This version of @code{alloca} can be
4161 found in the file @file{alloca.c}; to use it, you must also alter the
4162 @file{Makefile} variable @code{ALLOCA}. (This is done automatically
4163 for the systems on which we know it is needed.)
4165 If you do define this macro, you should probably do it as follows:
4169 #define USE_C_ALLOCA
4171 #define alloca __builtin_alloca
4176 so that when the compiler is compiled with GCC it uses the more
4177 efficient built-in @code{alloca} function.
4179 @item FUNCTION_CONVERSION_BUG
4180 @findex FUNCTION_CONVERSION_BUG
4181 Define this macro to indicate that the host compiler does not properly
4182 handle converting a function value to a pointer-to-function when it is
4183 used in an expression.
4185 @findex MULTIBYTE_CHARS
4186 @item MULTIBYTE_CHARS
4187 Define this macro to enable support for multibyte characters in the
4188 input to GCC. This requires that the host system support the ISO C
4189 library functions for converting multibyte characters to wide
4194 Define this if your system is POSIX.1 compliant.
4196 @findex USE_PROTOTYPES
4197 @item USE_PROTOTYPES
4198 Define this to be 1 if you know that the host compiler supports
4199 prototypes, even if it doesn't define __STDC__, or define
4200 it to be 0 if you do not want any prototypes used in compiling
4201 GCC. If @samp{USE_PROTOTYPES} is not defined, it will be
4202 determined automatically whether your compiler supports
4203 prototypes by checking if @samp{__STDC__} is defined.
4205 @findex PATH_SEPARATOR
4206 @item PATH_SEPARATOR
4207 Define this macro to be a C character constant representing the
4208 character used to separate components in paths. The default value is
4211 @findex DIR_SEPARATOR
4213 If your system uses some character other than slash to separate
4214 directory names within a file specification, define this macro to be a C
4215 character constant specifying that character. When GCC displays file
4216 names, the character you specify will be used. GCC will test for
4217 both slash and the character you specify when parsing filenames.
4219 @findex OBJECT_SUFFIX
4221 Define this macro to be a C string representing the suffix for object
4222 files on your machine. If you do not define this macro, GCC will use
4223 @samp{.o} as the suffix for object files.
4225 @findex EXECUTABLE_SUFFIX
4226 @item EXECUTABLE_SUFFIX
4227 Define this macro to be a C string representing the suffix for executable
4228 files on your machine. If you do not define this macro, GCC will use
4229 the null string as the suffix for object files.
4231 @findex HOST_BIT_BUCKET
4232 @item HOST_BIT_BUCKET
4233 The name of a file or file-like object on the host system which acts as
4234 a ``bit bucket''. If you do not define this macro, GCC will use
4235 @samp{/dev/null} as the bit bucket. If the target does not support a
4236 bit bucket, this should be defined to the null string, or some other
4237 illegal filename. If the bit bucket is not writable, GCC will use a
4238 temporary file instead.
4240 @findex COLLECT_EXPORT_LIST
4241 @item COLLECT_EXPORT_LIST
4242 If defined, @code{collect2} will scan the individual object files
4243 specified on its command line and create an export list for the linker.
4244 Define this macro for systems like AIX, where the linker discards
4245 object files that are not referenced from @code{main} and uses export
4248 @findex COLLECT2_HOST_INITIALIZATION
4249 @item COLLECT2_HOST_INITIALIZATION
4250 If defined, a C statement (sans semicolon) that performs host-dependent
4251 initialization when @code{collect2} is being initialized.
4253 @findex GCC_DRIVER_HOST_INITIALIZATION
4254 @item GCC_DRIVER_HOST_INITIALIZATION
4255 If defined, a C statement (sans semicolon) that performs host-dependent
4256 initialization when a compilation driver is being initialized.
