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0975678f 1@c Copyright (C) 1988,1989,1992,1993,1994,1996,1998,1999,2000,2001,2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
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2@c This is part of the GCC manual.
3@c For copying conditions, see the file gcc.texi.
4
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5@node C Implementation
6@chapter C Implementation-defined behavior
7@cindex implementation-defined behavior, C language
8
9A conforming implementation of ISO C is required to document its
10choice of behavior in each of the areas that are designated
11``implementation defined.'' The following lists all such areas,
12along with the section number from the ISO/IEC 9899:1999 standard.
13
14@menu
15* Translation implementation::
16* Environment implementation::
17* Identifiers implementation::
18* Characters implementation::
19* Integers implementation::
20* Floating point implementation::
21* Arrays and pointers implementation::
22* Hints implementation::
23* Structures unions enumerations and bit-fields implementation::
24* Qualifiers implementation::
25* Preprocessing directives implementation::
26* Library functions implementation::
27* Architecture implementation::
28* Locale-specific behavior implementation::
29@end menu
30
31@node Translation implementation
32@section Translation
33
34@itemize @bullet
35@item
36@cite{How a diagnostic is identified (3.10, 5.1.1.3).}
37
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38Diagnostics consist of all the output sent to stderr by GCC.
39
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40@item
41@cite{Whether each nonempty sequence of white-space characters other than
42new-line is retained or replaced by one space character in translation
43phase 3 (5.1.1.2).}
44@end itemize
45
46@node Environment implementation
47@section Environment
48
0c688a7d 49The behavior of these points are dependent on the implementation
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50of the C library, and are not defined by GCC itself.
51
52@node Identifiers implementation
53@section Identifiers
54
55@itemize @bullet
56@item
57@cite{Which additional multibyte characters may appear in identifiers
58and their correspondence to universal character names (6.4.2).}
59
60@item
61@cite{The number of significant initial characters in an identifier
62(5.2.4.1, 6.4.2).}
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63
64For internal names, all characters are significant. For external names,
65the number of significant characters are defined by the linker; for
66almost all targets, all characters are significant.
67
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68@end itemize
69
70@node Characters implementation
71@section Characters
72
73@itemize @bullet
74@item
75@cite{The number of bits in a byte (3.6).}
76
77@item
78@cite{The values of the members of the execution character set (5.2.1).}
79
80@item
81@cite{The unique value of the member of the execution character set produced
82for each of the standard alphabetic escape sequences (5.2.2).}
83
84@item
85@cite{The value of a @code{char} object into which has been stored any
86character other than a member of the basic execution character set (6.2.5).}
87
88@item
89@cite{Which of @code{signed char} or @code{unsigned char} has the same range,
39ffd3cb 90representation, and behavior as ``plain'' @code{char} (6.2.5, 6.3.1.1).}
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91
92@item
93@cite{The mapping of members of the source character set (in character
94constants and string literals) to members of the execution character
95set (6.4.4.4, 5.1.1.2).}
96
97@item
98@cite{The value of an integer character constant containing more than one
99character or containing a character or escape sequence that does not map
100to a single-byte execution character (6.4.4.4).}
101
102@item
103@cite{The value of a wide character constant containing more than one
104multibyte character, or containing a multibyte character or escape
105sequence not represented in the extended execution character set (6.4.4.4).}
106
107@item
108@cite{The current locale used to convert a wide character constant consisting
109of a single multibyte character that maps to a member of the extended
110execution character set into a corresponding wide character code (6.4.4.4).}
111
112@item
113@cite{The current locale used to convert a wide string literal into
114corresponding wide character codes (6.4.5).}
115
116@item
117@cite{The value of a string literal containing a multibyte character or escape
118sequence not represented in the execution character set (6.4.5).}
119@end itemize
120
121@node Integers implementation
122@section Integers
123
124@itemize @bullet
125@item
126@cite{Any extended integer types that exist in the implementation (6.2.5).}
127
128@item
129@cite{Whether signed integer types are represented using sign and magnitude,
130two's complement, or one's complement, and whether the extraordinary value
131is a trap representation or an ordinary value (6.2.6.2).}
132
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133GCC supports only two's complement integer types, and all bit patterns
134are ordinary values.
135
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136@item
137@cite{The rank of any extended integer type relative to another extended
138integer type with the same precision (6.3.1.1).}
139
140@item
141@cite{The result of, or the signal raised by, converting an integer to a
142signed integer type when the value cannot be represented in an object of
143that type (6.3.1.3).}
144
145@item
146@cite{The results of some bitwise operations on signed integers (6.5).}
147@end itemize
148
149@node Floating point implementation
150@section Floating point
151
152@itemize @bullet
153@item
154@cite{The accuracy of the floating-point operations and of the library
39ffd3cb 155functions in @code{<math.h>} and @code{<complex.h>} that return floating-point
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156results (5.2.4.2.2).}
157
158@item
159@cite{The rounding behaviors characterized by non-standard values
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160of @code{FLT_ROUNDS} @gol
161(5.2.4.2.2).}
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162
163@item
164@cite{The evaluation methods characterized by non-standard negative
165values of @code{FLT_EVAL_METHOD} (5.2.4.2.2).}
166
167@item
168@cite{The direction of rounding when an integer is converted to a
169floating-point number that cannot exactly represent the original
170value (6.3.1.4).}
171
172@item
173@cite{The direction of rounding when a floating-point number is
174converted to a narrower floating-point number (6.3.1.5).}
175
176@item
177@cite{How the nearest representable value or the larger or smaller
178representable value immediately adjacent to the nearest representable
179value is chosen for certain floating constants (6.4.4.2).}
180
181@item
182@cite{Whether and how floating expressions are contracted when not
183disallowed by the @code{FP_CONTRACT} pragma (6.5).}
184
185@item
186@cite{The default state for the @code{FENV_ACCESS} pragma (7.6.1).}
187
188@item
189@cite{Additional floating-point exceptions, rounding modes, environments,
190and classifications, and their macro names (7.6, 7.12).}
191
192@item
193@cite{The default state for the @code{FP_CONTRACT} pragma (7.12.2).}
194
195@item
196@cite{Whether the ``inexact'' floating-point exception can be raised
197when the rounded result actually does equal the mathematical result
198in an IEC 60559 conformant implementation (F.9).}
199
200@item
201@cite{Whether the ``underflow'' (and ``inexact'') floating-point
202exception can be raised when a result is tiny but not inexact in an
203IEC 60559 conformant implementation (F.9).}
204
205@end itemize
206
207@node Arrays and pointers implementation
208@section Arrays and pointers
209
210@itemize @bullet
211@item
212@cite{The result of converting a pointer to an integer or
213vice versa (6.3.2.3).}
214
cbf4c36f 215A cast from pointer to integer discards most-significant bits if the
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216pointer representation is larger than the integer type,
217sign-extends@footnote{Future versions of GCC may zero-extend, or use
218a target-defined @code{ptr_extend} pattern. Do not rely on sign extension.}
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219if the pointer representation is smaller than the integer type, otherwise
220the bits are unchanged.
221@c ??? We've always claimed that pointers were unsigned entities.
222@c Shouldn't we therefore be doing zero-extension? If so, the bug
223@c is in convert_to_integer, where we call type_for_size and request
224@c a signed integral type. On the other hand, it might be most useful
225@c for the target if we extend according to POINTERS_EXTEND_UNSIGNED.
226
227A cast from integer to pointer discards most-significant bits if the
228pointer representation is smaller than the integer type, extends according
229to the signedness of the integer type if the pointer representation
230is larger than the integer type, otherwise the bits are unchanged.
231
232When casting from pointer to integer and back again, the resulting
233pointer must reference the same object as the original pointer, otherwise
234the behavior is undefined. That is, one may not use integer arithmetic to
235avoid the undefined behavior of pointer arithmetic as proscribed in 6.5.6/8.
236
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237@item
238@cite{The size of the result of subtracting two pointers to elements
239of the same array (6.5.6).}
240
241@end itemize
242
243@node Hints implementation
244@section Hints
245
246@itemize @bullet
247@item
248@cite{The extent to which suggestions made by using the @code{register}
249storage-class specifier are effective (6.7.1).}
250
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251The @code{register} specifier affects code generation only in these ways:
252
253@itemize @bullet
254@item
255When used as part of the register variable extension, see
256@ref{Explicit Reg Vars}.
257
258@item
259When @option{-O0} is in use, the compiler allocates distinct stack
260memory for all variables that do not have the @code{register}
261storage-class specifier; if @code{register} is specified, the variable
262may have a shorter lifespan than the code would indicate and may never
263be placed in memory.
264
265@item
266On some rare x86 targets, @code{setjmp} doesn't save the registers in
267all circumstances. In those cases, GCC doesn't allocate any variables
268in registers unless they are marked @code{register}.
269
270@end itemize
271
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272@item
273@cite{The extent to which suggestions made by using the inline function
274specifier are effective (6.7.4).}
275
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276GCC will not inline any functions if the @option{-fno-inline} option is
277used or if @option{-O0} is used. Otherwise, GCC may still be unable to
278inline a function for many reasons; the @option{-Winline} option may be
279used to determine if a function has not been inlined and why not.
280
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281@end itemize
282
283@node Structures unions enumerations and bit-fields implementation
284@section Structures, unions, enumerations, and bit-fields
285
286@itemize @bullet
287@item
288@cite{Whether a ``plain'' int bit-field is treated as a @code{signed int}
289bit-field or as an @code{unsigned int} bit-field (6.7.2, 6.7.2.1).}
290
291@item
292@cite{Allowable bit-field types other than @code{_Bool}, @code{signed int},
293and @code{unsigned int} (6.7.2.1).}
294
295@item
296@cite{Whether a bit-field can straddle a storage-unit boundary (6.7.2.1).}
297
298@item
299@cite{The order of allocation of bit-fields within a unit (6.7.2.1).}
300
301@item
302@cite{The alignment of non-bit-field members of structures (6.7.2.1).}
303
304@item
305@cite{The integer type compatible with each enumerated type (6.7.2.2).}
306
307@end itemize
308
309@node Qualifiers implementation
310@section Qualifiers
311
312@itemize @bullet
313@item
314@cite{What constitutes an access to an object that has volatile-qualified
315type (6.7.3).}
316
317@end itemize
318
319@node Preprocessing directives implementation
320@section Preprocessing directives
321
322@itemize @bullet
323@item
324@cite{How sequences in both forms of header names are mapped to headers
325or external source file names (6.4.7).}
326
327@item
328@cite{Whether the value of a character constant in a constant expression
329that controls conditional inclusion matches the value of the same character
330constant in the execution character set (6.10.1).}
331
332@item
333@cite{Whether the value of a single-character character constant in a
334constant expression that controls conditional inclusion may have a
335negative value (6.10.1).}
336
337@item
338@cite{The places that are searched for an included @samp{<>} delimited
339header, and how the places are specified or the header is
340identified (6.10.2).}
341
342@item
343@cite{How the named source file is searched for in an included @samp{""}
344delimited header (6.10.2).}
345
346@item
347@cite{The method by which preprocessing tokens (possibly resulting from
348macro expansion) in a @code{#include} directive are combined into a header
349name (6.10.2).}
350
351@item
352@cite{The nesting limit for @code{#include} processing (6.10.2).}
353
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354GCC imposes a limit of 200 nested @code{#include}s.
355
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356@item
357@cite{Whether the @samp{#} operator inserts a @samp{\} character before
358the @samp{\} character that begins a universal character name in a
359character constant or string literal (6.10.3.2).}
360
361@item
362@cite{The behavior on each recognized non-@code{STDC #pragma}
363directive (6.10.6).}
364
365@item
366@cite{The definitions for @code{__DATE__} and @code{__TIME__} when
367respectively, the date and time of translation are not available (6.10.8).}
368
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369If the date and time are not available, @code{__DATE__} expands to
370@code{@w{"??? ?? ????"}} and @code{__TIME__} expands to
371@code{"??:??:??"}.
cba57c9d 372
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373@end itemize
374
375@node Library functions implementation
376@section Library functions
377
0c688a7d 378The behavior of these points are dependent on the implementation
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379of the C library, and are not defined by GCC itself.
380
381@node Architecture implementation
382@section Architecture
383
384@itemize @bullet
385@item
386@cite{The values or expressions assigned to the macros specified in the
39ffd3cb 387headers @code{<float.h>}, @code{<limits.h>}, and @code{<stdint.h>}
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388(5.2.4.2, 7.18.2, 7.18.3).}
389
390@item
391@cite{The number, order, and encoding of bytes in any object
392(when not explicitly specified in this International Standard) (6.2.6.1).}
393
394@item
395@cite{The value of the result of the sizeof operator (6.5.3.4).}
396
397@end itemize
398
399@node Locale-specific behavior implementation
400@section Locale-specific behavior
401
0c688a7d 402The behavior of these points are dependent on the implementation
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403of the C library, and are not defined by GCC itself.
404
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405@node C Extensions
406@chapter Extensions to the C Language Family
407@cindex extensions, C language
408@cindex C language extensions
409
84330467 410@opindex pedantic
161d7b59 411GNU C provides several language features not found in ISO standard C@.
f0523f02 412(The @option{-pedantic} option directs GCC to print a warning message if
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413any of these features is used.) To test for the availability of these
414features in conditional compilation, check for a predefined macro
161d7b59 415@code{__GNUC__}, which is always defined under GCC@.
c1f7febf 416
161d7b59 417These extensions are available in C and Objective-C@. Most of them are
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418also available in C++. @xref{C++ Extensions,,Extensions to the
419C++ Language}, for extensions that apply @emph{only} to C++.
420
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421Some features that are in ISO C99 but not C89 or C++ are also, as
422extensions, accepted by GCC in C89 mode and in C++.
5490d604 423
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424@menu
425* Statement Exprs:: Putting statements and declarations inside expressions.
426* Local Labels:: Labels local to a statement-expression.
427* Labels as Values:: Getting pointers to labels, and computed gotos.
428* Nested Functions:: As in Algol and Pascal, lexical scoping of functions.
429* Constructing Calls:: Dispatching a call to another function.
430* Naming Types:: Giving a name to the type of some expression.
431* Typeof:: @code{typeof}: referring to the type of an expression.
432* Lvalues:: Using @samp{?:}, @samp{,} and casts in lvalues.
433* Conditionals:: Omitting the middle operand of a @samp{?:} expression.
434* Long Long:: Double-word integers---@code{long long int}.
435* Complex:: Data types for complex numbers.
6f4d7222 436* Hex Floats:: Hexadecimal floating-point constants.
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437* Zero Length:: Zero-length arrays.
438* Variable Length:: Arrays whose length is computed at run time.
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439* Variadic Macros:: Macros with a variable number of arguments.
440* Escaped Newlines:: Slightly looser rules for escaped newlines.
441* Multi-line Strings:: String literals with embedded newlines.
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442* Subscripting:: Any array can be subscripted, even if not an lvalue.
443* Pointer Arith:: Arithmetic on @code{void}-pointers and function pointers.
444* Initializers:: Non-constant initializers.
4b404517 445* Compound Literals:: Compound literals give structures, unions
c1f7febf 446 or arrays as values.
4b404517 447* Designated Inits:: Labeling elements of initializers.
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448* Cast to Union:: Casting to union type from any member of the union.
449* Case Ranges:: `case 1 ... 9' and such.
4b404517 450* Mixed Declarations:: Mixing declarations and code.
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451* Function Attributes:: Declaring that functions have no side effects,
452 or that they can never return.
2c5e91d2 453* Attribute Syntax:: Formal syntax for attributes.
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454* Function Prototypes:: Prototype declarations and old-style definitions.
455* C++ Comments:: C++ comments are recognized.
456* Dollar Signs:: Dollar sign is allowed in identifiers.
457* Character Escapes:: @samp{\e} stands for the character @key{ESC}.
458* Variable Attributes:: Specifying attributes of variables.
459* Type Attributes:: Specifying attributes of types.
460* Alignment:: Inquiring about the alignment of a type or variable.
461* Inline:: Defining inline functions (as fast as macros).
462* Extended Asm:: Assembler instructions with C expressions as operands.
463 (With them you can define ``built-in'' functions.)
464* Constraints:: Constraints for asm operands
465* Asm Labels:: Specifying the assembler name to use for a C symbol.
466* Explicit Reg Vars:: Defining variables residing in specified registers.
467* Alternate Keywords:: @code{__const__}, @code{__asm__}, etc., for header files.
468* Incomplete Enums:: @code{enum foo;}, with details to follow.
469* Function Names:: Printable strings which are the name of the current
470 function.
471* Return Address:: Getting the return or frame address of a function.
1255c85c 472* Vector Extensions:: Using vector instructions through built-in functions.
c5c76735 473* Other Builtins:: Other built-in functions.
0975678f 474* Target Builtins:: Built-in functions specific to particular targets.
0168a849 475* Pragmas:: Pragmas accepted by GCC.
b11cc610 476* Unnamed Fields:: Unnamed struct/union fields within structs/unions.
3d78f2e9 477* Thread-Local:: Per-thread variables.
c1f7febf 478@end menu
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479
480@node Statement Exprs
481@section Statements and Declarations in Expressions
482@cindex statements inside expressions
483@cindex declarations inside expressions
484@cindex expressions containing statements
485@cindex macros, statements in expressions
486
487@c the above section title wrapped and causes an underfull hbox.. i
488@c changed it from "within" to "in". --mew 4feb93
489
490A compound statement enclosed in parentheses may appear as an expression
161d7b59 491in GNU C@. This allows you to use loops, switches, and local variables
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492within an expression.
493
494Recall that a compound statement is a sequence of statements surrounded
495by braces; in this construct, parentheses go around the braces. For
496example:
497
498@example
499(@{ int y = foo (); int z;
500 if (y > 0) z = y;
501 else z = - y;
502 z; @})
503@end example
504
505@noindent
506is a valid (though slightly more complex than necessary) expression
507for the absolute value of @code{foo ()}.
508
509The last thing in the compound statement should be an expression
510followed by a semicolon; the value of this subexpression serves as the
511value of the entire construct. (If you use some other kind of statement
512last within the braces, the construct has type @code{void}, and thus
513effectively no value.)
514
515This feature is especially useful in making macro definitions ``safe'' (so
516that they evaluate each operand exactly once). For example, the
517``maximum'' function is commonly defined as a macro in standard C as
518follows:
519
520@example
521#define max(a,b) ((a) > (b) ? (a) : (b))
522@end example
523
524@noindent
525@cindex side effects, macro argument
526But this definition computes either @var{a} or @var{b} twice, with bad
527results if the operand has side effects. In GNU C, if you know the
528type of the operands (here let's assume @code{int}), you can define
529the macro safely as follows:
530
531@example
532#define maxint(a,b) \
533 (@{int _a = (a), _b = (b); _a > _b ? _a : _b; @})
534@end example
535
536Embedded statements are not allowed in constant expressions, such as
c771326b 537the value of an enumeration constant, the width of a bit-field, or
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538the initial value of a static variable.
539
540If you don't know the type of the operand, you can still do this, but you
541must use @code{typeof} (@pxref{Typeof}) or type naming (@pxref{Naming
542Types}).
543
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544Statement expressions are not supported fully in G++, and their fate
545there is unclear. (It is possible that they will become fully supported
546at some point, or that they will be deprecated, or that the bugs that
547are present will continue to exist indefinitely.) Presently, statement
02f52e19 548expressions do not work well as default arguments.
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549
550In addition, there are semantic issues with statement-expressions in
551C++. If you try to use statement-expressions instead of inline
552functions in C++, you may be surprised at the way object destruction is
553handled. For example:
554
555@example
556#define foo(a) (@{int b = (a); b + 3; @})
557@end example
558
559@noindent
560does not work the same way as:
561
562@example
54e1d3a6 563inline int foo(int a) @{ int b = a; return b + 3; @}
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564@end example
565
566@noindent
567In particular, if the expression passed into @code{foo} involves the
568creation of temporaries, the destructors for those temporaries will be
569run earlier in the case of the macro than in the case of the function.
570
571These considerations mean that it is probably a bad idea to use
572statement-expressions of this form in header files that are designed to
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573work with C++. (Note that some versions of the GNU C Library contained
574header files using statement-expression that lead to precisely this
575bug.)
b98e139b 576
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577@node Local Labels
578@section Locally Declared Labels
579@cindex local labels
580@cindex macros, local labels
581
582Each statement expression is a scope in which @dfn{local labels} can be
583declared. A local label is simply an identifier; you can jump to it
584with an ordinary @code{goto} statement, but only from within the
585statement expression it belongs to.
586
587A local label declaration looks like this:
588
589@example
590__label__ @var{label};
591@end example
592
593@noindent
594or
595
596@example
0d893a63 597__label__ @var{label1}, @var{label2}, /* @r{@dots{}} */;
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598@end example
599
600Local label declarations must come at the beginning of the statement
601expression, right after the @samp{(@{}, before any ordinary
602declarations.
603
604The label declaration defines the label @emph{name}, but does not define
605the label itself. You must do this in the usual way, with
606@code{@var{label}:}, within the statements of the statement expression.
607
608The local label feature is useful because statement expressions are
609often used in macros. If the macro contains nested loops, a @code{goto}
610can be useful for breaking out of them. However, an ordinary label
611whose scope is the whole function cannot be used: if the macro can be
612expanded several times in one function, the label will be multiply
613defined in that function. A local label avoids this problem. For
614example:
615
616@example
617#define SEARCH(array, target) \
310668e8 618(@{ \
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619 __label__ found; \
620 typeof (target) _SEARCH_target = (target); \
621 typeof (*(array)) *_SEARCH_array = (array); \
622 int i, j; \
623 int value; \
624 for (i = 0; i < max; i++) \
625 for (j = 0; j < max; j++) \
626 if (_SEARCH_array[i][j] == _SEARCH_target) \
310668e8 627 @{ value = i; goto found; @} \
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628 value = -1; \
629 found: \
630 value; \
631@})
632@end example
633
634@node Labels as Values
635@section Labels as Values
636@cindex labels as values
637@cindex computed gotos
638@cindex goto with computed label
639@cindex address of a label
640
641You can get the address of a label defined in the current function
642(or a containing function) with the unary operator @samp{&&}. The
643value has type @code{void *}. This value is a constant and can be used
644wherever a constant of that type is valid. For example:
645
646@example
647void *ptr;
0d893a63 648/* @r{@dots{}} */
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RK
649ptr = &&foo;
650@end example
651
652To use these values, you need to be able to jump to one. This is done
653with the computed goto statement@footnote{The analogous feature in
654Fortran is called an assigned goto, but that name seems inappropriate in
655C, where one can do more than simply store label addresses in label
656variables.}, @code{goto *@var{exp};}. For example,
657
658@example
659goto *ptr;
660@end example
661
662@noindent
663Any expression of type @code{void *} is allowed.
664
665One way of using these constants is in initializing a static array that
666will serve as a jump table:
667
668@example
669static void *array[] = @{ &&foo, &&bar, &&hack @};
670@end example
671
672Then you can select a label with indexing, like this:
673
674@example
675goto *array[i];
676@end example
677
678@noindent
679Note that this does not check whether the subscript is in bounds---array
680indexing in C never does that.