4258 @findex UPDATE_PATH_HOST_CANONICALIZE
4259 @item UPDATE_PATH_HOST_CANONICALIZE (@var{path}, @var{key})
4260 If defined, a C statement (sans semicolon) that performs host-dependent
4261 canonicalization when a path used in a compilation driver or preprocessor is
4262 canonicalized. @var{path} is the path to be canonicalized, and @var{key} is
4263 a translation prefix when its value isn't @code{NULL}. If the C statement
4264 does canonicalize @var{path}, the new path should be returned.
4269 In addition, configuration files for system V define @code{bcopy},
4270 @code{bzero} and @code{bcmp} as aliases. Some files define @code{alloca}
4271 as a macro when compiled with GCC, in order to take advantage of the
4272 benefit of GCC's built-in @code{alloca}.
4275 @chapter Makefile Fragments
4276 @cindex makefile fragment
4278 When you configure GCC using the @file{configure} script
4279 (@pxref{Installation}), it will construct the file @file{Makefile} from
4280 the template file @file{Makefile.in}. When it does this, it will
4281 incorporate makefile fragment files from the @file{config} directory,
4282 named @file{t-@var{target}} and @file{x-@var{host}}. If these files do
4283 not exist, it means nothing needs to be added for a given target or
4287 * Target Fragment:: Writing the @file{t-@var{target}} file.
4288 * Host Fragment:: Writing the @file{x-@var{host}} file.
4291 @node Target Fragment
4292 @section The Target Makefile Fragment
4293 @cindex target makefile fragment
4294 @cindex @file{t-@var{target}}
4296 The target makefile fragment, @file{t-@var{target}}, defines special
4297 target dependent variables and targets used in the @file{Makefile}:
4302 The rule to use to build @file{libgcc1.a}.
4303 If your target does not need to use the functions in @file{libgcc1.a},
4307 @findex CROSS_LIBGCC1
4309 The rule to use to build @file{libgcc1.a} when building a cross
4310 compiler. If your target does not need to use the functions in
4311 @file{libgcc1.a}, set this to empty. @xref{Cross Runtime}.
4313 @findex LIBGCC2_CFLAGS
4314 @item LIBGCC2_CFLAGS
4315 Compiler flags to use when compiling @file{libgcc2.c}.
4317 @findex LIB2FUNCS_EXTRA
4318 @item LIB2FUNCS_EXTRA
4319 A list of source file names to be compiled or assembled and inserted
4320 into @file{libgcc.a}.
4322 @findex Floating Point Emulation
4323 @item Floating Point Emulation
4324 To have GCC include software floating point libraries in @file{libgcc.a}
4325 define @code{FPBIT} and @code{DPBIT} along with a few rules as follows:
4327 # We want fine grained libraries, so use the new code to build the
4328 # floating point emulation libraries.
4333 fp-bit.c: $(srcdir)/config/fp-bit.c
4334 echo '#define FLOAT' > fp-bit.c
4335 cat $(srcdir)/config/fp-bit.c >> fp-bit.c
4337 dp-bit.c: $(srcdir)/config/fp-bit.c
4338 cat $(srcdir)/config/fp-bit.c > dp-bit.c
4341 You may need to provide additional #defines at the beginning of @file{fp-bit.c}
4342 and @file{dp-bit.c} to control target endianness and other options.
4345 @findex CRTSTUFF_T_CFLAGS
4346 @item CRTSTUFF_T_CFLAGS
4347 Special flags used when compiling @file{crtstuff.c}.
4348 @xref{Initialization}.
4350 @findex CRTSTUFF_T_CFLAGS_S
4351 @item CRTSTUFF_T_CFLAGS_S
4352 Special flags used when compiling @file{crtstuff.c} for shared
4353 linking. Used if you use @file{crtbeginS.o} and @file{crtendS.o}
4354 in @code{EXTRA-PARTS}.
4355 @xref{Initialization}.
4357 @findex MULTILIB_OPTIONS
4358 @item MULTILIB_OPTIONS
4359 For some targets, invoking GCC in different ways produces objects
4360 that can not be linked together. For example, for some targets GCC
4361 produces both big and little endian code. For these targets, you must
4362 arrange for multiple versions of @file{libgcc.a} to be compiled, one for
4363 each set of incompatible options. When GCC invokes the linker, it
4364 arranges to link in the right version of @file{libgcc.a}, based on
4365 the command line options used.
4367 The @code{MULTILIB_OPTIONS} macro lists the set of options for which
4368 special versions of @file{libgcc.a} must be built. Write options that
4369 are mutually incompatible side by side, separated by a slash. Write
4370 options that may be used together separated by a space. The build
4371 procedure will build all combinations of compatible options.
4373 For example, if you set @code{MULTILIB_OPTIONS} to @samp{m68000/m68020
4374 msoft-float}, @file{Makefile} will build special versions of
4375 @file{libgcc.a} using the following sets of options: @samp{-m68000},
4376 @samp{-m68020}, @samp{-msoft-float}, @samp{-m68000 -msoft-float}, and
4377 @samp{-m68020 -msoft-float}.
4379 @findex MULTILIB_DIRNAMES
4380 @item MULTILIB_DIRNAMES
4381 If @code{MULTILIB_OPTIONS} is used, this variable specifies the
4382 directory names that should be used to hold the various libraries.
4383 Write one element in @code{MULTILIB_DIRNAMES} for each element in
4384 @code{MULTILIB_OPTIONS}. If @code{MULTILIB_DIRNAMES} is not used, the
4385 default value will be @code{MULTILIB_OPTIONS}, with all slashes treated
4388 For example, if @code{MULTILIB_OPTIONS} is set to @samp{m68000/m68020
4389 msoft-float}, then the default value of @code{MULTILIB_DIRNAMES} is
4390 @samp{m68000 m68020 msoft-float}. You may specify a different value if
4391 you desire a different set of directory names.
4393 @findex MULTILIB_MATCHES
4394 @item MULTILIB_MATCHES
4395 Sometimes the same option may be written in two different ways. If an
4396 option is listed in @code{MULTILIB_OPTIONS}, GCC needs to know about
4397 any synonyms. In that case, set @code{MULTILIB_MATCHES} to a list of
4398 items of the form @samp{option=option} to describe all relevant
4399 synonyms. For example, @samp{m68000=mc68000 m68020=mc68020}.
4401 @findex MULTILIB_EXCEPTIONS
4402 @item MULTILIB_EXCEPTIONS
4403 Sometimes when there are multiple sets of @code{MULTILIB_OPTIONS} being
4404 specified, there are combinations that should not be built. In that
4405 case, set @code{MULTILIB_EXCEPTIONS} to be all of the switch exceptions
4406 in shell case syntax that should not be built.
4408 For example, in the PowerPC embedded ABI support, it is not desirable
4409 to build libraries compiled with the @samp{-mcall-aix} option
4410 and either of the @samp{-fleading-underscore} or @samp{-mlittle} options
4411 at the same time. Therefore @code{MULTILIB_EXCEPTIONS} is set to
4412 @code{*mcall-aix/*fleading-underscore* *mlittle/*mcall-aix*}.
4414 @findex MULTILIB_EXTRA_OPTS
4415 @item MULTILIB_EXTRA_OPTS
4416 Sometimes it is desirable that when building multiple versions of
4417 @file{libgcc.a} certain options should always be passed on to the
4418 compiler. In that case, set @code{MULTILIB_EXTRA_OPTS} to be the list
4419 of options to be used for all builds.
4423 @section The Host Makefile Fragment
4424 @cindex host makefile fragment
4425 @cindex @file{x-@var{host}}
4427 The host makefile fragment, @file{x-@var{host}}, defines special host
4428 dependent variables and targets used in the @file{Makefile}:
4433 The compiler to use when building the first stage.
4437 Additional host libraries to link with.
4441 The compiler to use when building @file{libgcc1.a} for a native
4446 The version of @code{ar} to use when building @file{libgcc1.a} for a native
4451 The install program to use.
4456 @unnumbered Funding Free Software
4458 If you want to have more free software a few years from now, it makes
4459 sense for you to help encourage people to contribute funds for its
4460 development. The most effective approach known is to encourage
4461 commercial redistributors to donate.