681
682Such an array of label values serves a purpose much like that of the
683@code{switch} statement. The @code{switch} statement is cleaner, so
684use that rather than an array unless the problem does not fit a
685@code{switch} statement very well.
686
687Another use of label values is in an interpreter for threaded code.
688The labels within the interpreter function can be stored in the
689threaded code for super-fast dispatching.
690
02f52e19 691You may not use this mechanism to jump to code in a different function.
47620e09 692If you do that, totally unpredictable things will happen. The best way to
c1f7febf
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693avoid this is to store the label address only in automatic variables and
694never pass it as an argument.
695
47620e09
RH
696An alternate way to write the above example is
697
698@example
310668e8
JM
699static const int array[] = @{ &&foo - &&foo, &&bar - &&foo,
700 &&hack - &&foo @};
47620e09
RH
701goto *(&&foo + array[i]);
702@end example
703
704@noindent
705This is more friendly to code living in shared libraries, as it reduces
706the number of dynamic relocations that are needed, and by consequence,
707allows the data to be read-only.
708
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709@node Nested Functions
710@section Nested Functions
711@cindex nested functions
712@cindex downward funargs
713@cindex thunks
714
715A @dfn{nested function} is a function defined inside another function.
716(Nested functions are not supported for GNU C++.) The nested function's
717name is local to the block where it is defined. For example, here we
718define a nested function named @code{square}, and call it twice:
719
720@example
721@group
722foo (double a, double b)
723@{
724 double square (double z) @{ return z * z; @}
725
726 return square (a) + square (b);
727@}
728@end group
729@end example
730
731The nested function can access all the variables of the containing
732function that are visible at the point of its definition. This is
733called @dfn{lexical scoping}. For example, here we show a nested
734function which uses an inherited variable named @code{offset}:
735
736@example
aee96fe9 737@group
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RK
738bar (int *array, int offset, int size)
739@{
740 int access (int *array, int index)
741 @{ return array[index + offset]; @}
742 int i;
0d893a63 743 /* @r{@dots{}} */
c1f7febf 744 for (i = 0; i < size; i++)
0d893a63 745 /* @r{@dots{}} */ access (array, i) /* @r{@dots{}} */
c1f7febf 746@}
aee96fe9 747@end group
c1f7febf
RK
748@end example
749
750Nested function definitions are permitted within functions in the places
751where variable definitions are allowed; that is, in any block, before
752the first statement in the block.
753
754It is possible to call the nested function from outside the scope of its
755name by storing its address or passing the address to another function:
756
757@example
758hack (int *array, int size)
759@{
760 void store (int index, int value)
761 @{ array[index] = value; @}
762
763 intermediate (store, size);
764@}
765@end example
766
767Here, the function @code{intermediate} receives the address of
768@code{store} as an argument. If @code{intermediate} calls @code{store},
769the arguments given to @code{store} are used to store into @code{array}.
770But this technique works only so long as the containing function
771(@code{hack}, in this example) does not exit.
772
773If you try to call the nested function through its address after the
774containing function has exited, all hell will break loose. If you try
775to call it after a containing scope level has exited, and if it refers
776to some of the variables that are no longer in scope, you may be lucky,
777but it's not wise to take the risk. If, however, the nested function
778does not refer to anything that has gone out of scope, you should be
779safe.
780
9c34dbbf
ZW
781GCC implements taking the address of a nested function using a technique
782called @dfn{trampolines}. A paper describing them is available as
783
784@noindent
785@uref{http://people.debian.org/~karlheg/Usenix88-lexic.pdf}.
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RK
786
787A nested function can jump to a label inherited from a containing
788function, provided the label was explicitly declared in the containing
789function (@pxref{Local Labels}). Such a jump returns instantly to the
790containing function, exiting the nested function which did the
791@code{goto} and any intermediate functions as well. Here is an example:
792
793@example
794@group
795bar (int *array, int offset, int size)
796@{
797 __label__ failure;
798 int access (int *array, int index)
799 @{
800 if (index > size)
801 goto failure;
802 return array[index + offset];
803 @}
804 int i;
0d893a63 805 /* @r{@dots{}} */
c1f7febf 806 for (i = 0; i < size; i++)
0d893a63
MK
807 /* @r{@dots{}} */ access (array, i) /* @r{@dots{}} */
808 /* @r{@dots{}} */
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RK
809 return 0;
810
811 /* @r{Control comes here from @code{access}
812 if it detects an error.} */
813 failure:
814 return -1;
815@}
816@end group
817@end example
818
819A nested function always has internal linkage. Declaring one with
820@code{extern} is erroneous. If you need to declare the nested function
821before its definition, use @code{auto} (which is otherwise meaningless
822for function declarations).
823
824@example
825bar (int *array, int offset, int size)
826@{
827 __label__ failure;
828 auto int access (int *, int);
0d893a63 829 /* @r{@dots{}} */
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RK
830 int access (int *array, int index)
831 @{
832 if (index > size)
833 goto failure;
834 return array[index + offset];
835 @}
0d893a63 836 /* @r{@dots{}} */
c1f7febf
RK
837@}
838@end example
839
840@node Constructing Calls
841@section Constructing Function Calls
842@cindex constructing calls
843@cindex forwarding calls
844
845Using the built-in functions described below, you can record
846the arguments a function received, and call another function
847with the same arguments, without knowing the number or types
848of the arguments.
849
850You can also record the return value of that function call,
851and later return that value, without knowing what data type
852the function tried to return (as long as your caller expects
853that data type).
854
84330467
JM
855@deftypefn {Built-in Function} {void *} __builtin_apply_args ()
856This built-in function returns a pointer to data
c1f7febf
RK
857describing how to perform a call with the same arguments as were passed
858to the current function.
859
860The function saves the arg pointer register, structure value address,
861and all registers that might be used to pass arguments to a function
862into a block of memory allocated on the stack. Then it returns the
863address of that block.
84330467 864@end deftypefn
c1f7febf 865
84330467
JM
866@deftypefn {Built-in Function} {void *} __builtin_apply (void (*@var{function})(), void *@var{arguments}, size_t @var{size})
867This built-in function invokes @var{function}
868with a copy of the parameters described by @var{arguments}
869and @var{size}.
c1f7febf
RK
870
871The value of @var{arguments} should be the value returned by
872@code{__builtin_apply_args}. The argument @var{size} specifies the size
873of the stack argument data, in bytes.
874
84330467 875This function returns a pointer to data describing
c1f7febf
RK
876how to return whatever value was returned by @var{function}. The data
877is saved in a block of memory allocated on the stack.
878
879It is not always simple to compute the proper value for @var{size}. The
880value is used by @code{__builtin_apply} to compute the amount of data
881that should be pushed on the stack and copied from the incoming argument
882area.
84330467 883@end deftypefn
c1f7febf 884
84330467 885@deftypefn {Built-in Function} {void} __builtin_return (void *@var{result})
c1f7febf
RK
886This built-in function returns the value described by @var{result} from
887the containing function. You should specify, for @var{result}, a value
888returned by @code{__builtin_apply}.
84330467 889@end deftypefn
c1f7febf
RK
890
891@node Naming Types
892@section Naming an Expression's Type
893@cindex naming types
894
895You can give a name to the type of an expression using a @code{typedef}
896declaration with an initializer. Here is how to define @var{name} as a
897type name for the type of @var{exp}:
898
899@example
900typedef @var{name} = @var{exp};
901@end example
902
903This is useful in conjunction with the statements-within-expressions
904feature. Here is how the two together can be used to define a safe
905``maximum'' macro that operates on any arithmetic type:
906
907@example
908#define max(a,b) \
909 (@{typedef _ta = (a), _tb = (b); \
910 _ta _a = (a); _tb _b = (b); \
911 _a > _b ? _a : _b; @})
912@end example
913
914@cindex underscores in variables in macros
915@cindex @samp{_} in variables in macros
916@cindex local variables in macros
917@cindex variables, local, in macros
918@cindex macros, local variables in
919
920The reason for using names that start with underscores for the local
921variables is to avoid conflicts with variable names that occur within the
922expressions that are substituted for @code{a} and @code{b}. Eventually we
923hope to design a new form of declaration syntax that allows you to declare
924variables whose scopes start only after their initializers; this will be a
925more reliable way to prevent such conflicts.
926
927@node Typeof
928@section Referring to a Type with @code{typeof}
929@findex typeof
930@findex sizeof
931@cindex macros, types of arguments
932
933Another way to refer to the type of an expression is with @code{typeof}.
934The syntax of using of this keyword looks like @code{sizeof}, but the
935construct acts semantically like a type name defined with @code{typedef}.
936
937There are two ways of writing the argument to @code{typeof}: with an
938expression or with a type. Here is an example with an expression:
939
940@example
941typeof (x[0](1))
942@end example
943
944@noindent
89aed483
JM
945This assumes that @code{x} is an array of pointers to functions;
946the type described is that of the values of the functions.
c1f7febf
RK
947
948Here is an example with a typename as the argument:
949
950@example
951typeof (int *)
952@end example
953
954@noindent
955Here the type described is that of pointers to @code{int}.
956
5490d604 957If you are writing a header file that must work when included in ISO C
c1f7febf
RK
958programs, write @code{__typeof__} instead of @code{typeof}.
959@xref{Alternate Keywords}.
960
961A @code{typeof}-construct can be used anywhere a typedef name could be
962used. For example, you can use it in a declaration, in a cast, or inside
963of @code{sizeof} or @code{typeof}.
964
965@itemize @bullet
966@item
967This declares @code{y} with the type of what @code{x} points to.
968
969@example
970typeof (*x) y;
971@end example
972
973@item
974This declares @code{y} as an array of such values.
975
976@example
977typeof (*x) y[4];
978@end example
979
980@item
981This declares @code{y} as an array of pointers to characters:
982
983@example
984typeof (typeof (char *)[4]) y;
985@end example
986
987@noindent
988It is equivalent to the following traditional C declaration:
989
990@example
991char *y[4];
992@end example
993
994To see the meaning of the declaration using @code{typeof}, and why it
995might be a useful way to write, let's rewrite it with these macros:
996
997@example
998#define pointer(T) typeof(T *)
999#define array(T, N) typeof(T [N])
1000@end example
1001
1002@noindent
1003Now the declaration can be rewritten this way:
1004
1005@example
1006array (pointer (char), 4) y;
1007@end example
1008
1009@noindent
1010Thus, @code{array (pointer (char), 4)} is the type of arrays of 4
1011pointers to @code{char}.
1012@end itemize
1013
1014@node Lvalues
1015@section Generalized Lvalues
1016@cindex compound expressions as lvalues
1017@cindex expressions, compound, as lvalues
1018@cindex conditional expressions as lvalues
1019@cindex expressions, conditional, as lvalues
1020@cindex casts as lvalues
1021@cindex generalized lvalues
1022@cindex lvalues, generalized
1023@cindex extensions, @code{?:}
1024@cindex @code{?:} extensions
1025Compound expressions, conditional expressions and casts are allowed as
1026lvalues provided their operands are lvalues. This means that you can take
1027their addresses or store values into them.
1028
1029Standard C++ allows compound expressions and conditional expressions as
1030lvalues, and permits casts to reference type, so use of this extension
1031is deprecated for C++ code.
1032
1033For example, a compound expression can be assigned, provided the last
1034expression in the sequence is an lvalue. These two expressions are
1035equivalent:
1036
1037@example
1038(a, b) += 5
1039a, (b += 5)
1040@end example
1041
1042Similarly, the address of the compound expression can be taken. These two
1043expressions are equivalent:
1044
1045@example
1046&(a, b)
1047a, &b
1048@end example
1049
1050A conditional expression is a valid lvalue if its type is not void and the
1051true and false branches are both valid lvalues. For example, these two
1052expressions are equivalent:
1053
1054@example
1055(a ? b : c) = 5
1056(a ? b = 5 : (c = 5))
1057@end example
1058
1059A cast is a valid lvalue if its operand is an lvalue. A simple
1060assignment whose left-hand side is a cast works by converting the
1061right-hand side first to the specified type, then to the type of the
1062inner left-hand side expression. After this is stored, the value is
1063converted back to the specified type to become the value of the
1064assignment. Thus, if @code{a} has type @code{char *}, the following two
1065expressions are equivalent:
1066
1067@example
1068(int)a = 5
1069(int)(a = (char *)(int)5)
1070@end example
1071
1072An assignment-with-arithmetic operation such as @samp{+=} applied to a cast
1073performs the arithmetic using the type resulting from the cast, and then
1074continues as in the previous case. Therefore, these two expressions are
1075equivalent:
1076
1077@example
1078(int)a += 5
1079(int)(a = (char *)(int) ((int)a + 5))
1080@end example
1081
1082You cannot take the address of an lvalue cast, because the use of its
1083address would not work out coherently. Suppose that @code{&(int)f} were
1084permitted, where @code{f} has type @code{float}. Then the following
1085statement would try to store an integer bit-pattern where a floating
1086point number belongs:
1087
1088@example
1089*&(int)f = 1;
1090@end example
1091
1092This is quite different from what @code{(int)f = 1} would do---that
1093would convert 1 to floating point and store it. Rather than cause this
1094inconsistency, we think it is better to prohibit use of @samp{&} on a cast.
1095
1096If you really do want an @code{int *} pointer with the address of
1097@code{f}, you can simply write @code{(int *)&f}.
1098
1099@node Conditionals
1100@section Conditionals with Omitted Operands
1101@cindex conditional expressions, extensions
1102@cindex omitted middle-operands
1103@cindex middle-operands, omitted
1104@cindex extensions, @code{?:}
1105@cindex @code{?:} extensions
1106
1107The middle operand in a conditional expression may be omitted. Then
1108if the first operand is nonzero, its value is the value of the conditional
1109expression.
1110
1111Therefore, the expression
1112
1113@example
1114x ? : y
1115@end example
1116
1117@noindent
1118has the value of @code{x} if that is nonzero; otherwise, the value of
1119@code{y}.
1120
1121This example is perfectly equivalent to
1122
1123@example
1124x ? x : y
1125@end example
1126
1127@cindex side effect in ?:
1128@cindex ?: side effect
1129@noindent
1130In this simple case, the ability to omit the middle operand is not
1131especially useful. When it becomes useful is when the first operand does,
1132or may (if it is a macro argument), contain a side effect. Then repeating
1133the operand in the middle would perform the side effect twice. Omitting
1134the middle operand uses the value already computed without the undesirable
1135effects of recomputing it.
1136
1137@node Long Long
1138@section Double-Word Integers
1139@cindex @code{long long} data types
1140@cindex double-word arithmetic
1141@cindex multiprecision arithmetic
4b404517
JM
1142@cindex @code{LL} integer suffix
1143@cindex @code{ULL} integer suffix
c1f7febf 1144
4b404517
JM
1145ISO C99 supports data types for integers that are at least 64 bits wide,
1146and as an extension GCC supports them in C89 mode and in C++.
1147Simply write @code{long long int} for a signed integer, or
c1f7febf 1148@code{unsigned long long int} for an unsigned integer. To make an
84330467 1149integer constant of type @code{long long int}, add the suffix @samp{LL}
c1f7febf 1150to the integer. To make an integer constant of type @code{unsigned long
84330467 1151long int}, add the suffix @samp{ULL} to the integer.
c1f7febf
RK
1152
1153You can use these types in arithmetic like any other integer types.
1154Addition, subtraction, and bitwise boolean operations on these types
1155are open-coded on all types of machines. Multiplication is open-coded
1156if the machine supports fullword-to-doubleword a widening multiply
1157instruction. Division and shifts are open-coded only on machines that
1158provide special support. The operations that are not open-coded use
161d7b59 1159special library routines that come with GCC@.
c1f7febf
RK
1160
1161There may be pitfalls when you use @code{long long} types for function
1162arguments, unless you declare function prototypes. If a function
1163expects type @code{int} for its argument, and you pass a value of type
1164@code{long long int}, confusion will result because the caller and the
1165subroutine will disagree about the number of bytes for the argument.
1166Likewise, if the function expects @code{long long int} and you pass
1167@code{int}. The best way to avoid such problems is to use prototypes.
1168
1169@node Complex
1170@section Complex Numbers
1171@cindex complex numbers
4b404517
JM
1172@cindex @code{_Complex} keyword
1173@cindex @code{__complex__} keyword
c1f7febf 1174
4b404517
JM
1175ISO C99 supports complex floating data types, and as an extension GCC
1176supports them in C89 mode and in C++, and supports complex integer data
1177types which are not part of ISO C99. You can declare complex types
1178using the keyword @code{_Complex}. As an extension, the older GNU
1179keyword @code{__complex__} is also supported.
c1f7febf 1180
4b404517 1181For example, @samp{_Complex double x;} declares @code{x} as a
c1f7febf 1182variable whose real part and imaginary part are both of type
4b404517 1183@code{double}. @samp{_Complex short int y;} declares @code{y} to
c1f7febf
RK
1184have real and imaginary parts of type @code{short int}; this is not
1185likely to be useful, but it shows that the set of complex types is
1186complete.
1187
1188To write a constant with a complex data type, use the suffix @samp{i} or
1189@samp{j} (either one; they are equivalent). For example, @code{2.5fi}
4b404517
JM
1190has type @code{_Complex float} and @code{3i} has type
1191@code{_Complex int}. Such a constant always has a pure imaginary
c1f7febf 1192value, but you can form any complex value you like by adding one to a
4b404517
JM
1193real constant. This is a GNU extension; if you have an ISO C99
1194conforming C library (such as GNU libc), and want to construct complex
1195constants of floating type, you should include @code{<complex.h>} and
1196use the macros @code{I} or @code{_Complex_I} instead.
c1f7febf 1197
4b404517
JM
1198@cindex @code{__real__} keyword
1199@cindex @code{__imag__} keyword
c1f7febf
RK
1200To extract the real part of a complex-valued expression @var{exp}, write
1201@code{__real__ @var{exp}}. Likewise, use @code{__imag__} to
4b404517
JM
1202extract the imaginary part. This is a GNU extension; for values of
1203floating type, you should use the ISO C99 functions @code{crealf},
1204@code{creal}, @code{creall}, @code{cimagf}, @code{cimag} and
1205@code{cimagl}, declared in @code{<complex.h>} and also provided as
161d7b59 1206built-in functions by GCC@.
c1f7febf 1207
4b404517 1208@cindex complex conjugation
c1f7febf 1209The operator @samp{~} performs complex conjugation when used on a value
4b404517
JM
1210with a complex type. This is a GNU extension; for values of
1211floating type, you should use the ISO C99 functions @code{conjf},
1212@code{conj} and @code{conjl}, declared in @code{<complex.h>} and also
161d7b59 1213provided as built-in functions by GCC@.
c1f7febf 1214
f0523f02 1215GCC can allocate complex automatic variables in a noncontiguous
c1f7febf
RK
1216fashion; it's even possible for the real part to be in a register while
1217the imaginary part is on the stack (or vice-versa). None of the
1218supported debugging info formats has a way to represent noncontiguous
f0523f02 1219allocation like this, so GCC describes a noncontiguous complex
c1f7febf
RK
1220variable as if it were two separate variables of noncomplex type.
1221If the variable's actual name is @code{foo}, the two fictitious
1222variables are named @code{foo$real} and @code{foo$imag}. You can
1223examine and set these two fictitious variables with your debugger.
1224
1225A future version of GDB will know how to recognize such pairs and treat
1226them as a single variable with a complex type.
1227
6f4d7222 1228@node Hex Floats
6b42b9ea
UD
1229@section Hex Floats
1230@cindex hex floats
c5c76735 1231
4b404517 1232ISO C99 supports floating-point numbers written not only in the usual
6f4d7222 1233decimal notation, such as @code{1.55e1}, but also numbers such as
4b404517
JM
1234@code{0x1.fp3} written in hexadecimal format. As a GNU extension, GCC
1235supports this in C89 mode (except in some cases when strictly
1236conforming) and in C++. In that format the
84330467 1237@samp{0x} hex introducer and the @samp{p} or @samp{P} exponent field are
6f4d7222 1238mandatory. The exponent is a decimal number that indicates the power of
84330467 12392 by which the significant part will be multiplied. Thus @samp{0x1.f} is
aee96fe9
JM
1240@tex
1241$1 {15\over16}$,
1242@end tex
1243@ifnottex
12441 15/16,
1245@end ifnottex
1246@samp{p3} multiplies it by 8, and the value of @code{0x1.fp3}
6f4d7222
UD
1247is the same as @code{1.55e1}.
1248
1249Unlike for floating-point numbers in the decimal notation the exponent
1250is always required in the hexadecimal notation. Otherwise the compiler
1251would not be able to resolve the ambiguity of, e.g., @code{0x1.f}. This
84330467 1252could mean @code{1.0f} or @code{1.9375} since @samp{f} is also the
6f4d7222
UD
1253extension for floating-point constants of type @code{float}.
1254
c1f7febf
RK
1255@node Zero Length
1256@section Arrays of Length Zero
1257@cindex arrays of length zero
1258@cindex zero-length arrays
1259@cindex length-zero arrays
ffc5c6a9 1260@cindex flexible array members
c1f7febf 1261
161d7b59 1262Zero-length arrays are allowed in GNU C@. They are very useful as the
584ef5fe 1263last element of a structure which is really a header for a variable-length
c1f7febf
RK
1264object:
1265
1266@example
1267struct line @{
1268 int length;
1269 char contents[0];
1270@};
1271
584ef5fe
RH
1272struct line *thisline = (struct line *)
1273 malloc (sizeof (struct line) + this_length);
1274thisline->length = this_length;
c1f7febf
RK
1275@end example
1276
3764f879 1277In ISO C90, you would have to give @code{contents} a length of 1, which
c1f7febf
RK
1278means either you waste space or complicate the argument to @code{malloc}.
1279
02f52e19 1280In ISO C99, you would use a @dfn{flexible array member}, which is
584ef5fe
RH
1281slightly different in syntax and semantics:
1282
1283@itemize @bullet
1284@item
1285Flexible array members are written as @code{contents[]} without
1286the @code{0}.
1287
1288@item
1289Flexible array members have incomplete type, and so the @code{sizeof}
1290operator may not be applied. As a quirk of the original implementation
1291of zero-length arrays, @code{sizeof} evaluates to zero.
1292
1293@item
1294Flexible array members may only appear as the last member of a
e7b6a0ee 1295@code{struct} that is otherwise non-empty.
2984fe64
JM
1296
1297@item
1298A structure containing a flexible array member, or a union containing
1299such a structure (possibly recursively), may not be a member of a
1300structure or an element of an array. (However, these uses are
1301permitted by GCC as extensions.)
ffc5c6a9 1302@end itemize
a25f1211 1303
ffc5c6a9 1304GCC versions before 3.0 allowed zero-length arrays to be statically
e7b6a0ee
DD
1305initialized, as if they were flexible arrays. In addition to those
1306cases that were useful, it also allowed initializations in situations
1307that would corrupt later data. Non-empty initialization of zero-length
1308arrays is now treated like any case where there are more initializer
1309elements than the array holds, in that a suitable warning about "excess
1310elements in array" is given, and the excess elements (all of them, in
1311this case) are ignored.
ffc5c6a9
RH
1312
1313Instead GCC allows static initialization of flexible array members.
1314This is equivalent to defining a new structure containing the original
1315structure followed by an array of sufficient size to contain the data.
e979f9e8 1316I.e.@: in the following, @code{f1} is constructed as if it were declared
ffc5c6a9 1317like @code{f2}.
a25f1211
RH
1318
1319@example
ffc5c6a9
RH
1320struct f1 @{
1321 int x; int y[];
1322@} f1 = @{ 1, @{ 2, 3, 4 @} @};
1323
1324struct f2 @{
1325 struct f1 f1; int data[3];
1326@} f2 = @{ @{ 1 @}, @{ 2, 3, 4 @} @};
1327@end example
584ef5fe 1328
ffc5c6a9
RH
1329@noindent
1330The convenience of this extension is that @code{f1} has the desired
1331type, eliminating the need to consistently refer to @code{f2.f1}.
1332
1333This has symmetry with normal static arrays, in that an array of
1334unknown size is also written with @code{[]}.
a25f1211 1335
ffc5c6a9
RH
1336Of course, this extension only makes sense if the extra data comes at
1337the end of a top-level object, as otherwise we would be overwriting
1338data at subsequent offsets. To avoid undue complication and confusion
1339with initialization of deeply nested arrays, we simply disallow any
1340non-empty initialization except when the structure is the top-level
1341object. For example:
584ef5fe 1342
ffc5c6a9
RH
1343@example
1344struct foo @{ int x; int y[]; @};
1345struct bar @{ struct foo z; @};
1346
13ba36b4
JM
1347struct foo a = @{ 1, @{ 2, 3, 4 @} @}; // @r{Valid.}
1348struct bar b = @{ @{ 1, @{ 2, 3, 4 @} @} @}; // @r{Invalid.}
1349struct bar c = @{ @{ 1, @{ @} @} @}; // @r{Valid.}
1350struct foo d[1] = @{ @{ 1 @{ 2, 3, 4 @} @} @}; // @r{Invalid.}
a25f1211 1351@end example
4b606faf 1352
c1f7febf
RK
1353@node Variable Length
1354@section Arrays of Variable Length
1355@cindex variable-length arrays
1356@cindex arrays of variable length
4b404517 1357@cindex VLAs
c1f7febf 1358
4b404517
JM
1359Variable-length automatic arrays are allowed in ISO C99, and as an
1360extension GCC accepts them in C89 mode and in C++. (However, GCC's
1361implementation of variable-length arrays does not yet conform in detail
1362to the ISO C99 standard.) These arrays are
c1f7febf
RK
1363declared like any other automatic arrays, but with a length that is not
1364a constant expression. The storage is allocated at the point of
1365declaration and deallocated when the brace-level is exited. For
1366example:
1367
1368@example
1369FILE *
1370concat_fopen (char *s1, char *s2, char *mode)
1371@{
1372 char str[strlen (s1) + strlen (s2) + 1];
1373 strcpy (str, s1);
1374 strcat (str, s2);
1375 return fopen (str, mode);
1376@}
1377@end example
1378
1379@cindex scope of a variable length array
1380@cindex variable-length array scope
1381@cindex deallocating variable length arrays
1382Jumping or breaking out of the scope of the array name deallocates the
1383storage. Jumping into the scope is not allowed; you get an error
1384message for it.
1385
1386@cindex @code{alloca} vs variable-length arrays
1387You can use the function @code{alloca} to get an effect much like
1388variable-length arrays. The function @code{alloca} is available in
1389many other C implementations (but not in all). On the other hand,
1390variable-length arrays are more elegant.
1391
1392There are other differences between these two methods. Space allocated
1393with @code{alloca} exists until the containing @emph{function} returns.
1394The space for a variable-length array is deallocated as soon as the array
1395name's scope ends. (If you use both variable-length arrays and
1396@code{alloca} in the same function, deallocation of a variable-length array
1397will also deallocate anything more recently allocated with @code{alloca}.)
1398
1399You can also use variable-length arrays as arguments to functions:
1400
1401@example
1402struct entry
1403tester (int len, char data[len][len])
1404@{
0d893a63 1405 /* @r{@dots{}} */
c1f7febf
RK
1406@}
1407@end example
1408
1409The length of an array is computed once when the storage is allocated
1410and is remembered for the scope of the array in case you access it with
1411@code{sizeof}.
1412
1413If you want to pass the array first and the length afterward, you can
1414use a forward declaration in the parameter list---another GNU extension.
1415
1416@example
1417struct entry
1418tester (int len; char data[len][len], int len)
1419@{
0d893a63 1420 /* @r{@dots{}} */
c1f7febf
RK
1421@}
1422@end example
1423
1424@cindex parameter forward declaration
1425The @samp{int len} before the semicolon is a @dfn{parameter forward
1426declaration}, and it serves the purpose of making the name @code{len}
1427known when the declaration of @code{data} is parsed.
1428
1429You can write any number of such parameter forward declarations in the
1430parameter list. They can be separated by commas or semicolons, but the
1431last one must end with a semicolon, which is followed by the ``real''
1432parameter declarations. Each forward declaration must match a ``real''
4b404517
JM
1433declaration in parameter name and data type. ISO C99 does not support
1434parameter forward declarations.
c1f7febf 1435
ccd96f0a
NB
1436@node Variadic Macros
1437@section Macros with a Variable Number of Arguments.
c1f7febf
RK
1438@cindex variable number of arguments
1439@cindex macro with variable arguments
1440@cindex rest argument (in macro)
ccd96f0a 1441@cindex variadic macros
c1f7febf 1442
ccd96f0a
NB
1443In the ISO C standard of 1999, a macro can be declared to accept a
1444variable number of arguments much as a function can. The syntax for
1445defining the macro is similar to that of a function. Here is an
1446example:
c1f7febf 1447
478c9e72 1448@smallexample
ccd96f0a 1449#define debug(format, ...) fprintf (stderr, format, __VA_ARGS__)
478c9e72 1450@end smallexample
c1f7febf 1451
ccd96f0a
NB
1452Here @samp{@dots{}} is a @dfn{variable argument}. In the invocation of
1453such a macro, it represents the zero or more tokens until the closing
1454parenthesis that ends the invocation, including any commas. This set of
1455tokens replaces the identifier @code{__VA_ARGS__} in the macro body
1456wherever it appears. See the CPP manual for more information.
1457
1458GCC has long supported variadic macros, and used a different syntax that
1459allowed you to give a name to the variable arguments just like any other
1460argument. Here is an example:
c1f7febf
RK
1461
1462@example
ccd96f0a 1463#define debug(format, args...) fprintf (stderr, format, args)
c1f7febf
RK
1464@end example
1465
ccd96f0a
NB
1466This is in all ways equivalent to the ISO C example above, but arguably
1467more readable and descriptive.
c1f7febf 1468
ccd96f0a
NB
1469GNU CPP has two further variadic macro extensions, and permits them to
1470be used with either of the above forms of macro definition.
1471
1472In standard C, you are not allowed to leave the variable argument out
1473entirely; but you are allowed to pass an empty argument. For example,
1474this invocation is invalid in ISO C, because there is no comma after
1475the string:
c1f7febf
RK
1476
1477@example
ccd96f0a 1478debug ("A message")
c1f7febf
RK
1479@end example
1480
ccd96f0a
NB
1481GNU CPP permits you to completely omit the variable arguments in this
1482way. In the above examples, the compiler would complain, though since
1483the expansion of the macro still has the extra comma after the format
1484string.
1485
1486To help solve this problem, CPP behaves specially for variable arguments
1487used with the token paste operator, @samp{##}. If instead you write
c1f7febf 1488
478c9e72 1489@smallexample
ccd96f0a 1490#define debug(format, ...) fprintf (stderr, format, ## __VA_ARGS__)
478c9e72 1491@end smallexample
c1f7febf 1492
ccd96f0a
NB
1493and if the variable arguments are omitted or empty, the @samp{##}
1494operator causes the preprocessor to remove the comma before it. If you
1495do provide some variable arguments in your macro invocation, GNU CPP
1496does not complain about the paste operation and instead places the
1497variable arguments after the comma. Just like any other pasted macro
1498argument, these arguments are not macro expanded.
1499
1500@node Escaped Newlines
1501@section Slightly Looser Rules for Escaped Newlines
1502@cindex escaped newlines
1503@cindex newlines (escaped)
1504
f458d1d5
ZW
1505Recently, the preprocessor has relaxed its treatment of escaped
1506newlines. Previously, the newline had to immediately follow a
ccd96f0a
NB
1507backslash. The current implementation allows whitespace in the form of
1508spaces, horizontal and vertical tabs, and form feeds between the
1509backslash and the subsequent newline. The preprocessor issues a
1510warning, but treats it as a valid escaped newline and combines the two
1511lines to form a single logical line. This works within comments and
1512tokens, including multi-line strings, as well as between tokens.
1513Comments are @emph{not} treated as whitespace for the purposes of this
1514relaxation, since they have not yet been replaced with spaces.
1515
1516@node Multi-line Strings
1517@section String Literals with Embedded Newlines
1518@cindex multi-line string literals
1519
1520As an extension, GNU CPP permits string literals to cross multiple lines
1521without escaping the embedded newlines. Each embedded newline is
1522replaced with a single @samp{\n} character in the resulting string
1523literal, regardless of what form the newline took originally.
1524
1525CPP currently allows such strings in directives as well (other than the
1526@samp{#include} family). This is deprecated and will eventually be
1527removed.
c1f7febf
RK
1528
1529@node Subscripting
1530@section Non-Lvalue Arrays May Have Subscripts
1531@cindex subscripting
1532@cindex arrays, non-lvalue
1533
1534@cindex subscripting and function values
207bf485
JM
1535In ISO C99, arrays that are not lvalues still decay to pointers, and
1536may be subscripted, although they may not be modified or used after
1537the next sequence point and the unary @samp{&} operator may not be
1538applied to them. As an extension, GCC allows such arrays to be
1539subscripted in C89 mode, though otherwise they do not decay to
1540pointers outside C99 mode. For example,
4b404517 1541this is valid in GNU C though not valid in C89:
c1f7febf
RK
1542
1543@example
1544@group
1545struct foo @{int a[4];@};
1546
1547struct foo f();
1548
1549bar (int index)
1550@{
1551 return f().a[index];
1552@}
1553@end group
1554@end example
1555
1556@node Pointer Arith
1557@section Arithmetic on @code{void}- and Function-Pointers
1558@cindex void pointers, arithmetic
1559@cindex void, size of pointer to
1560@cindex function pointers, arithmetic
1561@cindex function, size of pointer to
1562
1563In GNU C, addition and subtraction operations are supported on pointers to
1564@code{void} and on pointers to functions. This is done by treating the
1565size of a @code{void} or of a function as 1.
1566
1567A consequence of this is that @code{sizeof} is also allowed on @code{void}
1568and on function types, and returns 1.
1569
84330467
JM
1570@opindex Wpointer-arith
1571The option @option{-Wpointer-arith} requests a warning if these extensions
c1f7febf
RK
1572are used.
1573
1574@node Initializers
1575@section Non-Constant Initializers
1576@cindex initializers, non-constant
1577@cindex non-constant initializers
1578
4b404517 1579As in standard C++ and ISO C99, the elements of an aggregate initializer for an
161d7b59 1580automatic variable are not required to be constant expressions in GNU C@.
c1f7febf
RK
1581Here is an example of an initializer with run-time varying elements:
1582
1583@example
1584foo (float f, float g)
1585@{
1586 float beat_freqs[2] = @{ f-g, f+g @};
0d893a63 1587 /* @r{@dots{}} */
c1f7febf
RK
1588@}
1589@end example
1590
4b404517
JM
1591@node Compound Literals
1592@section Compound Literals
c1f7febf
RK
1593@cindex constructor expressions
1594@cindex initializations in expressions
1595@cindex structures, constructor expression
1596@cindex expressions, constructor
4b404517
JM
1597@cindex compound literals
1598@c The GNU C name for what C99 calls compound literals was "constructor expressions".
c1f7febf 1599
4b404517 1600ISO C99 supports compound literals. A compound literal looks like
c1f7febf
RK
1601a cast containing an initializer. Its value is an object of the
1602type specified in the cast, containing the elements specified in
db3acfa5
JM
1603the initializer; it is an lvalue. As an extension, GCC supports
1604compound literals in C89 mode and in C++.
c1f7febf
RK
1605
1606Usually, the specified type is a structure. Assume that
1607@code{struct foo} and @code{structure} are declared as shown:
1608
1609@example
1610struct foo @{int a; char b[2];@} structure;
1611@end example
1612
1613@noindent
4b404517 1614Here is an example of constructing a @code{struct foo} with a compound literal:
c1f7febf
RK
1615
1616@example
1617structure = ((struct foo) @{x + y, 'a', 0@});
1618@end example
1619
1620@noindent
1621This is equivalent to writing the following:
1622
1623@example
1624@{
1625 struct foo temp = @{x + y, 'a', 0@};
1626 structure = temp;
1627@}
1628@end example
1629
4b404517 1630You can also construct an array. If all the elements of the compound literal
c1f7febf 1631are (made up of) simple constant expressions, suitable for use in
db3acfa5
JM
1632initializers of objects of static storage duration, then the compound
1633literal can be coerced to a pointer to its first element and used in
1634such an initializer, as shown here:
c1f7febf
RK
1635
1636@example
1637char **foo = (char *[]) @{ "x", "y", "z" @};
1638@end example
1639
4b404517
JM
1640Compound literals for scalar types and union types are is
1641also allowed, but then the compound literal is equivalent
c1f7febf
RK
1642to a cast.
1643
59c83dbf
JJ
1644As a GNU extension, GCC allows initialization of objects with static storage
1645duration by compound literals (which is not possible in ISO C99, because
1646the initializer is not a constant).
1647It is handled as if the object was initialized only with the bracket
1648enclosed list if compound literal's and object types match.
1649The initializer list of the compound literal must be constant.
1650If the object being initialized has array type of unknown size, the size is
ad47f1e5 1651determined by compound literal size.
59c83dbf
JJ
1652
1653@example
1654static struct foo x = (struct foo) @{1, 'a', 'b'@};
1655static int y[] = (int []) @{1, 2, 3@};
1656static int z[] = (int [3]) @{1@};
1657@end example
1658
1659@noindent
1660The above lines are equivalent to the following:
1661@example
1662static struct foo x = @{1, 'a', 'b'@};
1663static int y[] = @{1, 2, 3@};
ad47f1e5 1664static int z[] = @{1, 0, 0@};
59c83dbf
JJ
1665@end example
1666
4b404517
JM
1667@node Designated Inits
1668@section Designated Initializers
c1f7febf
RK
1669@cindex initializers with labeled elements
1670@cindex labeled elements in initializers
1671@cindex case labels in initializers
4b404517 1672@cindex designated initializers
c1f7febf 1673
26d4fec7 1674Standard C89 requires the elements of an initializer to appear in a fixed
c1f7febf
RK
1675order, the same as the order of the elements in the array or structure
1676being initialized.
1677
26d4fec7
JM
1678In ISO C99 you can give the elements in any order, specifying the array
1679indices or structure field names they apply to, and GNU C allows this as
1680an extension in C89 mode as well. This extension is not
c1f7febf
RK
1681implemented in GNU C++.
1682
26d4fec7 1683To specify an array index, write
c1f7febf
RK
1684@samp{[@var{index}] =} before the element value. For example,
1685
1686@example
26d4fec7 1687int a[6] = @{ [4] = 29, [2] = 15 @};
c1f7febf
RK
1688@end example
1689
1690@noindent
1691is equivalent to
1692
1693@example
1694int a[6] = @{ 0, 0, 15, 0, 29, 0 @};
1695@end example
1696
1697@noindent
1698The index values must be constant expressions, even if the array being
1699initialized is automatic.
1700
26d4fec7
JM
1701An alternative syntax for this which has been obsolete since GCC 2.5 but
1702GCC still accepts is to write @samp{[@var{index}]} before the element
1703value, with no @samp{=}.
1704
c1f7febf 1705To initialize a range of elements to the same value, write
26d4fec7
JM
1706@samp{[@var{first} ... @var{last}] = @var{value}}. This is a GNU
1707extension. For example,
c1f7febf
RK
1708
1709@example
1710int widths[] = @{ [0 ... 9] = 1, [10 ... 99] = 2, [100] = 3 @};
1711@end example
1712
8b6a5902
JJ
1713@noindent
1714If the value in it has side-effects, the side-effects will happen only once,
1715not for each initialized field by the range initializer.
1716
c1f7febf
RK
1717@noindent
1718Note that the length of the array is the highest value specified
1719plus one.
1720
1721In a structure initializer, specify the name of a field to initialize
26d4fec7 1722with @samp{.@var{fieldname} =} before the element value. For example,
c1f7febf
RK
1723given the following structure,
1724
1725@example
1726struct point @{ int x, y; @};
1727@end example
1728
1729@noindent
1730the following initialization
1731
1732@example
26d4fec7 1733struct point p = @{ .y = yvalue, .x = xvalue @};
c1f7febf
RK
1734@end example
1735
1736@noindent
1737is equivalent to
1738
1739@example
1740struct point p = @{ xvalue, yvalue @};
1741@end example
1742
26d4fec7
JM
1743Another syntax which has the same meaning, obsolete since GCC 2.5, is
1744@samp{@var{fieldname}:}, as shown here:
c1f7febf
RK
1745
1746@example
26d4fec7 1747struct point p = @{ y: yvalue, x: xvalue @};
c1f7febf
RK
1748@end example
1749
4b404517
JM
1750@cindex designators
1751The @samp{[@var{index}]} or @samp{.@var{fieldname}} is known as a
1752@dfn{designator}. You can also use a designator (or the obsolete colon
1753syntax) when initializing a union, to specify which element of the union
1754should be used. For example,
c1f7febf
RK
1755
1756@example
1757union foo @{ int i; double d; @};
1758
26d4fec7 1759union foo f = @{ .d = 4 @};
c1f7febf
RK
1760@end example
1761
1762@noindent
1763will convert 4 to a @code{double} to store it in the union using
1764the second element. By contrast, casting 4 to type @code{union foo}
1765would store it into the union as the integer @code{i}, since it is
1766an integer. (@xref{Cast to Union}.)
1767
1768You can combine this technique of naming elements with ordinary C
1769initialization of successive elements. Each initializer element that
4b404517 1770does not have a designator applies to the next consecutive element of the
c1f7febf
RK
1771array or structure. For example,
1772
1773@example
1774int a[6] = @{ [1] = v1, v2, [4] = v4 @};
1775@end example
1776
1777@noindent
1778is equivalent to
1779
1780@example
1781int a[6] = @{ 0, v1, v2, 0, v4, 0 @};
1782@end example
1783
1784Labeling the elements of an array initializer is especially useful
1785when the indices are characters or belong to an @code{enum} type.
1786For example:
1787
1788@example
1789int whitespace[256]
1790 = @{ [' '] = 1, ['\t'] = 1, ['\h'] = 1,
1791 ['\f'] = 1, ['\n'] = 1, ['\r'] = 1 @};
1792@end example
1793
4b404517 1794@cindex designator lists
26d4fec7 1795You can also write a series of @samp{.@var{fieldname}} and
4b404517 1796@samp{[@var{index}]} designators before an @samp{=} to specify a
26d4fec7
JM
1797nested subobject to initialize; the list is taken relative to the
1798subobject corresponding to the closest surrounding brace pair. For
1799example, with the @samp{struct point} declaration above:
1800
478c9e72 1801@smallexample
26d4fec7 1802struct point ptarray[10] = @{ [2].y = yv2, [2].x = xv2, [0].x = xv0 @};
478c9e72 1803@end smallexample
26d4fec7 1804
8b6a5902
JJ
1805@noindent
1806If the same field is initialized multiple times, it will have value from
1807the last initialization. If any such overridden initialization has
1808side-effect, it is unspecified whether the side-effect happens or not.
1809Currently, gcc will discard them and issue a warning.
1810
c1f7febf
RK
1811@node Case Ranges
1812@section Case Ranges
1813@cindex case ranges
1814@cindex ranges in case statements
1815
1816You can specify a range of consecutive values in a single @code{case} label,
1817like this:
1818
1819@example
1820case @var{low} ... @var{high}:
1821@end example
1822
1823@noindent
1824This has the same effect as the proper number of individual @code{case}
1825labels, one for each integer value from @var{low} to @var{high}, inclusive.
1826
1827This feature is especially useful for ranges of ASCII character codes:
1828
1829@example
1830case 'A' ... 'Z':
1831@end example
1832
1833@strong{Be careful:} Write spaces around the @code{...}, for otherwise
1834it may be parsed wrong when you use it with integer values. For example,
1835write this:
1836
1837@example
1838case 1 ... 5:
1839@end example
1840
1841@noindent
1842rather than this:
1843
1844@example
1845case 1...5:
1846@end example
1847
1848@node Cast to Union
1849@section Cast to a Union Type
1850@cindex cast to a union
1851@cindex union, casting to a
1852
1853A cast to union type is similar to other casts, except that the type
1854specified is a union type. You can specify the type either with
1855@code{union @var{tag}} or with a typedef name. A cast to union is actually
1856a constructor though, not a cast, and hence does not yield an lvalue like
4b404517 1857normal casts. (@xref{Compound Literals}.)
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RK
1858
1859The types that may be cast to the union type are those of the members
1860of the union. Thus, given the following union and variables:
1861
1862@example
1863union foo @{ int i; double d; @};
1864int x;
1865double y;
1866@end example
1867
1868@noindent
aee96fe9 1869both @code{x} and @code{y} can be cast to type @code{union foo}.
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RK
1870
1871Using the cast as the right-hand side of an assignment to a variable of
1872union type is equivalent to storing in a member of the union:
1873
1874@example
1875union foo u;
0d893a63 1876/* @r{@dots{}} */
c1f7febf
RK
1877u = (union foo) x @equiv{} u.i = x
1878u = (union foo) y @equiv{} u.d = y
1879@end example
1880
1881You can also use the union cast as a function argument:
1882
1883@example
1884void hack (union foo);
0d893a63 1885/* @r{@dots{}} */
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RK
1886hack ((union foo) x);
1887@end example
1888
4b404517
JM
1889@node Mixed Declarations
1890@section Mixed Declarations and Code
1891@cindex mixed declarations and code
1892@cindex declarations, mixed with code
1893@cindex code, mixed with declarations
1894
1895ISO C99 and ISO C++ allow declarations and code to be freely mixed
1896within compound statements. As an extension, GCC also allows this in
1897C89 mode. For example, you could do:
1898
1899@example
1900int i;
0d893a63 1901/* @r{@dots{}} */
4b404517
JM
1902i++;
1903int j = i + 2;
1904@end example
1905
1906Each identifier is visible from where it is declared until the end of
1907the enclosing block.