4463 Users of free software systems can boost the pace of development by
4464 encouraging for-a-fee distributors to donate part of their selling price
4465 to free software developers---the Free Software Foundation, and others.
4467 The way to convince distributors to do this is to demand it and expect
4468 it from them. So when you compare distributors, judge them partly by
4469 how much they give to free software development. Show distributors
4470 they must compete to be the one who gives the most.
4472 To make this approach work, you must insist on numbers that you can
4473 compare, such as, ``We will donate ten dollars to the Frobnitz project
4474 for each disk sold.'' Don't be satisfied with a vague promise, such as
4475 ``A portion of the profits are donated,'' since it doesn't give a basis
4478 Even a precise fraction ``of the profits from this disk'' is not very
4479 meaningful, since creative accounting and unrelated business decisions
4480 can greatly alter what fraction of the sales price counts as profit.
4481 If the price you pay is $50, ten percent of the profit is probably
4482 less than a dollar; it might be a few cents, or nothing at all.
4484 Some redistributors do development work themselves. This is useful too;
4485 but to keep everyone honest, you need to inquire how much they do, and
4486 what kind. Some kinds of development make much more long-term
4487 difference than others. For example, maintaining a separate version of
4488 a program contributes very little; maintaining the standard version of a
4489 program for the whole community contributes much. Easy new ports
4490 contribute little, since someone else would surely do them; difficult
4491 ports such as adding a new CPU to the GNU Compiler Collection contribute more;
4492 major new features or packages contribute the most.
4494 By establishing the idea that supporting further development is ``the
4495 proper thing to do'' when distributing free software for a fee, we can
4496 assure a steady flow of resources into making more free software.
4499 Copyright (C) 1994 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4500 Verbatim copying and redistribution of this section is permitted
4501 without royalty; alteration is not permitted.
4505 @unnumbered Linux and the GNU Project
4507 Many computer users run a modified version of the GNU system every
4508 day, without realizing it. Through a peculiar turn of events, the
4509 version of GNU which is widely used today is more often known as
4510 ``Linux'', and many users are not aware of the extent of its
4511 connection with the GNU Project.
4513 There really is a Linux; it is a kernel, and these people are using
4514 it. But you can't use a kernel by itself; a kernel is useful only as
4515 part of a whole system. The system in which Linux is typically used
4516 is a modified variant of the GNU system---in other words, a Linux-based
4519 Many users are not fully aware of the distinction between the kernel,
4520 which is Linux, and the whole system, which they also call ``Linux''.
4521 The ambiguous use of the name doesn't promote understanding.
4523 Programmers generally know that Linux is a kernel. But since they
4524 have generally heard the whole system called ``Linux'' as well, they
4525 often envisage a history which fits that name. For example, many
4526 believe that once Linus Torvalds finished writing the kernel, his
4527 friends looked around for other free software, and for no particular
4528 reason most everything necessary to make a Unix-like system was
4531 What they found was no accident---it was the GNU system. The available
4532 free software added up to a complete system because the GNU Project
4533 had been working since 1984 to make one. The GNU Manifesto
4534 had set forth the goal of developing a free Unix-like system, called
4535 GNU. By the time Linux was written, the system was almost finished.
4537 Most free software projects have the goal of developing a particular
4538 program for a particular job. For example, Linus Torvalds set out to
4539 write a Unix-like kernel (Linux); Donald Knuth set out to write a text
4540 formatter (TeX); Bob Scheifler set out to develop a window system (X
4541 Windows). It's natural to measure the contribution of this kind of
4542 project by specific programs that came from the project.
4544 If we tried to measure the GNU Project's contribution in this way,
4545 what would we conclude? One CD-ROM vendor found that in their ``Linux
4546 distribution'', GNU software was the largest single contingent, around
4547 28% of the total source code, and this included some of the essential
4548 major components without which there could be no system. Linux itself
4549 was about 3%. So if you were going to pick a name for the system
4550 based on who wrote the programs in the system, the most appropriate
4551 single choice would be ``GNU''.
4553 But we don't think that is the right way to consider the question.
4554 The GNU Project was not, is not, a project to develop specific
4555 software packages. It was not a project to develop a C compiler,
4556 although we did. It was not a project to develop a text editor,
4557 although we developed one. The GNU Project's aim was to develop
4558 @emph{a complete free Unix-like system}.
4560 Many people have made major contributions to the free software in the
4561 system, and they all deserve credit. But the reason it is @emph{a
4562 system}---and not just a collection of useful programs---is because the
4563 GNU Project set out to make it one. We wrote the programs that were
4564 needed to make a @emph{complete} free system. We wrote essential but
4565 unexciting major components, such as the assembler and linker, because
4566 you can't have a system without them. A complete system needs more
4567 than just programming tools, so we wrote other components as well,
4568 such as the Bourne Again SHell, the PostScript interpreter
4569 Ghostscript, and the GNU C library.
4571 By the early 90s we had put together the whole system aside from the
4572 kernel (and we were also working on a kernel, the GNU Hurd, which runs
4573 on top of Mach). Developing this kernel has been a lot harder than we
4574 expected, and we are still working on finishing it.
4576 Fortunately, you don't have to wait for it, because Linux is working
4577 now. When Linus Torvalds wrote Linux, he filled the last major gap.
4578 People could then put Linux together with the GNU system to make a
4579 complete free system: a Linux-based GNU system (or GNU/Linux system,
4582 Putting them together sounds simple, but it was not a trivial job.
4583 The GNU C library (called glibc for short) needed substantial changes.
4584 Integrating a complete system as a distribution that would work ``out
4585 of the box'' was a big job, too. It required addressing the issue of
4586 how to install and boot the system---a problem we had not tackled,
4587 because we hadn't yet reached that point. The people who developed
4588 the various system distributions made a substantial contribution.
4590 The GNU Project supports GNU/Linux systems as well as @emph{the}
4591 GNU system---even with funds. We funded the rewriting of the
4592 Linux-related extensions to the GNU C library, so that now they are
4593 well integrated, and the newest GNU/Linux systems use the current
4594 library release with no changes. We also funded an early stage of the
4595 development of Debian GNU/Linux.
4597 We use Linux-based GNU systems today for most of our work, and we hope
4598 you use them too. But please don't confuse the public by using the
4599 name ``Linux'' ambiguously. Linux is the kernel, one of the essential
4600 major components of the system. The system as a whole is more or less
4604 @unnumbered GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
4605 @center Version 2, June 1991
4608 Copyright @copyright{} 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4609 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA
4611 Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies
4612 of this license document, but changing it is not allowed.
4615 @unnumberedsec Preamble
4617 The licenses for most software are designed to take away your
4618 freedom to share and change it. By contrast, the GNU General Public
4619 License is intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change free
4620 software---to make sure the software is free for all its users. This
4621 General Public License applies to most of the Free Software
4622 Foundation's software and to any other program whose authors commit to
4623 using it. (Some other Free Software Foundation software is covered by
4624 the GNU Library General Public License instead.) You can apply it to
4627 When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not
4628 price. Our General Public Licenses are designed to make sure that you
4629 have the freedom to distribute copies of free software (and charge for
4630 this service if you wish), that you receive source code or can get it
4631 if you want it, that you can change the software or use pieces of it
4632 in new free programs; and that you know you can do these things.
4634 To protect your rights, we need to make restrictions that forbid
4635 anyone to deny you these rights or to ask you to surrender the rights.
4636 These restrictions translate to certain responsibilities for you if you
4637 distribute copies of the software, or if you modify it.
4639 For example, if you distribute copies of such a program, whether
4640 gratis or for a fee, you must give the recipients all the rights that
4641 you have. You must make sure that they, too, receive or can get the
4642 source code. And you must show them these terms so they know their
4645 We protect your rights with two steps: (1) copyright the software, and
4646 (2) offer you this license which gives you legal permission to copy,
4647 distribute and/or modify the software.