1908
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RK
1909@node Function Attributes
1910@section Declaring Attributes of Functions
1911@cindex function attributes
1912@cindex declaring attributes of functions
1913@cindex functions that never return
1914@cindex functions that have no side effects
1915@cindex functions in arbitrary sections
2a59078d 1916@cindex functions that behave like malloc
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RK
1917@cindex @code{volatile} applied to function
1918@cindex @code{const} applied to function
26f6672d 1919@cindex functions with @code{printf}, @code{scanf}, @code{strftime} or @code{strfmon} style arguments
b34c7881 1920@cindex functions with non-null pointer arguments
c1f7febf
RK
1921@cindex functions that are passed arguments in registers on the 386
1922@cindex functions that pop the argument stack on the 386
1923@cindex functions that do not pop the argument stack on the 386
1924
1925In GNU C, you declare certain things about functions called in your program
1926which help the compiler optimize function calls and check your code more
1927carefully.
1928
1929The keyword @code{__attribute__} allows you to specify special
1930attributes when making a declaration. This keyword is followed by an
9162542e 1931attribute specification inside double parentheses. The following
eacecf96 1932attributes are currently defined for functions on all targets:
6aa77e6c 1933@code{noreturn}, @code{noinline}, @code{always_inline},
39f2f3c8 1934@code{pure}, @code{const}, @code{nothrow},
9162542e
AO
1935@code{format}, @code{format_arg}, @code{no_instrument_function},
1936@code{section}, @code{constructor}, @code{destructor}, @code{used},
b34c7881
JT
1937@code{unused}, @code{deprecated}, @code{weak}, @code{malloc},
1938@code{alias}, and @code{nonnull}. Several other attributes are defined
1939for functions on particular target systems. Other attributes, including
1940@code{section} are supported for variables declarations
1941(@pxref{Variable Attributes}) and for types (@pxref{Type Attributes}).
c1f7febf
RK
1942
1943You may also specify attributes with @samp{__} preceding and following
1944each keyword. This allows you to use them in header files without
1945being concerned about a possible macro of the same name. For example,
1946you may use @code{__noreturn__} instead of @code{noreturn}.
1947
2c5e91d2
JM
1948@xref{Attribute Syntax}, for details of the exact syntax for using
1949attributes.
1950
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RK
1951@table @code
1952@cindex @code{noreturn} function attribute
1953@item noreturn
1954A few standard library functions, such as @code{abort} and @code{exit},
f0523f02 1955cannot return. GCC knows this automatically. Some programs define
c1f7febf
RK
1956their own functions that never return. You can declare them
1957@code{noreturn} to tell the compiler this fact. For example,
1958
1959@smallexample
aee96fe9 1960@group
c1f7febf
RK
1961void fatal () __attribute__ ((noreturn));
1962
1963void
0d893a63 1964fatal (/* @r{@dots{}} */)
c1f7febf 1965@{
0d893a63 1966 /* @r{@dots{}} */ /* @r{Print error message.} */ /* @r{@dots{}} */
c1f7febf
RK
1967 exit (1);
1968@}
aee96fe9 1969@end group
c1f7febf
RK
1970@end smallexample
1971
1972The @code{noreturn} keyword tells the compiler to assume that
1973@code{fatal} cannot return. It can then optimize without regard to what
1974would happen if @code{fatal} ever did return. This makes slightly
1975better code. More importantly, it helps avoid spurious warnings of
1976uninitialized variables.
1977
1978Do not assume that registers saved by the calling function are
1979restored before calling the @code{noreturn} function.
1980
1981It does not make sense for a @code{noreturn} function to have a return
1982type other than @code{void}.
1983
f0523f02 1984The attribute @code{noreturn} is not implemented in GCC versions
c1f7febf
RK
1985earlier than 2.5. An alternative way to declare that a function does
1986not return, which works in the current version and in some older
1987versions, is as follows:
1988
1989@smallexample
1990typedef void voidfn ();
1991
1992volatile voidfn fatal;
1993@end smallexample
1994
9162542e
AO
1995@cindex @code{noinline} function attribute
1996@item noinline
1997This function attribute prevents a function from being considered for
1998inlining.
1999
6aa77e6c
AH
2000@cindex @code{always_inline} function attribute
2001@item always_inline
2002Generally, functions are not inlined unless optimization is specified.
2003For functions declared inline, this attribute inlines the function even
2004if no optimization level was specified.
2005
2a8f6b90
JH
2006@cindex @code{pure} function attribute
2007@item pure
2008Many functions have no effects except the return value and their
d4047e24 2009return value depends only on the parameters and/or global variables.
2a8f6b90 2010Such a function can be subject
c1f7febf
RK
2011to common subexpression elimination and loop optimization just as an
2012arithmetic operator would be. These functions should be declared
2a8f6b90 2013with the attribute @code{pure}. For example,
c1f7febf
RK
2014
2015@smallexample
2a8f6b90 2016int square (int) __attribute__ ((pure));
c1f7febf
RK
2017@end smallexample
2018
2019@noindent
2020says that the hypothetical function @code{square} is safe to call
2021fewer times than the program says.
2022
2a8f6b90
JH
2023Some of common examples of pure functions are @code{strlen} or @code{memcmp}.
2024Interesting non-pure functions are functions with infinite loops or those
2025depending on volatile memory or other system resource, that may change between
2a59078d 2026two consecutive calls (such as @code{feof} in a multithreading environment).
2a8f6b90 2027
f0523f02 2028The attribute @code{pure} is not implemented in GCC versions earlier
2a8f6b90
JH
2029than 2.96.
2030@cindex @code{const} function attribute
2031@item const
2032Many functions do not examine any values except their arguments, and
2033have no effects except the return value. Basically this is just slightly
84330467 2034more strict class than the @code{pure} attribute above, since function is not
2a59078d 2035allowed to read global memory.
2a8f6b90
JH
2036
2037@cindex pointer arguments
2038Note that a function that has pointer arguments and examines the data
2039pointed to must @emph{not} be declared @code{const}. Likewise, a
2040function that calls a non-@code{const} function usually must not be
2041@code{const}. It does not make sense for a @code{const} function to
2042return @code{void}.
2043
f0523f02 2044The attribute @code{const} is not implemented in GCC versions earlier
c1f7febf
RK
2045than 2.5. An alternative way to declare that a function has no side
2046effects, which works in the current version and in some older versions,
2047is as follows:
2048
2049@smallexample
2050typedef int intfn ();
2051
2052extern const intfn square;
2053@end smallexample
2054
2055This approach does not work in GNU C++ from 2.6.0 on, since the language
2056specifies that the @samp{const} must be attached to the return value.
2057
39f2f3c8
RS
2058@cindex @code{nothrow} function attribute
2059@item nothrow
2060The @code{nothrow} attribute is used to inform the compiler that a
2061function cannot throw an exception. For example, most functions in
2062the standard C library can be guaranteed not to throw an exception
2063with the notable exceptions of @code{qsort} and @code{bsearch} that
2064take function pointer arguments. The @code{nothrow} attribute is not
2065implemented in GCC versions earlier than 3.2.
c1f7febf
RK
2066
2067@item format (@var{archetype}, @var{string-index}, @var{first-to-check})
2068@cindex @code{format} function attribute
84330467 2069@opindex Wformat
bb72a084 2070The @code{format} attribute specifies that a function takes @code{printf},
26f6672d
JM
2071@code{scanf}, @code{strftime} or @code{strfmon} style arguments which
2072should be type-checked against a format string. For example, the
2073declaration:
c1f7febf
RK
2074
2075@smallexample
2076extern int
2077my_printf (void *my_object, const char *my_format, ...)
2078 __attribute__ ((format (printf, 2, 3)));
2079@end smallexample
2080
2081@noindent
2082causes the compiler to check the arguments in calls to @code{my_printf}
2083for consistency with the @code{printf} style format string argument
2084@code{my_format}.
2085
2086The parameter @var{archetype} determines how the format string is
26f6672d
JM
2087interpreted, and should be @code{printf}, @code{scanf}, @code{strftime}
2088or @code{strfmon}. (You can also use @code{__printf__},
2089@code{__scanf__}, @code{__strftime__} or @code{__strfmon__}.) The
c1f7febf
RK
2090parameter @var{string-index} specifies which argument is the format
2091string argument (starting from 1), while @var{first-to-check} is the
2092number of the first argument to check against the format string. For
2093functions where the arguments are not available to be checked (such as
2094@code{vprintf}), specify the third parameter as zero. In this case the
b722c82c
JM
2095compiler only checks the format string for consistency. For
2096@code{strftime} formats, the third parameter is required to be zero.
c1f7febf
RK
2097
2098In the example above, the format string (@code{my_format}) is the second
2099argument of the function @code{my_print}, and the arguments to check
2100start with the third argument, so the correct parameters for the format
2101attribute are 2 and 3.
2102
84330467 2103@opindex ffreestanding
c1f7febf 2104The @code{format} attribute allows you to identify your own functions
f0523f02 2105which take format strings as arguments, so that GCC can check the
b722c82c 2106calls to these functions for errors. The compiler always (unless
84330467 2107@option{-ffreestanding} is used) checks formats
b722c82c 2108for the standard library functions @code{printf}, @code{fprintf},
bb72a084 2109@code{sprintf}, @code{scanf}, @code{fscanf}, @code{sscanf}, @code{strftime},
c1f7febf 2110@code{vprintf}, @code{vfprintf} and @code{vsprintf} whenever such
84330467 2111warnings are requested (using @option{-Wformat}), so there is no need to
b722c82c
JM
2112modify the header file @file{stdio.h}. In C99 mode, the functions
2113@code{snprintf}, @code{vsnprintf}, @code{vscanf}, @code{vfscanf} and
26f6672d 2114@code{vsscanf} are also checked. Except in strictly conforming C
b4c984fb
KG
2115standard modes, the X/Open function @code{strfmon} is also checked as
2116are @code{printf_unlocked} and @code{fprintf_unlocked}.
b722c82c 2117@xref{C Dialect Options,,Options Controlling C Dialect}.
c1f7febf
RK
2118
2119@item format_arg (@var{string-index})
2120@cindex @code{format_arg} function attribute
84330467 2121@opindex Wformat-nonliteral
26f6672d
JM
2122The @code{format_arg} attribute specifies that a function takes a format
2123string for a @code{printf}, @code{scanf}, @code{strftime} or
2124@code{strfmon} style function and modifies it (for example, to translate
2125it into another language), so the result can be passed to a
2126@code{printf}, @code{scanf}, @code{strftime} or @code{strfmon} style
2127function (with the remaining arguments to the format function the same
2128as they would have been for the unmodified string). For example, the
2129declaration:
c1f7febf
RK
2130
2131@smallexample
2132extern char *
2133my_dgettext (char *my_domain, const char *my_format)
2134 __attribute__ ((format_arg (2)));
2135@end smallexample
2136
2137@noindent
26f6672d
JM
2138causes the compiler to check the arguments in calls to a @code{printf},
2139@code{scanf}, @code{strftime} or @code{strfmon} type function, whose
2140format string argument is a call to the @code{my_dgettext} function, for
2141consistency with the format string argument @code{my_format}. If the
2142@code{format_arg} attribute had not been specified, all the compiler
2143could tell in such calls to format functions would be that the format
2144string argument is not constant; this would generate a warning when
84330467 2145@option{-Wformat-nonliteral} is used, but the calls could not be checked
26f6672d 2146without the attribute.
c1f7febf
RK
2147
2148The parameter @var{string-index} specifies which argument is the format
2149string argument (starting from 1).
2150
2151The @code{format-arg} attribute allows you to identify your own
f0523f02 2152functions which modify format strings, so that GCC can check the
26f6672d
JM
2153calls to @code{printf}, @code{scanf}, @code{strftime} or @code{strfmon}
2154type function whose operands are a call to one of your own function.
2155The compiler always treats @code{gettext}, @code{dgettext}, and
2156@code{dcgettext} in this manner except when strict ISO C support is
84330467
JM
2157requested by @option{-ansi} or an appropriate @option{-std} option, or
2158@option{-ffreestanding} is used. @xref{C Dialect Options,,Options
26f6672d 2159Controlling C Dialect}.
c1f7febf 2160
390de769 2161@item nonnull (@var{arg-index}, @dots{})
b34c7881
JT
2162@cindex @code{nonnull} function attribute
2163The @code{nonnull} attribute specifies that some function parameters should
2164be non-null pointers. For instance, the declaration:
2165
2166@smallexample
2167extern void *
2168my_memcpy (void *dest, const void *src, size_t len)
2169 __attribute__((nonnull (1, 2)));
2170@end smallexample
2171
2172@noindent
2173causes the compiler to check that, in calls to @code{my_memcpy},
2174arguments @var{dest} and @var{src} are non-null. If the compiler
2175determines that a null pointer is passed in an argument slot marked
2176as non-null, and the @option{-Wnonnull} option is enabled, a warning
2177is issued. The compiler may also choose to make optimizations based
2178on the knowledge that certain function arguments will not be null.
2179
2180If no argument index list is given to the @code{nonnull} attribute,
2181all pointer arguments are marked as non-null. To illustrate, the
2182following declaration is equivalent to the previous example:
2183
2184@smallexample
2185extern void *
2186my_memcpy (void *dest, const void *src, size_t len)
2187 __attribute__((nonnull));
2188@end smallexample
2189
07417085
KR
2190@item no_instrument_function
2191@cindex @code{no_instrument_function} function attribute
84330467
JM
2192@opindex finstrument-functions
2193If @option{-finstrument-functions} is given, profiling function calls will
07417085
KR
2194be generated at entry and exit of most user-compiled functions.
2195Functions with this attribute will not be so instrumented.
2196
84330467 2197@item section ("@var{section-name}")
c1f7febf
RK
2198@cindex @code{section} function attribute
2199Normally, the compiler places the code it generates in the @code{text} section.
2200Sometimes, however, you need additional sections, or you need certain
2201particular functions to appear in special sections. The @code{section}
2202attribute specifies that a function lives in a particular section.
2203For example, the declaration:
2204
2205@smallexample
2206extern void foobar (void) __attribute__ ((section ("bar")));
2207@end smallexample
2208
2209@noindent
2210puts the function @code{foobar} in the @code{bar} section.
2211
2212Some file formats do not support arbitrary sections so the @code{section}
2213attribute is not available on all platforms.
2214If you need to map the entire contents of a module to a particular
2215section, consider using the facilities of the linker instead.
2216
2217@item constructor
2218@itemx destructor
2219@cindex @code{constructor} function attribute
2220@cindex @code{destructor} function attribute
2221The @code{constructor} attribute causes the function to be called
2222automatically before execution enters @code{main ()}. Similarly, the
2223@code{destructor} attribute causes the function to be called
2224automatically after @code{main ()} has completed or @code{exit ()} has
2225been called. Functions with these attributes are useful for
2226initializing data that will be used implicitly during the execution of
2227the program.
2228
161d7b59 2229These attributes are not currently implemented for Objective-C@.
c1f7febf 2230
9162542e 2231@cindex @code{unused} attribute.
c1f7febf
RK
2232@item unused
2233This attribute, attached to a function, means that the function is meant
f0523f02 2234to be possibly unused. GCC will not produce a warning for this
c1f7febf
RK
2235function. GNU C++ does not currently support this attribute as
2236definitions without parameters are valid in C++.
2237
9162542e
AO
2238@cindex @code{used} attribute.
2239@item used
2240This attribute, attached to a function, means that code must be emitted
2241for the function even if it appears that the function is not referenced.
2242This is useful, for example, when the function is referenced only in
2243inline assembly.
2244
e23bd218
IR
2245@cindex @code{deprecated} attribute.
2246@item deprecated
2247The @code{deprecated} attribute results in a warning if the function
2248is used anywhere in the source file. This is useful when identifying
2249functions that are expected to be removed in a future version of a
2250program. The warning also includes the location of the declaration
2251of the deprecated function, to enable users to easily find further
2252information about why the function is deprecated, or what they should
2253do instead. Note that the warnings only occurs for uses:
2254
2255@smallexample
2256int old_fn () __attribute__ ((deprecated));
2257int old_fn ();
2258int (*fn_ptr)() = old_fn;
2259@end smallexample
2260
2261results in a warning on line 3 but not line 2.
2262
2263The @code{deprecated} attribute can also be used for variables and
2264types (@pxref{Variable Attributes}, @pxref{Type Attributes}.)
2265
c1f7febf
RK
2266@item weak
2267@cindex @code{weak} attribute
2268The @code{weak} attribute causes the declaration to be emitted as a weak
2269symbol rather than a global. This is primarily useful in defining
2270library functions which can be overridden in user code, though it can
2271also be used with non-function declarations. Weak symbols are supported
2272for ELF targets, and also for a.out targets when using the GNU assembler
2273and linker.
2274
140592a0
AG
2275@item malloc
2276@cindex @code{malloc} attribute
2277The @code{malloc} attribute is used to tell the compiler that a function
2278may be treated as if it were the malloc function. The compiler assumes
2279that calls to malloc result in a pointers that cannot alias anything.
2280This will often improve optimization.
2281
84330467 2282@item alias ("@var{target}")
c1f7febf
RK
2283@cindex @code{alias} attribute
2284The @code{alias} attribute causes the declaration to be emitted as an
2285alias for another symbol, which must be specified. For instance,
2286
2287@smallexample
47bd70b5 2288void __f () @{ /* @r{Do something.} */; @}
c1f7febf
RK
2289void f () __attribute__ ((weak, alias ("__f")));
2290@end smallexample
2291
2292declares @samp{f} to be a weak alias for @samp{__f}. In C++, the
2293mangled name for the target must be used.
2294
af3e86c2
RK
2295Not all target machines support this attribute.
2296
47bd70b5
JJ
2297@item visibility ("@var{visibility_type}")
2298@cindex @code{visibility} attribute
2299The @code{visibility} attribute on ELF targets causes the declaration
2300to be emitted with hidden, protected or internal visibility.
2301
2302@smallexample
2303void __attribute__ ((visibility ("protected")))
2304f () @{ /* @r{Do something.} */; @}
2305int i __attribute__ ((visibility ("hidden")));
2306@end smallexample
2307
9e8aab55
RH
2308See the ELF gABI for complete details, but the short story is
2309
2310@table @dfn
2311@item hidden
2312Hidden visibility indicates that the symbol will not be placed into
2313the dynamic symbol table, so no other @dfn{module} (executable or
2314shared library) can reference it directly.
2315
2316@item protected
2317Protected visibility indicates that the symbol will be placed in the
2318dynamic symbol table, but that references within the defining module
2319will bind to the local symbol. That is, the symbol cannot be overridden
2320by another module.
2321
2322@item internal
2323Internal visibility is like hidden visibility, but with additional
2324processor specific semantics. Unless otherwise specified by the psABI,
2325gcc defines internal visibility to mean that the function is @emph{never}
2326called from another module. Note that hidden symbols, while then cannot
2327be referenced directly by other modules, can be referenced indirectly via
2328function pointers. By indicating that a symbol cannot be called from
2329outside the module, gcc may for instance omit the load of a PIC register
2330since it is known that the calling function loaded the correct value.
2331@end table
2332
47bd70b5
JJ
2333Not all ELF targets support this attribute.
2334
c1f7febf
RK
2335@item regparm (@var{number})
2336@cindex functions that are passed arguments in registers on the 386
2337On the Intel 386, the @code{regparm} attribute causes the compiler to
84330467
JM
2338pass up to @var{number} integer arguments in registers EAX,
2339EDX, and ECX instead of on the stack. Functions that take a
c1f7febf
RK
2340variable number of arguments will continue to be passed all of their
2341arguments on the stack.
2342
2343@item stdcall
2344@cindex functions that pop the argument stack on the 386
2345On the Intel 386, the @code{stdcall} attribute causes the compiler to
2346assume that the called function will pop off the stack space used to
2347pass arguments, unless it takes a variable number of arguments.
2348
2349The PowerPC compiler for Windows NT currently ignores the @code{stdcall}
2350attribute.
2351
2352@item cdecl
2353@cindex functions that do pop the argument stack on the 386
84330467 2354@opindex mrtd
c1f7febf
RK
2355On the Intel 386, the @code{cdecl} attribute causes the compiler to
2356assume that the calling function will pop off the stack space used to
2357pass arguments. This is
84330467 2358useful to override the effects of the @option{-mrtd} switch.
c1f7febf
RK
2359
2360The PowerPC compiler for Windows NT currently ignores the @code{cdecl}
2361attribute.
2362
a5c76ee6 2363@item longcall/shortcall
c1f7febf
RK
2364@cindex functions called via pointer on the RS/6000 and PowerPC
2365On the RS/6000 and PowerPC, the @code{longcall} attribute causes the
a5c76ee6
ZW
2366compiler to always call this function via a pointer, just as it would if
2367the @option{-mlongcall} option had been specified. The @code{shortcall}
2368attribute causes the compiler not to do this. These attributes override
2369both the @option{-mlongcall} switch and the @code{#pragma longcall}
2370setting.
2371
2372@xref{RS/6000 and PowerPC Options}, for more information on when long
2373calls are and are not necessary.
c1f7febf 2374
c27ba912
DM
2375@item long_call/short_call
2376@cindex indirect calls on ARM
2377This attribute allows to specify how to call a particular function on
161d7b59 2378ARM@. Both attributes override the @option{-mlong-calls} (@pxref{ARM Options})
c27ba912
DM
2379command line switch and @code{#pragma long_calls} settings. The
2380@code{long_call} attribute causes the compiler to always call the
2381function by first loading its address into a register and then using the
2382contents of that register. The @code{short_call} attribute always places
2383the offset to the function from the call site into the @samp{BL}
2384instruction directly.
2385
c1f7febf
RK
2386@item dllimport
2387@cindex functions which are imported from a dll on PowerPC Windows NT
2388On the PowerPC running Windows NT, the @code{dllimport} attribute causes
2389the compiler to call the function via a global pointer to the function
2390pointer that is set up by the Windows NT dll library. The pointer name
2391is formed by combining @code{__imp_} and the function name.
2392
2393@item dllexport
2394@cindex functions which are exported from a dll on PowerPC Windows NT
2395On the PowerPC running Windows NT, the @code{dllexport} attribute causes
2396the compiler to provide a global pointer to the function pointer, so
2397that it can be called with the @code{dllimport} attribute. The pointer
2398name is formed by combining @code{__imp_} and the function name.
2399
2400@item exception (@var{except-func} [, @var{except-arg}])
2401@cindex functions which specify exception handling on PowerPC Windows NT
2402On the PowerPC running Windows NT, the @code{exception} attribute causes
2403the compiler to modify the structured exception table entry it emits for
2404the declared function. The string or identifier @var{except-func} is
2405placed in the third entry of the structured exception table. It
2406represents a function, which is called by the exception handling
2407mechanism if an exception occurs. If it was specified, the string or
2408identifier @var{except-arg} is placed in the fourth entry of the
2409structured exception table.