4649 Also, for each author's protection and ours, we want to make certain
4650 that everyone understands that there is no warranty for this free
4651 software. If the software is modified by someone else and passed on, we
4652 want its recipients to know that what they have is not the original, so
4653 that any problems introduced by others will not reflect on the original
4654 authors' reputations.
4656 Finally, any free program is threatened constantly by software
4657 patents. We wish to avoid the danger that redistributors of a free
4658 program will individually obtain patent licenses, in effect making the
4659 program proprietary. To prevent this, we have made it clear that any
4660 patent must be licensed for everyone's free use or not licensed at all.
4662 The precise terms and conditions for copying, distribution and
4663 modification follow.
4666 @unnumberedsec TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING, DISTRIBUTION AND MODIFICATION
4669 @center TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR COPYING, DISTRIBUTION AND MODIFICATION
4674 This License applies to any program or other work which contains
4675 a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it may be distributed
4676 under the terms of this General Public License. The ``Program'', below,
4677 refers to any such program or work, and a ``work based on the Program''
4678 means either the Program or any derivative work under copyright law:
4679 that is to say, a work containing the Program or a portion of it,
4680 either verbatim or with modifications and/or translated into another
4681 language. (Hereinafter, translation is included without limitation in
4682 the term ``modification''.) Each licensee is addressed as ``you''.
4684 Activities other than copying, distribution and modification are not
4685 covered by this License; they are outside its scope. The act of
4686 running the Program is not restricted, and the output from the Program
4687 is covered only if its contents constitute a work based on the
4688 Program (independent of having been made by running the Program).
4689 Whether that is true depends on what the Program does.
4692 You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of the Program's
4693 source code as you receive it, in any medium, provided that you
4694 conspicuously and appropriately publish on each copy an appropriate
4695 copyright notice and disclaimer of warranty; keep intact all the
4696 notices that refer to this License and to the absence of any warranty;
4697 and give any other recipients of the Program a copy of this License
4698 along with the Program.
4700 You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and
4701 you may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange for a fee.
4704 You may modify your copy or copies of the Program or any portion
4705 of it, thus forming a work based on the Program, and copy and
4706 distribute such modifications or work under the terms of Section 1
4707 above, provided that you also meet all of these conditions:
4711 You must cause the modified files to carry prominent notices
4712 stating that you changed the files and the date of any change.
4715 You must cause any work that you distribute or publish, that in
4716 whole or in part contains or is derived from the Program or any
4717 part thereof, to be licensed as a whole at no charge to all third
4718 parties under the terms of this License.
4721 If the modified program normally reads commands interactively
4722 when run, you must cause it, when started running for such
4723 interactive use in the most ordinary way, to print or display an
4724 announcement including an appropriate copyright notice and a
4725 notice that there is no warranty (or else, saying that you provide
4726 a warranty) and that users may redistribute the program under
4727 these conditions, and telling the user how to view a copy of this
4728 License. (Exception: if the Program itself is interactive but
4729 does not normally print such an announcement, your work based on
4730 the Program is not required to print an announcement.)
4733 These requirements apply to the modified work as a whole. If
4734 identifiable sections of that work are not derived from the Program,
4735 and can be reasonably considered independent and separate works in
4736 themselves, then this License, and its terms, do not apply to those
4737 sections when you distribute them as separate works. But when you
4738 distribute the same sections as part of a whole which is a work based
4739 on the Program, the distribution of the whole must be on the terms of
4740 this License, whose permissions for other licensees extend to the
4741 entire whole, and thus to each and every part regardless of who wrote it.
4743 Thus, it is not the intent of this section to claim rights or contest
4744 your rights to work written entirely by you; rather, the intent is to
4745 exercise the right to control the distribution of derivative or
4746 collective works based on the Program.
4748 In addition, mere aggregation of another work not based on the Program
4749 with the Program (or with a work based on the Program) on a volume of
4750 a storage or distribution medium does not bring the other work under
4751 the scope of this License.