2410
2411@item function_vector
2412@cindex calling functions through the function vector on the H8/300 processors
88ab0d1c 2413Use this attribute on the H8/300 and H8/300H to indicate that the specified
c1f7febf
RK
2414function should be called through the function vector. Calling a
2415function through the function vector will reduce code size, however;
2416the function vector has a limited size (maximum 128 entries on the H8/300
2417and 64 entries on the H8/300H) and shares space with the interrupt vector.
2418
2419You must use GAS and GLD from GNU binutils version 2.7 or later for
88ab0d1c 2420this attribute to work correctly.
c1f7febf 2421
6d3d9133
NC
2422@item interrupt
2423@cindex interrupt handler functions
88ab0d1c 2424Use this attribute on the ARM, AVR, M32R/D and Xstormy16 ports to indicate
9f339dde
GK
2425that the specified function is an interrupt handler. The compiler will
2426generate function entry and exit sequences suitable for use in an
2427interrupt handler when this attribute is present.
6d3d9133 2428
b93e3893
AO
2429Note, interrupt handlers for the H8/300, H8/300H and SH processors can
2430be specified via the @code{interrupt_handler} attribute.
6d3d9133
NC
2431
2432Note, on the AVR interrupts will be enabled inside the function.
2433
2434Note, for the ARM you can specify the kind of interrupt to be handled by
2435adding an optional parameter to the interrupt attribute like this:
2436
2437@smallexample
2438void f () __attribute__ ((interrupt ("IRQ")));
2439@end smallexample
2440
161d7b59 2441Permissible values for this parameter are: IRQ, FIQ, SWI, ABORT and UNDEF@.
6d3d9133 2442
b93e3893
AO
2443@item interrupt_handler
2444@cindex interrupt handler functions on the H8/300 and SH processors
88ab0d1c 2445Use this attribute on the H8/300, H8/300H and SH to indicate that the
b93e3893
AO
2446specified function is an interrupt handler. The compiler will generate
2447function entry and exit sequences suitable for use in an interrupt
2448handler when this attribute is present.
2449
2450@item sp_switch
88ab0d1c 2451Use this attribute on the SH to indicate an @code{interrupt_handler}
b93e3893
AO
2452function should switch to an alternate stack. It expects a string
2453argument that names a global variable holding the address of the
2454alternate stack.
2455
2456@smallexample
2457void *alt_stack;
aee96fe9
JM
2458void f () __attribute__ ((interrupt_handler,
2459 sp_switch ("alt_stack")));
b93e3893
AO
2460@end smallexample
2461
2462@item trap_exit
88ab0d1c 2463Use this attribute on the SH for an @code{interrupt_handle} to return using
b93e3893
AO
2464@code{trapa} instead of @code{rte}. This attribute expects an integer
2465argument specifying the trap number to be used.
2466
c1f7febf
RK
2467@item eightbit_data
2468@cindex eight bit data on the H8/300 and H8/300H
88ab0d1c 2469Use this attribute on the H8/300 and H8/300H to indicate that the specified
c1f7febf
RK
2470variable should be placed into the eight bit data section.
2471The compiler will generate more efficient code for certain operations
2472on data in the eight bit data area. Note the eight bit data area is limited to
2473256 bytes of data.
2474
2475You must use GAS and GLD from GNU binutils version 2.7 or later for
88ab0d1c 2476this attribute to work correctly.
c1f7febf
RK
2477
2478@item tiny_data
2479@cindex tiny data section on the H8/300H
88ab0d1c 2480Use this attribute on the H8/300H to indicate that the specified
c1f7febf
RK
2481variable should be placed into the tiny data section.
2482The compiler will generate more efficient code for loads and stores
2483on data in the tiny data section. Note the tiny data area is limited to
2484slightly under 32kbytes of data.
845da534 2485
052a4b28
DC
2486@item signal
2487@cindex signal handler functions on the AVR processors
88ab0d1c 2488Use this attribute on the AVR to indicate that the specified
052a4b28
DC
2489function is an signal handler. The compiler will generate function
2490entry and exit sequences suitable for use in an signal handler when this
767094dd 2491attribute is present. Interrupts will be disabled inside function.
052a4b28
DC
2492
2493@item naked
6d3d9133 2494@cindex function without a prologue/epilogue code
e3223ea2
DC
2495Use this attribute on the ARM, AVR and IP2K ports to indicate that the
2496specified function do not need prologue/epilogue sequences generated by
2497the compiler. It is up to the programmer to provide these sequences.
052a4b28 2498
845da534
DE
2499@item model (@var{model-name})
2500@cindex function addressability on the M32R/D
2501Use this attribute on the M32R/D to set the addressability of an object,
2502and the code generated for a function.
2503The identifier @var{model-name} is one of @code{small}, @code{medium},
2504or @code{large}, representing each of the code models.
2505
2506Small model objects live in the lower 16MB of memory (so that their
2507addresses can be loaded with the @code{ld24} instruction), and are
2508callable with the @code{bl} instruction.
2509
02f52e19 2510Medium model objects may live anywhere in the 32-bit address space (the
845da534
DE
2511compiler will generate @code{seth/add3} instructions to load their addresses),
2512and are callable with the @code{bl} instruction.
2513
02f52e19 2514Large model objects may live anywhere in the 32-bit address space (the
845da534
DE
2515compiler will generate @code{seth/add3} instructions to load their addresses),
2516and may not be reachable with the @code{bl} instruction (the compiler will
2517generate the much slower @code{seth/add3/jl} instruction sequence).
2518
c1f7febf
RK
2519@end table
2520
2521You can specify multiple attributes in a declaration by separating them
2522by commas within the double parentheses or by immediately following an
2523attribute declaration with another attribute declaration.
2524
2525@cindex @code{#pragma}, reason for not using
2526@cindex pragma, reason for not using
9f1bbeaa
JM
2527Some people object to the @code{__attribute__} feature, suggesting that
2528ISO C's @code{#pragma} should be used instead. At the time
2529@code{__attribute__} was designed, there were two reasons for not doing
2530this.
c1f7febf
RK
2531
2532@enumerate
2533@item
2534It is impossible to generate @code{#pragma} commands from a macro.
2535
2536@item
2537There is no telling what the same @code{#pragma} might mean in another
2538compiler.
2539@end enumerate
2540
9f1bbeaa
JM
2541These two reasons applied to almost any application that might have been
2542proposed for @code{#pragma}. It was basically a mistake to use
2543@code{#pragma} for @emph{anything}.
2544
2545The ISO C99 standard includes @code{_Pragma}, which now allows pragmas
2546to be generated from macros. In addition, a @code{#pragma GCC}
2547namespace is now in use for GCC-specific pragmas. However, it has been
2548found convenient to use @code{__attribute__} to achieve a natural
2549attachment of attributes to their corresponding declarations, whereas
2550@code{#pragma GCC} is of use for constructs that do not naturally form
2551part of the grammar. @xref{Other Directives,,Miscellaneous
2552Preprocessing Directives, cpp, The C Preprocessor}.
c1f7febf 2553
2c5e91d2
JM
2554@node Attribute Syntax
2555@section Attribute Syntax
2556@cindex attribute syntax
2557
2558This section describes the syntax with which @code{__attribute__} may be
2559used, and the constructs to which attribute specifiers bind, for the C
161d7b59 2560language. Some details may vary for C++ and Objective-C@. Because of
2c5e91d2
JM
2561infelicities in the grammar for attributes, some forms described here
2562may not be successfully parsed in all cases.
2563
91d231cb
JM
2564There are some problems with the semantics of attributes in C++. For
2565example, there are no manglings for attributes, although they may affect
2566code generation, so problems may arise when attributed types are used in
2567conjunction with templates or overloading. Similarly, @code{typeid}
2568does not distinguish between types with different attributes. Support
2569for attributes in C++ may be restricted in future to attributes on
2570declarations only, but not on nested declarators.
2571
2c5e91d2
JM
2572@xref{Function Attributes}, for details of the semantics of attributes
2573applying to functions. @xref{Variable Attributes}, for details of the
2574semantics of attributes applying to variables. @xref{Type Attributes},
2575for details of the semantics of attributes applying to structure, union
2576and enumerated types.
2577
2578An @dfn{attribute specifier} is of the form
2579@code{__attribute__ ((@var{attribute-list}))}. An @dfn{attribute list}
2580is a possibly empty comma-separated sequence of @dfn{attributes}, where
2581each attribute is one of the following:
2582
2583@itemize @bullet
2584@item
2585Empty. Empty attributes are ignored.
2586
2587@item
2588A word (which may be an identifier such as @code{unused}, or a reserved
2589word such as @code{const}).
2590
2591@item
2592A word, followed by, in parentheses, parameters for the attribute.
2593These parameters take one of the following forms:
2594
2595@itemize @bullet
2596@item
2597An identifier. For example, @code{mode} attributes use this form.
2598
2599@item
2600An identifier followed by a comma and a non-empty comma-separated list
2601of expressions. For example, @code{format} attributes use this form.
2602
2603@item
2604A possibly empty comma-separated list of expressions. For example,
2605@code{format_arg} attributes use this form with the list being a single
2606integer constant expression, and @code{alias} attributes use this form
2607with the list being a single string constant.
2608@end itemize
2609@end itemize
2610
2611An @dfn{attribute specifier list} is a sequence of one or more attribute
2612specifiers, not separated by any other tokens.
2613
2614An attribute specifier list may appear after the colon following a
2615label, other than a @code{case} or @code{default} label. The only
2616attribute it makes sense to use after a label is @code{unused}. This
2617feature is intended for code generated by programs which contains labels
2618that may be unused but which is compiled with @option{-Wall}. It would
2619not normally be appropriate to use in it human-written code, though it
2620could be useful in cases where the code that jumps to the label is
2621contained within an @code{#ifdef} conditional.
2622
2623An attribute specifier list may appear as part of a @code{struct},
2624@code{union} or @code{enum} specifier. It may go either immediately
2625after the @code{struct}, @code{union} or @code{enum} keyword, or after
2626the closing brace. It is ignored if the content of the structure, union
2627or enumerated type is not defined in the specifier in which the
2628attribute specifier list is used---that is, in usages such as
2629@code{struct __attribute__((foo)) bar} with no following opening brace.
2630Where attribute specifiers follow the closing brace, they are considered
2631to relate to the structure, union or enumerated type defined, not to any
2632enclosing declaration the type specifier appears in, and the type
2633defined is not complete until after the attribute specifiers.
2634@c Otherwise, there would be the following problems: a shift/reduce
4fe9b91c 2635@c conflict between attributes binding the struct/union/enum and
2c5e91d2
JM
2636@c binding to the list of specifiers/qualifiers; and "aligned"
2637@c attributes could use sizeof for the structure, but the size could be
2638@c changed later by "packed" attributes.
2639
2640Otherwise, an attribute specifier appears as part of a declaration,
2641counting declarations of unnamed parameters and type names, and relates
2642to that declaration (which may be nested in another declaration, for
91d231cb
JM
2643example in the case of a parameter declaration), or to a particular declarator
2644within a declaration. Where an
ff867905
JM
2645attribute specifier is applied to a parameter declared as a function or
2646an array, it should apply to the function or array rather than the
2647pointer to which the parameter is implicitly converted, but this is not
2648yet correctly implemented.
2c5e91d2
JM
2649
2650Any list of specifiers and qualifiers at the start of a declaration may
2651contain attribute specifiers, whether or not such a list may in that
2652context contain storage class specifiers. (Some attributes, however,
2653are essentially in the nature of storage class specifiers, and only make
2654sense where storage class specifiers may be used; for example,
2655@code{section}.) There is one necessary limitation to this syntax: the
2656first old-style parameter declaration in a function definition cannot
2657begin with an attribute specifier, because such an attribute applies to
2658the function instead by syntax described below (which, however, is not
2659yet implemented in this case). In some other cases, attribute
2660specifiers are permitted by this grammar but not yet supported by the
2661compiler. All attribute specifiers in this place relate to the
c771326b 2662declaration as a whole. In the obsolescent usage where a type of
2c5e91d2
JM
2663@code{int} is implied by the absence of type specifiers, such a list of
2664specifiers and qualifiers may be an attribute specifier list with no
2665other specifiers or qualifiers.
2666
2667An attribute specifier list may appear immediately before a declarator
2668(other than the first) in a comma-separated list of declarators in a
2669declaration of more than one identifier using a single list of
4b01f8d8 2670specifiers and qualifiers. Such attribute specifiers apply
9c34dbbf
ZW
2671only to the identifier before whose declarator they appear. For
2672example, in
2673
2674@smallexample
2675__attribute__((noreturn)) void d0 (void),
2676 __attribute__((format(printf, 1, 2))) d1 (const char *, ...),
2677 d2 (void)
2678@end smallexample
2679
2680@noindent
2681the @code{noreturn} attribute applies to all the functions
4b01f8d8 2682declared; the @code{format} attribute only applies to @code{d1}.
2c5e91d2
JM
2683
2684An attribute specifier list may appear immediately before the comma,
2685@code{=} or semicolon terminating the declaration of an identifier other
2686than a function definition. At present, such attribute specifiers apply
2687to the declared object or function, but in future they may attach to the
2688outermost adjacent declarator. In simple cases there is no difference,
f282ffb3 2689but, for example, in
9c34dbbf
ZW
2690
2691@smallexample
2692void (****f)(void) __attribute__((noreturn));
2693@end smallexample
2694
2695@noindent
2696at present the @code{noreturn} attribute applies to @code{f}, which
2697causes a warning since @code{f} is not a function, but in future it may
2698apply to the function @code{****f}. The precise semantics of what
2699attributes in such cases will apply to are not yet specified. Where an
2700assembler name for an object or function is specified (@pxref{Asm
2701Labels}), at present the attribute must follow the @code{asm}
2702specification; in future, attributes before the @code{asm} specification
2703may apply to the adjacent declarator, and those after it to the declared
2704object or function.
2c5e91d2
JM
2705
2706An attribute specifier list may, in future, be permitted to appear after
2707the declarator in a function definition (before any old-style parameter
2708declarations or the function body).
2709
0e03329a
JM
2710Attribute specifiers may be mixed with type qualifiers appearing inside
2711the @code{[]} of a parameter array declarator, in the C99 construct by
2712which such qualifiers are applied to the pointer to which the array is
2713implicitly converted. Such attribute specifiers apply to the pointer,
2714not to the array, but at present this is not implemented and they are
2715ignored.
2716
2c5e91d2
JM
2717An attribute specifier list may appear at the start of a nested
2718declarator. At present, there are some limitations in this usage: the
91d231cb
JM
2719attributes correctly apply to the declarator, but for most individual
2720attributes the semantics this implies are not implemented.
2721When attribute specifiers follow the @code{*} of a pointer
4b01f8d8 2722declarator, they may be mixed with any type qualifiers present.
91d231cb 2723The following describes the formal semantics of this syntax. It will make the
2c5e91d2
JM
2724most sense if you are familiar with the formal specification of
2725declarators in the ISO C standard.
2726
2727Consider (as in C99 subclause 6.7.5 paragraph 4) a declaration @code{T
2728D1}, where @code{T} contains declaration specifiers that specify a type
2729@var{Type} (such as @code{int}) and @code{D1} is a declarator that
2730contains an identifier @var{ident}. The type specified for @var{ident}
2731for derived declarators whose type does not include an attribute
2732specifier is as in the ISO C standard.
2733
2734If @code{D1} has the form @code{( @var{attribute-specifier-list} D )},
2735and the declaration @code{T D} specifies the type
2736``@var{derived-declarator-type-list} @var{Type}'' for @var{ident}, then
2737@code{T D1} specifies the type ``@var{derived-declarator-type-list}
2738@var{attribute-specifier-list} @var{Type}'' for @var{ident}.
2739
2740If @code{D1} has the form @code{*
2741@var{type-qualifier-and-attribute-specifier-list} D}, and the
2742declaration @code{T D} specifies the type
2743``@var{derived-declarator-type-list} @var{Type}'' for @var{ident}, then
2744@code{T D1} specifies the type ``@var{derived-declarator-type-list}
2745@var{type-qualifier-and-attribute-specifier-list} @var{Type}'' for
2746@var{ident}.
2747
f282ffb3 2748For example,
9c34dbbf
ZW
2749
2750@smallexample
2751void (__attribute__((noreturn)) ****f) (void);
2752@end smallexample
2753
2754@noindent
2755specifies the type ``pointer to pointer to pointer to pointer to
2756non-returning function returning @code{void}''. As another example,
2757
2758@smallexample
2759char *__attribute__((aligned(8))) *f;
2760@end smallexample
2761
2762@noindent
2763specifies the type ``pointer to 8-byte-aligned pointer to @code{char}''.
91d231cb
JM
2764Note again that this does not work with most attributes; for example,
2765the usage of @samp{aligned} and @samp{noreturn} attributes given above
2766is not yet supported.
2767
2768For compatibility with existing code written for compiler versions that
2769did not implement attributes on nested declarators, some laxity is
2770allowed in the placing of attributes. If an attribute that only applies
2771to types is applied to a declaration, it will be treated as applying to
2772the type of that declaration. If an attribute that only applies to
2773declarations is applied to the type of a declaration, it will be treated
2774as applying to that declaration; and, for compatibility with code
2775placing the attributes immediately before the identifier declared, such
2776an attribute applied to a function return type will be treated as
2777applying to the function type, and such an attribute applied to an array
2778element type will be treated as applying to the array type. If an
2779attribute that only applies to function types is applied to a
2780pointer-to-function type, it will be treated as applying to the pointer
2781target type; if such an attribute is applied to a function return type
2782that is not a pointer-to-function type, it will be treated as applying
2783to the function type.
2c5e91d2 2784
c1f7febf
RK
2785@node Function Prototypes
2786@section Prototypes and Old-Style Function Definitions
2787@cindex function prototype declarations
2788@cindex old-style function definitions
2789@cindex promotion of formal parameters
2790
5490d604 2791GNU C extends ISO C to allow a function prototype to override a later
c1f7febf
RK
2792old-style non-prototype definition. Consider the following example:
2793
2794@example
2795/* @r{Use prototypes unless the compiler is old-fashioned.} */
d863830b 2796#ifdef __STDC__
c1f7febf
RK
2797#define P(x) x
2798#else
2799#define P(x) ()
2800#endif
2801
2802/* @r{Prototype function declaration.} */
2803int isroot P((uid_t));
2804
2805/* @r{Old-style function definition.} */
2806int
2807isroot (x) /* ??? lossage here ??? */
2808 uid_t x;
2809@{
2810 return x == 0;
2811@}
2812@end example
2813
5490d604 2814Suppose the type @code{uid_t} happens to be @code{short}. ISO C does
c1f7febf
RK
2815not allow this example, because subword arguments in old-style
2816non-prototype definitions are promoted. Therefore in this example the
2817function definition's argument is really an @code{int}, which does not
2818match the prototype argument type of @code{short}.
2819
5490d604 2820This restriction of ISO C makes it hard to write code that is portable
c1f7febf
RK
2821to traditional C compilers, because the programmer does not know
2822whether the @code{uid_t} type is @code{short}, @code{int}, or
2823@code{long}. Therefore, in cases like these GNU C allows a prototype
2824to override a later old-style definition. More precisely, in GNU C, a
2825function prototype argument type overrides the argument type specified
2826by a later old-style definition if the former type is the same as the
2827latter type before promotion. Thus in GNU C the above example is
2828equivalent to the following:
2829
2830@example
2831int isroot (uid_t);
2832
2833int
2834isroot (uid_t x)
2835@{
2836 return x == 0;
2837@}
2838@end example
2839
9c34dbbf 2840@noindent
c1f7febf
RK
2841GNU C++ does not support old-style function definitions, so this
2842extension is irrelevant.
2843
2844@node C++ Comments
2845@section C++ Style Comments
2846@cindex //
2847@cindex C++ comments
2848@cindex comments, C++ style
2849
2850In GNU C, you may use C++ style comments, which start with @samp{//} and
2851continue until the end of the line. Many other C implementations allow
f458d1d5
ZW
2852such comments, and they are included in the 1999 C standard. However,
2853C++ style comments are not recognized if you specify an @option{-std}
2854option specifying a version of ISO C before C99, or @option{-ansi}
2855(equivalent to @option{-std=c89}).
c1f7febf
RK
2856
2857@node Dollar Signs
2858@section Dollar Signs in Identifier Names
2859@cindex $
2860@cindex dollar signs in identifier names
2861@cindex identifier names, dollar signs in
2862
79188db9
RK
2863In GNU C, you may normally use dollar signs in identifier names.
2864This is because many traditional C implementations allow such identifiers.
2865However, dollar signs in identifiers are not supported on a few target
2866machines, typically because the target assembler does not allow them.
c1f7febf
RK
2867
2868@node Character Escapes
2869@section The Character @key{ESC} in Constants
2870
2871You can use the sequence @samp{\e} in a string or character constant to
2872stand for the ASCII character @key{ESC}.
2873
2874@node Alignment
2875@section Inquiring on Alignment of Types or Variables
2876@cindex alignment
2877@cindex type alignment
2878@cindex variable alignment
2879
2880The keyword @code{__alignof__} allows you to inquire about how an object
2881is aligned, or the minimum alignment usually required by a type. Its
2882syntax is just like @code{sizeof}.
2883
2884For example, if the target machine requires a @code{double} value to be
2885aligned on an 8-byte boundary, then @code{__alignof__ (double)} is 8.
2886This is true on many RISC machines. On more traditional machine
2887designs, @code{__alignof__ (double)} is 4 or even 2.
2888
2889Some machines never actually require alignment; they allow reference to any
2890data type even at an odd addresses. For these machines, @code{__alignof__}
2891reports the @emph{recommended} alignment of a type.
2892
5372b3fb
NB
2893If the operand of @code{__alignof__} is an lvalue rather than a type,
2894its value is the required alignment for its type, taking into account
2895any minimum alignment specified with GCC's @code{__attribute__}
2896extension (@pxref{Variable Attributes}). For example, after this
2897declaration:
c1f7febf
RK
2898
2899@example
2900struct foo @{ int x; char y; @} foo1;
2901@end example
2902
2903@noindent
5372b3fb
NB
2904the value of @code{__alignof__ (foo1.y)} is 1, even though its actual
2905alignment is probably 2 or 4, the same as @code{__alignof__ (int)}.
c1f7febf 2906
9d27bffe
SS
2907It is an error to ask for the alignment of an incomplete type.
2908
c1f7febf
RK
2909@node Variable Attributes
2910@section Specifying Attributes of Variables
2911@cindex attribute of variables
2912@cindex variable attributes
2913
2914The keyword @code{__attribute__} allows you to specify special
2915attributes of variables or structure fields. This keyword is followed
e23bd218 2916by an attribute specification inside double parentheses. Ten
c1f7febf
RK
2917attributes are currently defined for variables: @code{aligned},
2918@code{mode}, @code{nocommon}, @code{packed}, @code{section},
e23bd218
IR
2919@code{transparent_union}, @code{unused}, @code{deprecated},
2920@code{vector_size}, and @code{weak}. Some other attributes are defined
2921for variables on particular target systems. Other attributes are
2922available for functions (@pxref{Function Attributes}) and for types
2923(@pxref{Type Attributes}). Other front ends might define more
2924attributes (@pxref{C++ Extensions,,Extensions to the C++ Language}).
c1f7febf
RK
2925
2926You may also specify attributes with @samp{__} preceding and following
2927each keyword. This allows you to use them in header files without
2928being concerned about a possible macro of the same name. For example,
2929you may use @code{__aligned__} instead of @code{aligned}.