4754 You may copy and distribute the Program (or a work based on it,
4755 under Section 2) in object code or executable form under the terms of
4756 Sections 1 and 2 above provided that you also do one of the following:
4760 Accompany it with the complete corresponding machine-readable
4761 source code, which must be distributed under the terms of Sections
4762 1 and 2 above on a medium customarily used for software interchange; or,
4765 Accompany it with a written offer, valid for at least three
4766 years, to give any third party, for a charge no more than your
4767 cost of physically performing source distribution, a complete
4768 machine-readable copy of the corresponding source code, to be
4769 distributed under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above on a medium
4770 customarily used for software interchange; or,
4773 Accompany it with the information you received as to the offer
4774 to distribute corresponding source code. (This alternative is
4775 allowed only for noncommercial distribution and only if you
4776 received the program in object code or executable form with such
4777 an offer, in accord with Subsection b above.)
4780 The source code for a work means the preferred form of the work for
4781 making modifications to it. For an executable work, complete source
4782 code means all the source code for all modules it contains, plus any
4783 associated interface definition files, plus the scripts used to
4784 control compilation and installation of the executable. However, as a
4785 special exception, the source code distributed need not include
4786 anything that is normally distributed (in either source or binary
4787 form) with the major components (compiler, kernel, and so on) of the
4788 operating system on which the executable runs, unless that component
4789 itself accompanies the executable.
4791 If distribution of executable or object code is made by offering
4792 access to copy from a designated place, then offering equivalent
4793 access to copy the source code from the same place counts as
4794 distribution of the source code, even though third parties are not
4795 compelled to copy the source along with the object code.
4798 You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Program
4799 except as expressly provided under this License. Any attempt
4800 otherwise to copy, modify, sublicense or distribute the Program is
4801 void, and will automatically terminate your rights under this License.
4802 However, parties who have received copies, or rights, from you under
4803 this License will not have their licenses terminated so long as such
4804 parties remain in full compliance.
4807 You are not required to accept this License, since you have not
4808 signed it. However, nothing else grants you permission to modify or
4809 distribute the Program or its derivative works. These actions are
4810 prohibited by law if you do not accept this License. Therefore, by
4811 modifying or distributing the Program (or any work based on the
4812 Program), you indicate your acceptance of this License to do so, and
4813 all its terms and conditions for copying, distributing or modifying
4814 the Program or works based on it.
4817 Each time you redistribute the Program (or any work based on the
4818 Program), the recipient automatically receives a license from the
4819 original licensor to copy, distribute or modify the Program subject to
4820 these terms and conditions. You may not impose any further
4821 restrictions on the recipients' exercise of the rights granted herein.
4822 You are not responsible for enforcing compliance by third parties to
4826 If, as a consequence of a court judgment or allegation of patent
4827 infringement or for any other reason (not limited to patent issues),
4828 conditions are imposed on you (whether by court order, agreement or
4829 otherwise) that contradict the conditions of this License, they do not
4830 excuse you from the conditions of this License. If you cannot
4831 distribute so as to satisfy simultaneously your obligations under this
4832 License and any other pertinent obligations, then as a consequence you
4833 may not distribute the Program at all. For example, if a patent
4834 license would not permit royalty-free redistribution of the Program by
4835 all those who receive copies directly or indirectly through you, then
4836 the only way you could satisfy both it and this License would be to
4837 refrain entirely from distribution of the Program.
4839 If any portion of this section is held invalid or unenforceable under
4840 any particular circumstance, the balance of the section is intended to
4841 apply and the section as a whole is intended to apply in other
4844 It is not the purpose of this section to induce you to infringe any
4845 patents or other property right claims or to contest validity of any
4846 such claims; this section has the sole purpose of protecting the
4847 integrity of the free software distribution system, which is
4848 implemented by public license practices. Many people have made
4849 generous contributions to the wide range of software distributed
4850 through that system in reliance on consistent application of that
4851 system; it is up to the author/donor to decide if he or she is willing
4852 to distribute software through any other system and a licensee cannot
4855 This section is intended to make thoroughly clear what is believed to
4856 be a consequence of the rest of this License.