2930
2c5e91d2
JM
2931@xref{Attribute Syntax}, for details of the exact syntax for using
2932attributes.
2933
c1f7febf
RK
2934@table @code
2935@cindex @code{aligned} attribute
2936@item aligned (@var{alignment})
2937This attribute specifies a minimum alignment for the variable or
2938structure field, measured in bytes. For example, the declaration:
2939
2940@smallexample
2941int x __attribute__ ((aligned (16))) = 0;
2942@end smallexample
2943
2944@noindent
2945causes the compiler to allocate the global variable @code{x} on a
294616-byte boundary. On a 68040, this could be used in conjunction with
2947an @code{asm} expression to access the @code{move16} instruction which
2948requires 16-byte aligned operands.
2949
2950You can also specify the alignment of structure fields. For example, to
2951create a double-word aligned @code{int} pair, you could write:
2952
2953@smallexample
2954struct foo @{ int x[2] __attribute__ ((aligned (8))); @};
2955@end smallexample
2956
2957@noindent
2958This is an alternative to creating a union with a @code{double} member
2959that forces the union to be double-word aligned.
2960
c1f7febf
RK
2961As in the preceding examples, you can explicitly specify the alignment
2962(in bytes) that you wish the compiler to use for a given variable or
2963structure field. Alternatively, you can leave out the alignment factor
2964and just ask the compiler to align a variable or field to the maximum
2965useful alignment for the target machine you are compiling for. For
2966example, you could write:
2967
2968@smallexample
2969short array[3] __attribute__ ((aligned));
2970@end smallexample
2971
2972Whenever you leave out the alignment factor in an @code{aligned} attribute
2973specification, the compiler automatically sets the alignment for the declared
2974variable or field to the largest alignment which is ever used for any data
2975type on the target machine you are compiling for. Doing this can often make
2976copy operations more efficient, because the compiler can use whatever
2977instructions copy the biggest chunks of memory when performing copies to
2978or from the variables or fields that you have aligned this way.
2979
2980The @code{aligned} attribute can only increase the alignment; but you
2981can decrease it by specifying @code{packed} as well. See below.
2982
2983Note that the effectiveness of @code{aligned} attributes may be limited
2984by inherent limitations in your linker. On many systems, the linker is
2985only able to arrange for variables to be aligned up to a certain maximum
2986alignment. (For some linkers, the maximum supported alignment may
2987be very very small.) If your linker is only able to align variables
2988up to a maximum of 8 byte alignment, then specifying @code{aligned(16)}
2989in an @code{__attribute__} will still only provide you with 8 byte
2990alignment. See your linker documentation for further information.
2991
2992@item mode (@var{mode})
2993@cindex @code{mode} attribute
2994This attribute specifies the data type for the declaration---whichever
2995type corresponds to the mode @var{mode}. This in effect lets you
2996request an integer or floating point type according to its width.
2997
2998You may also specify a mode of @samp{byte} or @samp{__byte__} to
2999indicate the mode corresponding to a one-byte integer, @samp{word} or
3000@samp{__word__} for the mode of a one-word integer, and @samp{pointer}
3001or @samp{__pointer__} for the mode used to represent pointers.
3002
3003@item nocommon
3004@cindex @code{nocommon} attribute
84330467 3005@opindex fno-common
f0523f02 3006This attribute specifies requests GCC not to place a variable
c1f7febf 3007``common'' but instead to allocate space for it directly. If you
f0523f02 3008specify the @option{-fno-common} flag, GCC will do this for all
c1f7febf
RK
3009variables.
3010
3011Specifying the @code{nocommon} attribute for a variable provides an
3012initialization of zeros. A variable may only be initialized in one
3013source file.
3014
3015@item packed
3016@cindex @code{packed} attribute
3017The @code{packed} attribute specifies that a variable or structure field
3018should have the smallest possible alignment---one byte for a variable,
3019and one bit for a field, unless you specify a larger value with the
3020@code{aligned} attribute.
3021
3022Here is a structure in which the field @code{x} is packed, so that it
3023immediately follows @code{a}:
3024
3025@example
3026struct foo
3027@{
3028 char a;
3029 int x[2] __attribute__ ((packed));
3030@};
3031@end example
3032
84330467 3033@item section ("@var{section-name}")
c1f7febf
RK
3034@cindex @code{section} variable attribute
3035Normally, the compiler places the objects it generates in sections like
3036@code{data} and @code{bss}. Sometimes, however, you need additional sections,
3037or you need certain particular variables to appear in special sections,
3038for example to map to special hardware. The @code{section}
3039attribute specifies that a variable (or function) lives in a particular
3040section. For example, this small program uses several specific section names:
3041
3042@smallexample
3043struct duart a __attribute__ ((section ("DUART_A"))) = @{ 0 @};
3044struct duart b __attribute__ ((section ("DUART_B"))) = @{ 0 @};
3045char stack[10000] __attribute__ ((section ("STACK"))) = @{ 0 @};
3046int init_data __attribute__ ((section ("INITDATA"))) = 0;
3047
3048main()
3049@{
3050 /* Initialize stack pointer */
3051 init_sp (stack + sizeof (stack));
3052
3053 /* Initialize initialized data */
3054 memcpy (&init_data, &data, &edata - &data);
3055
3056 /* Turn on the serial ports */
3057 init_duart (&a);
3058 init_duart (&b);
3059@}
3060@end smallexample
3061
3062@noindent
3063Use the @code{section} attribute with an @emph{initialized} definition
f0523f02 3064of a @emph{global} variable, as shown in the example. GCC issues
c1f7febf
RK
3065a warning and otherwise ignores the @code{section} attribute in
3066uninitialized variable declarations.
3067
3068You may only use the @code{section} attribute with a fully initialized
3069global definition because of the way linkers work. The linker requires
3070each object be defined once, with the exception that uninitialized
3071variables tentatively go in the @code{common} (or @code{bss}) section
84330467
JM
3072and can be multiply ``defined''. You can force a variable to be
3073initialized with the @option{-fno-common} flag or the @code{nocommon}
c1f7febf
RK
3074attribute.
3075
3076Some file formats do not support arbitrary sections so the @code{section}
3077attribute is not available on all platforms.
3078If you need to map the entire contents of a module to a particular
3079section, consider using the facilities of the linker instead.
3080
593d3a34
MK
3081@item shared
3082@cindex @code{shared} variable attribute
02f52e19
AJ
3083On Windows NT, in addition to putting variable definitions in a named
3084section, the section can also be shared among all running copies of an
161d7b59 3085executable or DLL@. For example, this small program defines shared data
84330467 3086by putting it in a named section @code{shared} and marking the section
593d3a34
MK
3087shareable:
3088
3089@smallexample
3090int foo __attribute__((section ("shared"), shared)) = 0;
3091
3092int
3093main()
3094@{
310668e8
JM
3095 /* Read and write foo. All running
3096 copies see the same value. */
593d3a34
MK
3097 return 0;
3098@}
3099@end smallexample
3100
3101@noindent
3102You may only use the @code{shared} attribute along with @code{section}
02f52e19 3103attribute with a fully initialized global definition because of the way
593d3a34
MK
3104linkers work. See @code{section} attribute for more information.
3105
161d7b59 3106The @code{shared} attribute is only available on Windows NT@.
593d3a34 3107
c1f7febf
RK
3108@item transparent_union
3109This attribute, attached to a function parameter which is a union, means
3110that the corresponding argument may have the type of any union member,
3111but the argument is passed as if its type were that of the first union
3112member. For more details see @xref{Type Attributes}. You can also use
3113this attribute on a @code{typedef} for a union data type; then it
3114applies to all function parameters with that type.
3115
3116@item unused
3117This attribute, attached to a variable, means that the variable is meant
f0523f02 3118to be possibly unused. GCC will not produce a warning for this
c1f7febf
RK
3119variable.
3120
e23bd218
IR
3121@item deprecated
3122The @code{deprecated} attribute results in a warning if the variable
3123is used anywhere in the source file. This is useful when identifying
3124variables that are expected to be removed in a future version of a
3125program. The warning also includes the location of the declaration
3126of the deprecated variable, to enable users to easily find further
3127information about why the variable is deprecated, or what they should
3128do instead. Note that the warnings only occurs for uses:
3129
3130@smallexample
3131extern int old_var __attribute__ ((deprecated));
3132extern int old_var;
3133int new_fn () @{ return old_var; @}
3134@end smallexample
3135
3136results in a warning on line 3 but not line 2.
3137
3138The @code{deprecated} attribute can also be used for functions and
3139types (@pxref{Function Attributes}, @pxref{Type Attributes}.)
3140
1b9191d2
AH
3141@item vector_size (@var{bytes})
3142This attribute specifies the vector size for the variable, measured in
3143bytes. For example, the declaration:
3144
3145@smallexample
3146int foo __attribute__ ((vector_size (16)));
3147@end smallexample
3148
3149@noindent
3150causes the compiler to set the mode for @code{foo}, to be 16 bytes,
3151divided into @code{int} sized units. Assuming a 32-bit int (a vector of
31524 units of 4 bytes), the corresponding mode of @code{foo} will be V4SI@.
3153
3154This attribute is only applicable to integral and float scalars,
3155although arrays, pointers, and function return values are allowed in
3156conjunction with this construct.
3157
3158Aggregates with this attribute are invalid, even if they are of the same
3159size as a corresponding scalar. For example, the declaration:
3160
3161@smallexample
ad706f54 3162struct S @{ int a; @};
1b9191d2
AH
3163struct S __attribute__ ((vector_size (16))) foo;
3164@end smallexample
3165
3166@noindent
3167is invalid even if the size of the structure is the same as the size of
3168the @code{int}.
3169
c1f7febf
RK
3170@item weak
3171The @code{weak} attribute is described in @xref{Function Attributes}.
845da534
DE
3172
3173@item model (@var{model-name})
3174@cindex variable addressability on the M32R/D
3175Use this attribute on the M32R/D to set the addressability of an object.
3176The identifier @var{model-name} is one of @code{small}, @code{medium},
3177or @code{large}, representing each of the code models.
3178
3179Small model objects live in the lower 16MB of memory (so that their
3180addresses can be loaded with the @code{ld24} instruction).
3181
02f52e19 3182Medium and large model objects may live anywhere in the 32-bit address space
845da534
DE
3183(the compiler will generate @code{seth/add3} instructions to load their
3184addresses).
3185
c1f7febf
RK
3186@end table
3187
3188To specify multiple attributes, separate them by commas within the
3189double parentheses: for example, @samp{__attribute__ ((aligned (16),
3190packed))}.
3191
3192@node Type Attributes
3193@section Specifying Attributes of Types
3194@cindex attribute of types
3195@cindex type attributes
3196
3197The keyword @code{__attribute__} allows you to specify special
3198attributes of @code{struct} and @code{union} types when you define such
3199types. This keyword is followed by an attribute specification inside
d18b1ed8 3200double parentheses. Six attributes are currently defined for types:
e23bd218 3201@code{aligned}, @code{packed}, @code{transparent_union}, @code{unused},
d18b1ed8
OS
3202@code{deprecated} and @code{may_alias}. Other attributes are defined for
3203functions (@pxref{Function Attributes}) and for variables
3204(@pxref{Variable Attributes}).
c1f7febf
RK
3205
3206You may also specify any one of these attributes with @samp{__}
3207preceding and following its keyword. This allows you to use these
3208attributes in header files without being concerned about a possible
3209macro of the same name. For example, you may use @code{__aligned__}
3210instead of @code{aligned}.
3211
3212You may specify the @code{aligned} and @code{transparent_union}
3213attributes either in a @code{typedef} declaration or just past the
3214closing curly brace of a complete enum, struct or union type
3215@emph{definition} and the @code{packed} attribute only past the closing
3216brace of a definition.
3217
4051959b
JM
3218You may also specify attributes between the enum, struct or union
3219tag and the name of the type rather than after the closing brace.
3220
2c5e91d2
JM
3221@xref{Attribute Syntax}, for details of the exact syntax for using
3222attributes.
3223
c1f7febf
RK
3224@table @code
3225@cindex @code{aligned} attribute
3226@item aligned (@var{alignment})
3227This attribute specifies a minimum alignment (in bytes) for variables
3228of the specified type. For example, the declarations:
3229
3230@smallexample
f69eecfb
JL
3231struct S @{ short f[3]; @} __attribute__ ((aligned (8)));
3232typedef int more_aligned_int __attribute__ ((aligned (8)));
c1f7febf
RK
3233@end smallexample
3234
3235@noindent
d863830b 3236force the compiler to insure (as far as it can) that each variable whose
c1f7febf
RK
3237type is @code{struct S} or @code{more_aligned_int} will be allocated and
3238aligned @emph{at least} on a 8-byte boundary. On a Sparc, having all
3239variables of type @code{struct S} aligned to 8-byte boundaries allows
3240the compiler to use the @code{ldd} and @code{std} (doubleword load and
3241store) instructions when copying one variable of type @code{struct S} to
3242another, thus improving run-time efficiency.
3243
3244Note that the alignment of any given @code{struct} or @code{union} type
5490d604 3245is required by the ISO C standard to be at least a perfect multiple of
c1f7febf
RK
3246the lowest common multiple of the alignments of all of the members of
3247the @code{struct} or @code{union} in question. This means that you @emph{can}
3248effectively adjust the alignment of a @code{struct} or @code{union}
3249type by attaching an @code{aligned} attribute to any one of the members
3250of such a type, but the notation illustrated in the example above is a
3251more obvious, intuitive, and readable way to request the compiler to
3252adjust the alignment of an entire @code{struct} or @code{union} type.
3253
3254As in the preceding example, you can explicitly specify the alignment
3255(in bytes) that you wish the compiler to use for a given @code{struct}
3256or @code{union} type. Alternatively, you can leave out the alignment factor
3257and just ask the compiler to align a type to the maximum
3258useful alignment for the target machine you are compiling for. For
3259example, you could write:
3260
3261@smallexample
3262struct S @{ short f[3]; @} __attribute__ ((aligned));
3263@end smallexample
3264
3265Whenever you leave out the alignment factor in an @code{aligned}
3266attribute specification, the compiler automatically sets the alignment
3267for the type to the largest alignment which is ever used for any data
3268type on the target machine you are compiling for. Doing this can often
3269make copy operations more efficient, because the compiler can use
3270whatever instructions copy the biggest chunks of memory when performing
3271copies to or from the variables which have types that you have aligned
3272this way.
3273
3274In the example above, if the size of each @code{short} is 2 bytes, then
3275the size of the entire @code{struct S} type is 6 bytes. The smallest
3276power of two which is greater than or equal to that is 8, so the
3277compiler sets the alignment for the entire @code{struct S} type to 8
3278bytes.
3279
3280Note that although you can ask the compiler to select a time-efficient
3281alignment for a given type and then declare only individual stand-alone
3282objects of that type, the compiler's ability to select a time-efficient
3283alignment is primarily useful only when you plan to create arrays of
3284variables having the relevant (efficiently aligned) type. If you
3285declare or use arrays of variables of an efficiently-aligned type, then
3286it is likely that your program will also be doing pointer arithmetic (or
3287subscripting, which amounts to the same thing) on pointers to the
3288relevant type, and the code that the compiler generates for these
3289pointer arithmetic operations will often be more efficient for
3290efficiently-aligned types than for other types.
3291
3292The @code{aligned} attribute can only increase the alignment; but you
3293can decrease it by specifying @code{packed} as well. See below.
3294
3295Note that the effectiveness of @code{aligned} attributes may be limited
3296by inherent limitations in your linker. On many systems, the linker is
3297only able to arrange for variables to be aligned up to a certain maximum
3298alignment. (For some linkers, the maximum supported alignment may
3299be very very small.) If your linker is only able to align variables
3300up to a maximum of 8 byte alignment, then specifying @code{aligned(16)}
3301in an @code{__attribute__} will still only provide you with 8 byte
3302alignment. See your linker documentation for further information.
3303
3304@item packed
3305This attribute, attached to an @code{enum}, @code{struct}, or
3306@code{union} type definition, specified that the minimum required memory
3307be used to represent the type.
3308
84330467 3309@opindex fshort-enums
c1f7febf
RK
3310Specifying this attribute for @code{struct} and @code{union} types is
3311equivalent to specifying the @code{packed} attribute on each of the
84330467 3312structure or union members. Specifying the @option{-fshort-enums}
c1f7febf
RK
3313flag on the line is equivalent to specifying the @code{packed}
3314attribute on all @code{enum} definitions.
3315
3316You may only specify this attribute after a closing curly brace on an
1cd4bca9
BK
3317@code{enum} definition, not in a @code{typedef} declaration, unless that
3318declaration also contains the definition of the @code{enum}.
c1f7febf
RK
3319
3320@item transparent_union
3321This attribute, attached to a @code{union} type definition, indicates
3322that any function parameter having that union type causes calls to that
3323function to be treated in a special way.
3324
3325First, the argument corresponding to a transparent union type can be of
3326any type in the union; no cast is required. Also, if the union contains
3327a pointer type, the corresponding argument can be a null pointer
3328constant or a void pointer expression; and if the union contains a void
3329pointer type, the corresponding argument can be any pointer expression.
3330If the union member type is a pointer, qualifiers like @code{const} on
3331the referenced type must be respected, just as with normal pointer
3332conversions.
3333
3334Second, the argument is passed to the function using the calling
3335conventions of first member of the transparent union, not the calling
3336conventions of the union itself. All members of the union must have the
3337same machine representation; this is necessary for this argument passing
3338to work properly.
3339
3340Transparent unions are designed for library functions that have multiple
3341interfaces for compatibility reasons. For example, suppose the
3342@code{wait} function must accept either a value of type @code{int *} to
3343comply with Posix, or a value of type @code{union wait *} to comply with
3344the 4.1BSD interface. If @code{wait}'s parameter were @code{void *},
3345@code{wait} would accept both kinds of arguments, but it would also
3346accept any other pointer type and this would make argument type checking
3347less useful. Instead, @code{<sys/wait.h>} might define the interface
3348as follows:
3349
3350@smallexample
3351typedef union
3352 @{
3353 int *__ip;
3354 union wait *__up;
3355 @} wait_status_ptr_t __attribute__ ((__transparent_union__));
3356
3357pid_t wait (wait_status_ptr_t);
3358@end smallexample
3359
3360This interface allows either @code{int *} or @code{union wait *}
3361arguments to be passed, using the @code{int *} calling convention.
3362The program can call @code{wait} with arguments of either type:
3363
3364@example
3365int w1 () @{ int w; return wait (&w); @}
3366int w2 () @{ union wait w; return wait (&w); @}
3367@end example
3368
3369With this interface, @code{wait}'s implementation might look like this:
3370
3371@example
3372pid_t wait (wait_status_ptr_t p)
3373@{
3374 return waitpid (-1, p.__ip, 0);
3375@}
3376@end example
d863830b
JL
3377
3378@item unused
3379When attached to a type (including a @code{union} or a @code{struct}),
3380this attribute means that variables of that type are meant to appear
f0523f02 3381possibly unused. GCC will not produce a warning for any variables of
d863830b
JL
3382that type, even if the variable appears to do nothing. This is often
3383the case with lock or thread classes, which are usually defined and then
3384not referenced, but contain constructors and destructors that have
956d6950 3385nontrivial bookkeeping functions.
d863830b 3386
e23bd218
IR
3387@item deprecated
3388The @code{deprecated} attribute results in a warning if the type
3389is used anywhere in the source file. This is useful when identifying
3390types that are expected to be removed in a future version of a program.
3391If possible, the warning also includes the location of the declaration
3392of the deprecated type, to enable users to easily find further
3393information about why the type is deprecated, or what they should do
3394instead. Note that the warnings only occur for uses and then only
adc9fe67 3395if the type is being applied to an identifier that itself is not being
e23bd218
IR
3396declared as deprecated.
3397
3398@smallexample
3399typedef int T1 __attribute__ ((deprecated));
3400T1 x;
3401typedef T1 T2;
3402T2 y;
3403typedef T1 T3 __attribute__ ((deprecated));
3404T3 z __attribute__ ((deprecated));
3405@end smallexample
3406
3407results in a warning on line 2 and 3 but not lines 4, 5, or 6. No
3408warning is issued for line 4 because T2 is not explicitly
3409deprecated. Line 5 has no warning because T3 is explicitly
3410deprecated. Similarly for line 6.
3411
3412The @code{deprecated} attribute can also be used for functions and
3413variables (@pxref{Function Attributes}, @pxref{Variable Attributes}.)
3414
d18b1ed8
OS
3415@item may_alias
3416Accesses to objects with types with this attribute are not subjected to
3417type-based alias analysis, but are instead assumed to be able to alias
3418any other type of objects, just like the @code{char} type. See
3419@option{-fstrict-aliasing} for more information on aliasing issues.
3420
3421Example of use:
3422
478c9e72 3423@smallexample
d18b1ed8
OS
3424typedef short __attribute__((__may_alias__)) short_a;
3425
3426int
3427main (void)
3428@{
3429 int a = 0x12345678;
3430 short_a *b = (short_a *) &a;
3431
3432 b[1] = 0;
3433
3434 if (a == 0x12345678)
3435 abort();
3436
3437 exit(0);
3438@}
478c9e72 3439@end smallexample
d18b1ed8
OS
3440
3441If you replaced @code{short_a} with @code{short} in the variable
3442declaration, the above program would abort when compiled with
3443@option{-fstrict-aliasing}, which is on by default at @option{-O2} or
3444above in recent GCC versions.
c1f7febf
RK
3445@end table
3446
3447To specify multiple attributes, separate them by commas within the
3448double parentheses: for example, @samp{__attribute__ ((aligned (16),
3449packed))}.
3450
3451@node Inline
3452@section An Inline Function is As Fast As a Macro
3453@cindex inline functions
3454@cindex integrating function code
3455@cindex open coding
3456@cindex macros, inline alternative
3457
f0523f02 3458By declaring a function @code{inline}, you can direct GCC to
c1f7febf
RK
3459integrate that function's code into the code for its callers. This
3460makes execution faster by eliminating the function-call overhead; in
3461addition, if any of the actual argument values are constant, their known
3462values may permit simplifications at compile time so that not all of the
3463inline function's code needs to be included. The effect on code size is
3464less predictable; object code may be larger or smaller with function
3465inlining, depending on the particular case. Inlining of functions is an
3466optimization and it really ``works'' only in optimizing compilation. If
84330467 3467you don't use @option{-O}, no function is really inline.
c1f7febf 3468
4b404517
JM
3469Inline functions are included in the ISO C99 standard, but there are
3470currently substantial differences between what GCC implements and what
3471the ISO C99 standard requires.
3472
c1f7febf
RK
3473To declare a function inline, use the @code{inline} keyword in its
3474declaration, like this:
3475
3476@example
3477inline int
3478inc (int *a)
3479@{
3480 (*a)++;
3481@}
3482@end example
3483
5490d604 3484(If you are writing a header file to be included in ISO C programs, write
c1f7febf 3485@code{__inline__} instead of @code{inline}. @xref{Alternate Keywords}.)
c1f7febf 3486You can also make all ``simple enough'' functions inline with the option
84330467 3487@option{-finline-functions}.
247b14bd 3488
84330467 3489@opindex Winline
247b14bd
RH
3490Note that certain usages in a function definition can make it unsuitable
3491for inline substitution. Among these usages are: use of varargs, use of
3492alloca, use of variable sized data types (@pxref{Variable Length}),
3493use of computed goto (@pxref{Labels as Values}), use of nonlocal goto,
84330467 3494and nested functions (@pxref{Nested Functions}). Using @option{-Winline}
247b14bd
RH
3495will warn when a function marked @code{inline} could not be substituted,
3496and will give the reason for the failure.
c1f7febf 3497
2147b154 3498Note that in C and Objective-C, unlike C++, the @code{inline} keyword
c1f7febf
RK
3499does not affect the linkage of the function.
3500
3501@cindex automatic @code{inline} for C++ member fns
3502@cindex @code{inline} automatic for C++ member fns
3503@cindex member fns, automatically @code{inline}
3504@cindex C++ member fns, automatically @code{inline}
84330467 3505@opindex fno-default-inline
f0523f02 3506GCC automatically inlines member functions defined within the class
c1f7febf 3507body of C++ programs even if they are not explicitly declared
84330467 3508@code{inline}. (You can override this with @option{-fno-default-inline};
c1f7febf
RK
3509@pxref{C++ Dialect Options,,Options Controlling C++ Dialect}.)
3510
3511@cindex inline functions, omission of
84330467 3512@opindex fkeep-inline-functions
c1f7febf
RK
3513When a function is both inline and @code{static}, if all calls to the
3514function are integrated into the caller, and the function's address is
3515never used, then the function's own assembler code is never referenced.
f0523f02 3516In this case, GCC does not actually output assembler code for the
84330467 3517function, unless you specify the option @option{-fkeep-inline-functions}.
c1f7febf
RK
3518Some calls cannot be integrated for various reasons (in particular,
3519calls that precede the function's definition cannot be integrated, and
3520neither can recursive calls within the definition). If there is a
3521nonintegrated call, then the function is compiled to assembler code as
3522usual. The function must also be compiled as usual if the program
3523refers to its address, because that can't be inlined.
3524
3525@cindex non-static inline function
3526When an inline function is not @code{static}, then the compiler must assume
3527that there may be calls from other source files; since a global symbol can
3528be defined only once in any program, the function must not be defined in
3529the other source files, so the calls therein cannot be integrated.
3530Therefore, a non-@code{static} inline function is always compiled on its
3531own in the usual fashion.
3532
3533If you specify both @code{inline} and @code{extern} in the function
3534definition, then the definition is used only for inlining. In no case
3535is the function compiled on its own, not even if you refer to its
3536address explicitly. Such an address becomes an external reference, as
3537if you had only declared the function, and had not defined it.
3538
3539This combination of @code{inline} and @code{extern} has almost the
3540effect of a macro. The way to use it is to put a function definition in
3541a header file with these keywords, and put another copy of the
3542definition (lacking @code{inline} and @code{extern}) in a library file.
3543The definition in the header file will cause most calls to the function
3544to be inlined. If any uses of the function remain, they will refer to
3545the single copy in the library.
3546
4b404517
JM
3547For future compatibility with when GCC implements ISO C99 semantics for
3548inline functions, it is best to use @code{static inline} only. (The
3549existing semantics will remain available when @option{-std=gnu89} is
3550specified, but eventually the default will be @option{-std=gnu99} and
3551that will implement the C99 semantics, though it does not do so yet.)
3552
6aa77e6c
AH
3553GCC does not inline any functions when not optimizing unless you specify
3554the @samp{always_inline} attribute for the function, like this:
3555
3556@example
3557/* Prototype. */
3558inline void foo (const char) __attribute__((always_inline));
3559@end example
c1f7febf
RK
3560
3561@node Extended Asm
3562@section Assembler Instructions with C Expression Operands
3563@cindex extended @code{asm}
3564@cindex @code{asm} expressions
3565@cindex assembler instructions
3566@cindex registers
3567
c85f7c16
JL
3568In an assembler instruction using @code{asm}, you can specify the
3569operands of the instruction using C expressions. This means you need not
3570guess which registers or memory locations will contain the data you want
c1f7febf
RK
3571to use.
3572
c85f7c16
JL
3573You must specify an assembler instruction template much like what
3574appears in a machine description, plus an operand constraint string for
3575each operand.
c1f7febf
RK
3576
3577For example, here is how to use the 68881's @code{fsinx} instruction:
3578
3579@example
3580asm ("fsinx %1,%0" : "=f" (result) : "f" (angle));
3581@end example
3582
3583@noindent
3584Here @code{angle} is the C expression for the input operand while
3585@code{result} is that of the output operand. Each has @samp{"f"} as its
c85f7c16
JL
3586operand constraint, saying that a floating point register is required.
3587The @samp{=} in @samp{=f} indicates that the operand is an output; all
3588output operands' constraints must use @samp{=}. The constraints use the
3589same language used in the machine description (@pxref{Constraints}).
3590
3591Each operand is described by an operand-constraint string followed by
3592the C expression in parentheses. A colon separates the assembler
3593template from the first output operand and another separates the last
3594output operand from the first input, if any. Commas separate the
84b72302
RH
3595operands within each group. The total number of operands is currently
3596limited to 30; this limitation may be lifted in some future version of
3597GCC.
c85f7c16
JL
3598
3599If there are no output operands but there are input operands, you must
3600place two consecutive colons surrounding the place where the output
c1f7febf
RK
3601operands would go.
3602
84b72302
RH
3603As of GCC version 3.1, it is also possible to specify input and output
3604operands using symbolic names which can be referenced within the
3605assembler code. These names are specified inside square brackets
3606preceding the constraint string, and can be referenced inside the
3607assembler code using @code{%[@var{name}]} instead of a percentage sign
3608followed by the operand number. Using named operands the above example
3609could look like:
3610
3611@example
3612asm ("fsinx %[angle],%[output]"
3613 : [output] "=f" (result)
3614 : [angle] "f" (angle));
3615@end example
3616
3617@noindent
3618Note that the symbolic operand names have no relation whatsoever to
3619other C identifiers. You may use any name you like, even those of
3620existing C symbols, but must ensure that no two operands within the same
3621assembler construct use the same symbolic name.
3622
c1f7febf 3623Output operand expressions must be lvalues; the compiler can check this.
c85f7c16
JL
3624The input operands need not be lvalues. The compiler cannot check
3625whether the operands have data types that are reasonable for the
3626instruction being executed. It does not parse the assembler instruction
3627template and does not know what it means or even whether it is valid
3628assembler input. The extended @code{asm} feature is most often used for
3629machine instructions the compiler itself does not know exist. If
3630the output expression cannot be directly addressed (for example, it is a
f0523f02 3631bit-field), your constraint must allow a register. In that case, GCC
c85f7c16
JL
3632will use the register as the output of the @code{asm}, and then store
3633that register into the output.
3634
f0523f02 3635The ordinary output operands must be write-only; GCC will assume that
c85f7c16
JL
3636the values in these operands before the instruction are dead and need
3637not be generated. Extended asm supports input-output or read-write
3638operands. Use the constraint character @samp{+} to indicate such an
3639operand and list it with the output operands.
3640
3641When the constraints for the read-write operand (or the operand in which
3642only some of the bits are to be changed) allows a register, you may, as
3643an alternative, logically split its function into two separate operands,
3644one input operand and one write-only output operand. The connection
3645between them is expressed by constraints which say they need to be in
3646the same location when the instruction executes. You can use the same C
3647expression for both operands, or different expressions. For example,
3648here we write the (fictitious) @samp{combine} instruction with
3649@code{bar} as its read-only source operand and @code{foo} as its
3650read-write destination:
c1f7febf
RK
3651
3652@example
3653asm ("combine %2,%0" : "=r" (foo) : "0" (foo), "g" (bar));
3654@end example
3655
3656@noindent
c85f7c16 3657The constraint @samp{"0"} for operand 1 says that it must occupy the
84b72302
RH
3658same location as operand 0. A number in constraint is allowed only in
3659an input operand and it must refer to an output operand.
c1f7febf 3660
84b72302 3661Only a number in the constraint can guarantee that one operand will be in
c85f7c16
JL
3662the same place as another. The mere fact that @code{foo} is the value
3663of both operands is not enough to guarantee that they will be in the
3664same place in the generated assembler code. The following would not
3665work reliably:
c1f7febf
RK
3666
3667@example
3668asm ("combine %2,%0" : "=r" (foo) : "r" (foo), "g" (bar));
3669@end example
3670
3671Various optimizations or reloading could cause operands 0 and 1 to be in
f0523f02 3672different registers; GCC knows no reason not to do so. For example, the
c1f7febf
RK
3673compiler might find a copy of the value of @code{foo} in one register and
3674use it for operand 1, but generate the output operand 0 in a different
3675register (copying it afterward to @code{foo}'s own address). Of course,
3676since the register for operand 1 is not even mentioned in the assembler
f0523f02 3677code, the result will not work, but GCC can't tell that.
c1f7febf 3678
84b72302
RH
3679As of GCC version 3.1, one may write @code{[@var{name}]} instead of
3680the operand number for a matching constraint. For example:
3681
3682@example
3683asm ("cmoveq %1,%2,%[result]"
3684 : [result] "=r"(result)
3685 : "r" (test), "r"(new), "[result]"(old));
3686@end example
3687
c85f7c16
JL
3688Some instructions clobber specific hard registers. To describe this,
3689write a third colon after the input operands, followed by the names of
3690the clobbered hard registers (given as strings). Here is a realistic
3691example for the VAX:
c1f7febf
RK
3692
3693@example
3694asm volatile ("movc3 %0,%1,%2"
3695 : /* no outputs */
3696 : "g" (from), "g" (to), "g" (count)
3697 : "r0", "r1", "r2", "r3", "r4", "r5");
3698@end example
3699
c5c76735
JL
3700You may not write a clobber description in a way that overlaps with an
3701input or output operand. For example, you may not have an operand
3702describing a register class with one member if you mention that register
3703in the clobber list. There is no way for you to specify that an input
3704operand is modified without also specifying it as an output
3705operand. Note that if all the output operands you specify are for this
3706purpose (and hence unused), you will then also need to specify
3707@code{volatile} for the @code{asm} construct, as described below, to
f0523f02 3708prevent GCC from deleting the @code{asm} statement as unused.
8fe1938e 3709
c1f7febf 3710If you refer to a particular hardware register from the assembler code,
c85f7c16
JL
3711you will probably have to list the register after the third colon to
3712tell the compiler the register's value is modified. In some assemblers,
3713the register names begin with @samp{%}; to produce one @samp{%} in the
3714assembler code, you must write @samp{%%} in the input.
3715
3716If your assembler instruction can alter the condition code register, add
f0523f02 3717@samp{cc} to the list of clobbered registers. GCC on some machines
c85f7c16
JL
3718represents the condition codes as a specific hardware register;
3719@samp{cc} serves to name this register. On other machines, the
3720condition code is handled differently, and specifying @samp{cc} has no
3721effect. But it is valid no matter what the machine.
c1f7febf
RK
3722
3723If your assembler instruction modifies memory in an unpredictable
c85f7c16 3724fashion, add @samp{memory} to the list of clobbered registers. This
f0523f02 3725will cause GCC to not keep memory values cached in registers across
dd40655a
GK
3726the assembler instruction. You will also want to add the
3727@code{volatile} keyword if the memory affected is not listed in the
3728inputs or outputs of the @code{asm}, as the @samp{memory} clobber does
3729not count as a side-effect of the @code{asm}.
c1f7febf 3730
c85f7c16 3731You can put multiple assembler instructions together in a single
8720914b
HPN
3732@code{asm} template, separated by the characters normally used in assembly
3733code for the system. A combination that works in most places is a newline
3734to break the line, plus a tab character to move to the instruction field
3735(written as @samp{\n\t}). Sometimes semicolons can be used, if the
3736assembler allows semicolons as a line-breaking character. Note that some
3737assembler dialects use semicolons to start a comment.
3738The input operands are guaranteed not to use any of the clobbered
c85f7c16
JL
3739registers, and neither will the output operands' addresses, so you can
3740read and write the clobbered registers as many times as you like. Here
3741is an example of multiple instructions in a template; it assumes the
3742subroutine @code{_foo} accepts arguments in registers 9 and 10:
c1f7febf
RK
3743
3744@example
8720914b 3745asm ("movl %0,r9\n\tmovl %1,r10\n\tcall _foo"
c1f7febf
RK
3746 : /* no outputs */
3747 : "g" (from), "g" (to)
3748 : "r9", "r10");
3749@end example
3750
f0523f02 3751Unless an output operand has the @samp{&} constraint modifier, GCC
c85f7c16
JL
3752may allocate it in the same register as an unrelated input operand, on
3753the assumption the inputs are consumed before the outputs are produced.
c1f7febf
RK
3754This assumption may be false if the assembler code actually consists of
3755more than one instruction. In such a case, use @samp{&} for each output
c85f7c16 3756operand that may not overlap an input. @xref{Modifiers}.
c1f7febf 3757
c85f7c16
JL
3758If you want to test the condition code produced by an assembler
3759instruction, you must include a branch and a label in the @code{asm}
3760construct, as follows:
c1f7febf
RK
3761
3762@example
8720914b 3763asm ("clr %0\n\tfrob %1\n\tbeq 0f\n\tmov #1,%0\n0:"
c1f7febf
RK
3764 : "g" (result)
3765 : "g" (input));
3766@end example
3767
3768@noindent
3769This assumes your assembler supports local labels, as the GNU assembler
3770and most Unix assemblers do.
3771
3772Speaking of labels, jumps from one @code{asm} to another are not
c85f7c16
JL
3773supported. The compiler's optimizers do not know about these jumps, and
3774therefore they cannot take account of them when deciding how to
c1f7febf
RK
3775optimize.
3776
3777@cindex macros containing @code{asm}
3778Usually the most convenient way to use these @code{asm} instructions is to
3779encapsulate them in macros that look like functions. For example,
3780
3781@example
3782#define sin(x) \
3783(@{ double __value, __arg = (x); \
3784 asm ("fsinx %1,%0": "=f" (__value): "f" (__arg)); \
3785 __value; @})
3786@end example
3787
3788@noindent
3789Here the variable @code{__arg} is used to make sure that the instruction
3790operates on a proper @code{double} value, and to accept only those
3791arguments @code{x} which can convert automatically to a @code{double}.
3792
c85f7c16
JL
3793Another way to make sure the instruction operates on the correct data
3794type is to use a cast in the @code{asm}. This is different from using a
c1f7febf
RK
3795variable @code{__arg} in that it converts more different types. For
3796example, if the desired type were @code{int}, casting the argument to
3797@code{int} would accept a pointer with no complaint, while assigning the
3798argument to an @code{int} variable named @code{__arg} would warn about
3799using a pointer unless the caller explicitly casts it.
3800
f0523f02 3801If an @code{asm} has output operands, GCC assumes for optimization
c85f7c16
JL
3802purposes the instruction has no side effects except to change the output
3803operands. This does not mean instructions with a side effect cannot be
3804used, but you must be careful, because the compiler may eliminate them
3805if the output operands aren't used, or move them out of loops, or
3806replace two with one if they constitute a common subexpression. Also,
3807if your instruction does have a side effect on a variable that otherwise
3808appears not to change, the old value of the variable may be reused later
3809if it happens to be found in a register.
c1f7febf
RK
3810
3811You can prevent an @code{asm} instruction from being deleted, moved
3812significantly, or combined, by writing the keyword @code{volatile} after
3813the @code{asm}. For example:
3814
3815@example
310668e8
JM
3816#define get_and_set_priority(new) \
3817(@{ int __old; \
3818 asm volatile ("get_and_set_priority %0, %1" \
3819 : "=g" (__old) : "g" (new)); \
c85f7c16 3820 __old; @})
24f98470 3821@end example
c1f7febf
RK
3822
3823@noindent
f0523f02 3824If you write an @code{asm} instruction with no outputs, GCC will know
c85f7c16 3825the instruction has side-effects and will not delete the instruction or
e71b34aa 3826move it outside of loops.
c85f7c16 3827
e71b34aa
MM
3828The @code{volatile} keyword indicates that the instruction has
3829important side-effects. GCC will not delete a volatile @code{asm} if
3830it is reachable. (The instruction can still be deleted if GCC can
3831prove that control-flow will never reach the location of the
3832instruction.) In addition, GCC will not reschedule instructions
3833across a volatile @code{asm} instruction. For example:
3834
3835@example
bd78000b 3836*(volatile int *)addr = foo;
e71b34aa
MM
3837asm volatile ("eieio" : : );
3838@end example
3839
ebb48a4d 3840@noindent
e71b34aa
MM
3841Assume @code{addr} contains the address of a memory mapped device
3842register. The PowerPC @code{eieio} instruction (Enforce In-order
aee96fe9 3843Execution of I/O) tells the CPU to make sure that the store to that
161d7b59 3844device register happens before it issues any other I/O@.
c1f7febf
RK
3845
3846Note that even a volatile @code{asm} instruction can be moved in ways
3847that appear insignificant to the compiler, such as across jump
3848instructions. You can't expect a sequence of volatile @code{asm}
3849instructions to remain perfectly consecutive. If you want consecutive
e71b34aa
MM
3850output, use a single @code{asm}. Also, GCC will perform some
3851optimizations across a volatile @code{asm} instruction; GCC does not
3852``forget everything'' when it encounters a volatile @code{asm}
3853instruction the way some other compilers do.
3854
3855An @code{asm} instruction without any operands or clobbers (an ``old
3856style'' @code{asm}) will be treated identically to a volatile
3857@code{asm} instruction.
c1f7febf
RK
3858
3859It is a natural idea to look for a way to give access to the condition
3860code left by the assembler instruction. However, when we attempted to
3861implement this, we found no way to make it work reliably. The problem
3862is that output operands might need reloading, which would result in
3863additional following ``store'' instructions. On most machines, these
3864instructions would alter the condition code before there was time to
3865test it. This problem doesn't arise for ordinary ``test'' and
3866``compare'' instructions because they don't have any output operands.
3867
eda3fbbe
GB
3868For reasons similar to those described above, it is not possible to give
3869an assembler instruction access to the condition code left by previous
3870instructions.
3871
5490d604 3872If you are writing a header file that should be includable in ISO C
c1f7febf
RK
3873programs, write @code{__asm__} instead of @code{asm}. @xref{Alternate
3874Keywords}.
3875
fe0ce426
JH
3876@subsection i386 floating point asm operands
3877
3878There are several rules on the usage of stack-like regs in
3879asm_operands insns. These rules apply only to the operands that are
3880stack-like regs:
3881
3882@enumerate
3883@item
3884Given a set of input regs that die in an asm_operands, it is
3885necessary to know which are implicitly popped by the asm, and
3886which must be explicitly popped by gcc.
3887
3888An input reg that is implicitly popped by the asm must be
3889explicitly clobbered, unless it is constrained to match an
3890output operand.
3891
3892@item
3893For any input reg that is implicitly popped by an asm, it is
3894necessary to know how to adjust the stack to compensate for the pop.
3895If any non-popped input is closer to the top of the reg-stack than
3896the implicitly popped reg, it would not be possible to know what the
84330467 3897stack looked like---it's not clear how the rest of the stack ``slides
fe0ce426
JH
3898up''.
3899
3900All implicitly popped input regs must be closer to the top of
3901the reg-stack than any input that is not implicitly popped.
3902
3903It is possible that if an input dies in an insn, reload might
3904use the input reg for an output reload. Consider this example:
3905
3906@example
3907asm ("foo" : "=t" (a) : "f" (b));
3908@end example
3909
3910This asm says that input B is not popped by the asm, and that
c771326b 3911the asm pushes a result onto the reg-stack, i.e., the stack is one
fe0ce426
JH
3912deeper after the asm than it was before. But, it is possible that
3913reload will think that it can use the same reg for both the input and
3914the output, if input B dies in this insn.
3915
3916If any input operand uses the @code{f} constraint, all output reg
3917constraints must use the @code{&} earlyclobber.
3918
3919The asm above would be written as
3920
3921@example
3922asm ("foo" : "=&t" (a) : "f" (b));
3923@end example
3924
3925@item
3926Some operands need to be in particular places on the stack. All
84330467 3927output operands fall in this category---there is no other way to
fe0ce426
JH
3928know which regs the outputs appear in unless the user indicates
3929this in the constraints.
3930
3931Output operands must specifically indicate which reg an output
3932appears in after an asm. @code{=f} is not allowed: the operand
3933constraints must select a class with a single reg.
3934
3935@item
3936Output operands may not be ``inserted'' between existing stack regs.
3937Since no 387 opcode uses a read/write operand, all output operands
3938are dead before the asm_operands, and are pushed by the asm_operands.
3939It makes no sense to push anywhere but the top of the reg-stack.
3940
3941Output operands must start at the top of the reg-stack: output
3942operands may not ``skip'' a reg.
3943
3944@item
3945Some asm statements may need extra stack space for internal
3946calculations. This can be guaranteed by clobbering stack registers
3947unrelated to the inputs and outputs.
3948
3949@end enumerate
3950
3951Here are a couple of reasonable asms to want to write. This asm
3952takes one input, which is internally popped, and produces two outputs.
3953
3954@example
3955asm ("fsincos" : "=t" (cos), "=u" (sin) : "0" (inp));
3956@end example
3957
3958This asm takes two inputs, which are popped by the @code{fyl2xp1} opcode,
3959and replaces them with one output. The user must code the @code{st(1)}
3960clobber for reg-stack.c to know that @code{fyl2xp1} pops both inputs.
3961
3962@example
3963asm ("fyl2xp1" : "=t" (result) : "0" (x), "u" (y) : "st(1)");
3964@end example
3965
c1f7febf 3966@include md.texi
c1f7febf
RK
3967
3968@node Asm Labels
3969@section Controlling Names Used in Assembler Code
3970@cindex assembler names for identifiers
3971@cindex names used in assembler code
3972@cindex identifiers, names in assembler code
3973
3974You can specify the name to be used in the assembler code for a C
3975function or variable by writing the @code{asm} (or @code{__asm__})
3976keyword after the declarator as follows:
3977
3978@example
3979int foo asm ("myfoo") = 2;
3980@end example
3981
3982@noindent
3983This specifies that the name to be used for the variable @code{foo} in
3984the assembler code should be @samp{myfoo} rather than the usual
3985@samp{_foo}.
3986
3987On systems where an underscore is normally prepended to the name of a C
3988function or variable, this feature allows you to define names for the
3989linker that do not start with an underscore.