4859 If the distribution and/or use of the Program is restricted in
4860 certain countries either by patents or by copyrighted interfaces, the
4861 original copyright holder who places the Program under this License
4862 may add an explicit geographical distribution limitation excluding
4863 those countries, so that distribution is permitted only in or among
4864 countries not thus excluded. In such case, this License incorporates
4865 the limitation as if written in the body of this License.
4868 The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/or new versions
4869 of the General Public License from time to time. Such new versions will
4870 be similar in spirit to the present version, but may differ in detail to
4871 address new problems or concerns.
4873 Each version is given a distinguishing version number. If the Program
4874 specifies a version number of this License which applies to it and ``any
4875 later version'', you have the option of following the terms and conditions
4876 either of that version or of any later version published by the Free
4877 Software Foundation. If the Program does not specify a version number of
4878 this License, you may choose any version ever published by the Free Software
4882 If you wish to incorporate parts of the Program into other free
4883 programs whose distribution conditions are different, write to the author
4884 to ask for permission. For software which is copyrighted by the Free
4885 Software Foundation, write to the Free Software Foundation; we sometimes
4886 make exceptions for this. Our decision will be guided by the two goals
4887 of preserving the free status of all derivatives of our free software and
4888 of promoting the sharing and reuse of software generally.
4891 @heading NO WARRANTY
4898 BECAUSE THE PROGRAM IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO WARRANTY
4899 FOR THE PROGRAM, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN
4900 OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES
4901 PROVIDE THE PROGRAM ``AS IS'' WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED
4902 OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
4903 MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE ENTIRE RISK AS
4904 TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PROGRAM IS WITH YOU. SHOULD THE
4905 PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING,
4906 REPAIR OR CORRECTION.
4909 IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING
4910 WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MAY MODIFY AND/OR
4911 REDISTRIBUTE THE PROGRAM AS PERMITTED ABOVE, BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES,
4912 INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING
4913 OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE PROGRAM (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED
4914 TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY
4915 YOU OR THIRD PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE PROGRAM TO OPERATE WITH ANY OTHER
4916 PROGRAMS), EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE
4917 POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
4921 @heading END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
4924 @center END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
4928 @unnumberedsec How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs
4930 If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest
4931 possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it
4932 free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms.
4934 To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest
4935 to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively
4936 convey the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least
4937 the ``copyright'' line and a pointer to where the full notice is found.
4940 @var{one line to give the program's name and a brief idea of what it does.}
4941 Copyright (C) @var{yyyy} @var{name of author}
4943 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
4944 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
4945 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
4946 (at your option) any later version.
4948 This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
4949 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
4950 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
4951 GNU General Public License for more details.
4953 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
4954 along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
4955 Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
4958 Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.
4960 If the program is interactive, make it output a short notice like this
4961 when it starts in an interactive mode:
4964 Gnomovision version 69, Copyright (C) @var{yyyy} @var{name of author}
4965 Gnomovision comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details
4967 This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it
4968 under certain conditions; type `show c' for details.
4971 The hypothetical commands @samp{show w} and @samp{show c} should show
4972 the appropriate parts of the General Public License. Of course, the
4973 commands you use may be called something other than @samp{show w} and
4974 @samp{show c}; they could even be mouse-clicks or menu items---whatever
4977 You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or your
4978 school, if any, to sign a ``copyright disclaimer'' for the program, if
4979 necessary. Here is a sample; alter the names:
4982 Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the program
4983 `Gnomovision' (which makes passes at compilers) written by James Hacker.
4985 @var{signature of Ty Coon}, 1 April 1989
4986 Ty Coon, President of Vice
4989 This General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into
4990 proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you may
4991 consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the
4992 library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Library General
4993 Public License instead of this License.
4996 @unnumbered Contributors to GCC
4997 @cindex contributors
4998 @include contrib.texi