3990
0adc3c19
MM
3991It does not make sense to use this feature with a non-static local
3992variable since such variables do not have assembler names. If you are
3993trying to put the variable in a particular register, see @ref{Explicit
3994Reg Vars}. GCC presently accepts such code with a warning, but will
3995probably be changed to issue an error, rather than a warning, in the
3996future.
3997
c1f7febf
RK
3998You cannot use @code{asm} in this way in a function @emph{definition}; but
3999you can get the same effect by writing a declaration for the function
4000before its definition and putting @code{asm} there, like this:
4001
4002@example
4003extern func () asm ("FUNC");
4004
4005func (x, y)
4006 int x, y;
0d893a63 4007/* @r{@dots{}} */
c1f7febf
RK
4008@end example
4009
4010It is up to you to make sure that the assembler names you choose do not
4011conflict with any other assembler symbols. Also, you must not use a
f0523f02
JM
4012register name; that would produce completely invalid assembler code. GCC
4013does not as yet have the ability to store static variables in registers.
c1f7febf
RK
4014Perhaps that will be added.
4015
4016@node Explicit Reg Vars
4017@section Variables in Specified Registers
4018@cindex explicit register variables
4019@cindex variables in specified registers
4020@cindex specified registers
4021@cindex registers, global allocation
4022
4023GNU C allows you to put a few global variables into specified hardware
4024registers. You can also specify the register in which an ordinary
4025register variable should be allocated.
4026
4027@itemize @bullet
4028@item
4029Global register variables reserve registers throughout the program.
4030This may be useful in programs such as programming language
4031interpreters which have a couple of global variables that are accessed
4032very often.
4033
4034@item
4035Local register variables in specific registers do not reserve the
4036registers. The compiler's data flow analysis is capable of determining
4037where the specified registers contain live values, and where they are
8d344fbc 4038available for other uses. Stores into local register variables may be deleted
0deaf590
JL
4039when they appear to be dead according to dataflow analysis. References
4040to local register variables may be deleted or moved or simplified.
c1f7febf
RK
4041
4042These local variables are sometimes convenient for use with the extended
4043@code{asm} feature (@pxref{Extended Asm}), if you want to write one
4044output of the assembler instruction directly into a particular register.
4045(This will work provided the register you specify fits the constraints
4046specified for that operand in the @code{asm}.)
4047@end itemize
4048
4049@menu
4050* Global Reg Vars::
4051* Local Reg Vars::
4052@end menu
4053
4054@node Global Reg Vars
4055@subsection Defining Global Register Variables
4056@cindex global register variables
4057@cindex registers, global variables in
4058
4059You can define a global register variable in GNU C like this:
4060
4061@example
4062register int *foo asm ("a5");
4063@end example
4064
4065@noindent
4066Here @code{a5} is the name of the register which should be used. Choose a
4067register which is normally saved and restored by function calls on your
4068machine, so that library routines will not clobber it.
4069
4070Naturally the register name is cpu-dependent, so you would need to
4071conditionalize your program according to cpu type. The register
4072@code{a5} would be a good choice on a 68000 for a variable of pointer
4073type. On machines with register windows, be sure to choose a ``global''
4074register that is not affected magically by the function call mechanism.
4075
4076In addition, operating systems on one type of cpu may differ in how they
4077name the registers; then you would need additional conditionals. For
4078example, some 68000 operating systems call this register @code{%a5}.
4079
4080Eventually there may be a way of asking the compiler to choose a register
4081automatically, but first we need to figure out how it should choose and
4082how to enable you to guide the choice. No solution is evident.
4083
4084Defining a global register variable in a certain register reserves that
4085register entirely for this use, at least within the current compilation.
4086The register will not be allocated for any other purpose in the functions
4087in the current compilation. The register will not be saved and restored by
4088these functions. Stores into this register are never deleted even if they
4089would appear to be dead, but references may be deleted or moved or
4090simplified.
4091
4092It is not safe to access the global register variables from signal
4093handlers, or from more than one thread of control, because the system
4094library routines may temporarily use the register for other things (unless
4095you recompile them specially for the task at hand).
4096
4097@cindex @code{qsort}, and global register variables
4098It is not safe for one function that uses a global register variable to
4099call another such function @code{foo} by way of a third function
e979f9e8 4100@code{lose} that was compiled without knowledge of this variable (i.e.@: in a
c1f7febf
RK
4101different source file in which the variable wasn't declared). This is
4102because @code{lose} might save the register and put some other value there.
4103For example, you can't expect a global register variable to be available in
4104the comparison-function that you pass to @code{qsort}, since @code{qsort}
4105might have put something else in that register. (If you are prepared to
4106recompile @code{qsort} with the same global register variable, you can
4107solve this problem.)
4108
4109If you want to recompile @code{qsort} or other source files which do not
4110actually use your global register variable, so that they will not use that
4111register for any other purpose, then it suffices to specify the compiler
84330467 4112option @option{-ffixed-@var{reg}}. You need not actually add a global
c1f7febf
RK
4113register declaration to their source code.
4114
4115A function which can alter the value of a global register variable cannot
4116safely be called from a function compiled without this variable, because it
4117could clobber the value the caller expects to find there on return.
4118Therefore, the function which is the entry point into the part of the
4119program that uses the global register variable must explicitly save and
4120restore the value which belongs to its caller.
4121
4122@cindex register variable after @code{longjmp}
4123@cindex global register after @code{longjmp}
4124@cindex value after @code{longjmp}
4125@findex longjmp
4126@findex setjmp
4127On most machines, @code{longjmp} will restore to each global register
4128variable the value it had at the time of the @code{setjmp}. On some
4129machines, however, @code{longjmp} will not change the value of global
4130register variables. To be portable, the function that called @code{setjmp}
4131should make other arrangements to save the values of the global register
4132variables, and to restore them in a @code{longjmp}. This way, the same
4133thing will happen regardless of what @code{longjmp} does.
4134
4135All global register variable declarations must precede all function
4136definitions. If such a declaration could appear after function
4137definitions, the declaration would be too late to prevent the register from
4138being used for other purposes in the preceding functions.
4139
4140Global register variables may not have initial values, because an
4141executable file has no means to supply initial contents for a register.
4142
4143On the Sparc, there are reports that g3 @dots{} g7 are suitable
4144registers, but certain library functions, such as @code{getwd}, as well
4145as the subroutines for division and remainder, modify g3 and g4. g1 and
4146g2 are local temporaries.
4147
4148On the 68000, a2 @dots{} a5 should be suitable, as should d2 @dots{} d7.
4149Of course, it will not do to use more than a few of those.
4150
4151@node Local Reg Vars
4152@subsection Specifying Registers for Local Variables
4153@cindex local variables, specifying registers
4154@cindex specifying registers for local variables
4155@cindex registers for local variables
4156
4157You can define a local register variable with a specified register
4158like this:
4159
4160@example
4161register int *foo asm ("a5");
4162@end example
4163
4164@noindent
4165Here @code{a5} is the name of the register which should be used. Note
4166that this is the same syntax used for defining global register
4167variables, but for a local variable it would appear within a function.
4168
4169Naturally the register name is cpu-dependent, but this is not a
4170problem, since specific registers are most often useful with explicit
4171assembler instructions (@pxref{Extended Asm}). Both of these things
4172generally require that you conditionalize your program according to
4173cpu type.
4174
4175In addition, operating systems on one type of cpu may differ in how they
4176name the registers; then you would need additional conditionals. For
4177example, some 68000 operating systems call this register @code{%a5}.
4178
c1f7febf
RK
4179Defining such a register variable does not reserve the register; it
4180remains available for other uses in places where flow control determines
4181the variable's value is not live. However, these registers are made
e5e809f4
JL
4182unavailable for use in the reload pass; excessive use of this feature
4183leaves the compiler too few available registers to compile certain
4184functions.
4185
f0523f02 4186This option does not guarantee that GCC will generate code that has
e5e809f4
JL
4187this variable in the register you specify at all times. You may not
4188code an explicit reference to this register in an @code{asm} statement
4189and assume it will always refer to this variable.
c1f7febf 4190
8d344fbc 4191Stores into local register variables may be deleted when they appear to be dead
0deaf590
JL
4192according to dataflow analysis. References to local register variables may
4193be deleted or moved or simplified.
4194
c1f7febf
RK
4195@node Alternate Keywords
4196@section Alternate Keywords
4197@cindex alternate keywords
4198@cindex keywords, alternate
4199
5490d604 4200@option{-ansi} and the various @option{-std} options disable certain
f458d1d5
ZW
4201keywords. This causes trouble when you want to use GNU C extensions, or
4202a general-purpose header file that should be usable by all programs,
4203including ISO C programs. The keywords @code{asm}, @code{typeof} and
4204@code{inline} are not available in programs compiled with
4205@option{-ansi} or @option{-std} (although @code{inline} can be used in a
4206program compiled with @option{-std=c99}). The ISO C99 keyword
5490d604
JM
4207@code{restrict} is only available when @option{-std=gnu99} (which will
4208eventually be the default) or @option{-std=c99} (or the equivalent
bd819a4a 4209@option{-std=iso9899:1999}) is used.
c1f7febf
RK
4210
4211The way to solve these problems is to put @samp{__} at the beginning and
4212end of each problematical keyword. For example, use @code{__asm__}
f458d1d5 4213instead of @code{asm}, and @code{__inline__} instead of @code{inline}.
c1f7febf
RK
4214
4215Other C compilers won't accept these alternative keywords; if you want to
4216compile with another compiler, you can define the alternate keywords as
4217macros to replace them with the customary keywords. It looks like this:
4218
4219@example
4220#ifndef __GNUC__
4221#define __asm__ asm
4222#endif
4223@end example
4224
6e6b0525 4225@findex __extension__
84330467
JM
4226@opindex pedantic
4227@option{-pedantic} and other options cause warnings for many GNU C extensions.
dbe519e0 4228You can
c1f7febf
RK
4229prevent such warnings within one expression by writing
4230@code{__extension__} before the expression. @code{__extension__} has no
4231effect aside from this.
4232
4233@node Incomplete Enums
4234@section Incomplete @code{enum} Types
4235
4236You can define an @code{enum} tag without specifying its possible values.
4237This results in an incomplete type, much like what you get if you write
4238@code{struct foo} without describing the elements. A later declaration
4239which does specify the possible values completes the type.
4240
4241You can't allocate variables or storage using the type while it is
4242incomplete. However, you can work with pointers to that type.
4243
4244This extension may not be very useful, but it makes the handling of
4245@code{enum} more consistent with the way @code{struct} and @code{union}
4246are handled.
4247
4248This extension is not supported by GNU C++.
4249
4250@node Function Names
4251@section Function Names as Strings
4b404517
JM
4252@cindex @code{__FUNCTION__} identifier
4253@cindex @code{__PRETTY_FUNCTION__} identifier
4254@cindex @code{__func__} identifier
c1f7febf 4255
f0523f02 4256GCC predefines two magic identifiers to hold the name of the current
767094dd
JM
4257function. The identifier @code{__FUNCTION__} holds the name of the function
4258as it appears in the source. The identifier @code{__PRETTY_FUNCTION__}
22acfb79
NM
4259holds the name of the function pretty printed in a language specific
4260fashion.
c1f7febf
RK
4261
4262These names are always the same in a C function, but in a C++ function
4263they may be different. For example, this program:
4264
4265@smallexample
4266extern "C" @{
4267extern int printf (char *, ...);
4268@}
4269
4270class a @{
4271 public:
4272 sub (int i)
4273 @{
4274 printf ("__FUNCTION__ = %s\n", __FUNCTION__);
4275 printf ("__PRETTY_FUNCTION__ = %s\n", __PRETTY_FUNCTION__);
4276 @}
4277@};
4278
4279int
4280main (void)
4281@{
4282 a ax;
4283 ax.sub (0);
4284 return 0;
4285@}
4286@end smallexample
4287
4288@noindent
4289gives this output:
4290
4291@smallexample
4292__FUNCTION__ = sub
4293__PRETTY_FUNCTION__ = int a::sub (int)
4294@end smallexample
4295
22acfb79 4296The compiler automagically replaces the identifiers with a string
767094dd 4297literal containing the appropriate name. Thus, they are neither
22acfb79 4298preprocessor macros, like @code{__FILE__} and @code{__LINE__}, nor
767094dd
JM
4299variables. This means that they catenate with other string literals, and
4300that they can be used to initialize char arrays. For example
22acfb79
NM
4301
4302@smallexample
4303char here[] = "Function " __FUNCTION__ " in " __FILE__;
4304@end smallexample
4305
4306On the other hand, @samp{#ifdef __FUNCTION__} does not have any special
c1f7febf
RK
4307meaning inside a function, since the preprocessor does not do anything
4308special with the identifier @code{__FUNCTION__}.
4309
9aa8a1df
NB
4310Note that these semantics are deprecated, and that GCC 3.2 will handle
4311@code{__FUNCTION__} and @code{__PRETTY_FUNCTION__} the same way as
4312@code{__func__}. @code{__func__} is defined by the ISO standard C99:
22acfb79
NM
4313
4314@display
4315The identifier @code{__func__} is implicitly declared by the translator
4316as if, immediately following the opening brace of each function
4317definition, the declaration
4318
4319@smallexample
4320static const char __func__[] = "function-name";
4321@end smallexample
4322
4323appeared, where function-name is the name of the lexically-enclosing
767094dd 4324function. This name is the unadorned name of the function.
22acfb79
NM
4325@end display
4326
4327By this definition, @code{__func__} is a variable, not a string literal.
4328In particular, @code{__func__} does not catenate with other string
4329literals.
4330
4331In @code{C++}, @code{__FUNCTION__} and @code{__PRETTY_FUNCTION__} are
4332variables, declared in the same way as @code{__func__}.
4333
c1f7febf
RK
4334@node Return Address
4335@section Getting the Return or Frame Address of a Function
4336
4337These functions may be used to get information about the callers of a
4338function.
4339
84330467 4340@deftypefn {Built-in Function} {void *} __builtin_return_address (unsigned int @var{level})
c1f7febf
RK
4341This function returns the return address of the current function, or of
4342one of its callers. The @var{level} argument is number of frames to
4343scan up the call stack. A value of @code{0} yields the return address
4344of the current function, a value of @code{1} yields the return address
95b1627e
EC
4345of the caller of the current function, and so forth. When inlining
4346the expected behavior is that the function will return the address of
4347the function that will be returned to. To work around this behavior use
4348the @code{noinline} function attribute.
c1f7febf
RK
4349
4350The @var{level} argument must be a constant integer.
4351
4352On some machines it may be impossible to determine the return address of
4353any function other than the current one; in such cases, or when the top
dd96fbc5
L
4354of the stack has been reached, this function will return @code{0} or a
4355random value. In addition, @code{__builtin_frame_address} may be used
4356to determine if the top of the stack has been reached.
c1f7febf 4357
df2a54e9 4358This function should only be used with a nonzero argument for debugging
c1f7febf 4359purposes.
84330467 4360@end deftypefn
c1f7febf 4361
84330467 4362@deftypefn {Built-in Function} {void *} __builtin_frame_address (unsigned int @var{level})
c1f7febf
RK
4363This function is similar to @code{__builtin_return_address}, but it
4364returns the address of the function frame rather than the return address
4365of the function. Calling @code{__builtin_frame_address} with a value of
4366@code{0} yields the frame address of the current function, a value of
4367@code{1} yields the frame address of the caller of the current function,
4368and so forth.
4369
4370The frame is the area on the stack which holds local variables and saved
4371registers. The frame address is normally the address of the first word
4372pushed on to the stack by the function. However, the exact definition
4373depends upon the processor and the calling convention. If the processor
4374has a dedicated frame pointer register, and the function has a frame,
4375then @code{__builtin_frame_address} will return the value of the frame
4376pointer register.
4377
dd96fbc5
L
4378On some machines it may be impossible to determine the frame address of
4379any function other than the current one; in such cases, or when the top
4380of the stack has been reached, this function will return @code{0} if
4381the first frame pointer is properly initialized by the startup code.
4382
df2a54e9 4383This function should only be used with a nonzero argument for debugging
dd96fbc5 4384purposes.
84330467 4385@end deftypefn
c1f7febf 4386
1255c85c
BS
4387@node Vector Extensions
4388@section Using vector instructions through built-in functions
4389
4390On some targets, the instruction set contains SIMD vector instructions that
4391operate on multiple values contained in one large register at the same time.
4392For example, on the i386 the MMX, 3Dnow! and SSE extensions can be used
4393this way.
4394
4395The first step in using these extensions is to provide the necessary data
4396types. This should be done using an appropriate @code{typedef}:
4397
4398@example
4399typedef int v4si __attribute__ ((mode(V4SI)));
4400@end example
4401
4402The base type @code{int} is effectively ignored by the compiler, the
4403actual properties of the new type @code{v4si} are defined by the
4404@code{__attribute__}. It defines the machine mode to be used; for vector
80ebf43e
BS
4405types these have the form @code{V@var{n}@var{B}}; @var{n} should be the
4406number of elements in the vector, and @var{B} should be the base mode of the
1255c85c
BS
4407individual elements. The following can be used as base modes:
4408
4409@table @code
4410@item QI
4411An integer that is as wide as the smallest addressable unit, usually 8 bits.
4412@item HI
4413An integer, twice as wide as a QI mode integer, usually 16 bits.
4414@item SI
4415An integer, four times as wide as a QI mode integer, usually 32 bits.
4416@item DI
4417An integer, eight times as wide as a QI mode integer, usually 64 bits.
4418@item SF
4419A floating point value, as wide as a SI mode integer, usually 32 bits.
4420@item DF
4421A floating point value, as wide as a DI mode integer, usually 64 bits.
4422@end table
4423
1255c85c
BS
4424There are no @code{V1xx} vector modes - they would be identical to the
4425corresponding base mode.
4426
cb2a532e
AH
4427Specifying a combination that is not valid for the current architecture
4428will cause gcc to synthesize the instructions using a narrower mode.
4429For example, if you specify a variable of type @code{V4SI} and your
4430architecture does not allow for this specific SIMD type, gcc will
4431produce code that uses 4 @code{SIs}.
4432
4433The types defined in this manner can be used with a subset of normal C
4434operations. Currently, gcc will allow using the following operators on
4435these types: @code{+, -, *, /, unary minus}@.
4436
4437The operations behave like C++ @code{valarrays}. Addition is defined as
4438the addition of the corresponding elements of the operands. For
4439example, in the code below, each of the 4 elements in @var{a} will be
4440added to the corresponding 4 elements in @var{b} and the resulting
4441vector will be stored in @var{c}.
4442
4443@example
4444typedef int v4si __attribute__ ((mode(V4SI)));
4445
4446v4si a, b, c;
4447
4448c = a + b;
4449@end example
4450
4451Subtraction, multiplication, and division operate in a similar manner.
4452Likewise, the result of using the unary minus operator on a vector type
4453is a vector whose elements are the negative value of the corresponding
4454elements in the operand.
4455
4456You can declare variables and use them in function calls and returns, as
4457well as in assignments and some casts. You can specify a vector type as
4458a return type for a function. Vector types can also be used as function
4459arguments. It is possible to cast from one vector type to another,
4460provided they are of the same size (in fact, you can also cast vectors
4461to and from other datatypes of the same size).
4462
4463You cannot operate between vectors of different lengths or different
4464signness without a cast.
4465
4466A port that supports hardware vector operations, usually provides a set
4467of built-in functions that can be used to operate on vectors. For
4468example, a function to add two vectors and multiply the result by a
4469third could look like this:
1255c85c
BS
4470
4471@example
4472v4si f (v4si a, v4si b, v4si c)
4473@{
4474 v4si tmp = __builtin_addv4si (a, b);
4475 return __builtin_mulv4si (tmp, c);
4476@}
4477
4478@end example
4479
185ebd6c 4480@node Other Builtins
f0523f02 4481@section Other built-in functions provided by GCC
c771326b 4482@cindex built-in functions
01702459
JM
4483@findex __builtin_isgreater
4484@findex __builtin_isgreaterequal
4485@findex __builtin_isless
4486@findex __builtin_islessequal
4487@findex __builtin_islessgreater
4488@findex __builtin_isunordered
4489@findex abort
4490@findex abs
4491@findex alloca
4492@findex bcmp
4493@findex bzero
341e3d11
JM
4494@findex cimag
4495@findex cimagf
4496@findex cimagl
4497@findex conj
4498@findex conjf
4499@findex conjl
01702459
JM
4500@findex cos
4501@findex cosf
4502@findex cosl
341e3d11
JM
4503@findex creal
4504@findex crealf
4505@findex creall
01702459
JM
4506@findex exit
4507@findex _exit
796cdb65 4508@findex _Exit
e7b489c8
RS
4509@findex exp
4510@findex expf
4511@findex expl
01702459
JM
4512@findex fabs
4513@findex fabsf
4514@findex fabsl
4515@findex ffs
18f988a0 4516@findex fprintf
b4c984fb 4517@findex fprintf_unlocked
01702459 4518@findex fputs
b4c984fb 4519@findex fputs_unlocked
e78f4a97 4520@findex imaxabs
c7b6c6cd 4521@findex index
01702459
JM
4522@findex labs
4523@findex llabs
e7b489c8
RS
4524@findex log
4525@findex logf
4526@findex logl
01702459
JM
4527@findex memcmp
4528@findex memcpy
4529@findex memset
4530@findex printf
b4c984fb 4531@findex printf_unlocked
c7b6c6cd 4532@findex rindex
01702459
JM
4533@findex sin
4534@findex sinf
4535@findex sinl
4536@findex sqrt
4537@findex sqrtf
4538@findex sqrtl
d118937d 4539@findex strcat
01702459
JM
4540@findex strchr
4541@findex strcmp
4542@findex strcpy
d118937d 4543@findex strcspn
01702459 4544@findex strlen
d118937d 4545@findex strncat
da9e9f08
KG
4546@findex strncmp
4547@findex strncpy
01702459
JM
4548@findex strpbrk
4549@findex strrchr
d118937d 4550@findex strspn
01702459 4551@findex strstr
185ebd6c 4552
f0523f02 4553GCC provides a large number of built-in functions other than the ones
185ebd6c
RH
4554mentioned above. Some of these are for internal use in the processing
4555of exceptions or variable-length argument lists and will not be
4556documented here because they may change from time to time; we do not
4557recommend general use of these functions.
4558
4559The remaining functions are provided for optimization purposes.
4560
84330467 4561@opindex fno-builtin
9c34dbbf
ZW
4562GCC includes built-in versions of many of the functions in the standard
4563C library. The versions prefixed with @code{__builtin_} will always be
4564treated as having the same meaning as the C library function even if you
4565specify the @option{-fno-builtin} option. (@pxref{C Dialect Options})
4566Many of these functions are only optimized in certain cases; if they are
01702459
JM
4567not optimized in a particular case, a call to the library function will
4568be emitted.
4569
84330467
JM
4570@opindex ansi
4571@opindex std
796cdb65
JM
4572The functions @code{abort}, @code{exit}, @code{_Exit} and @code{_exit}
4573are recognized and presumed not to return, but otherwise are not built
84330467
JM
4574in. @code{_exit} is not recognized in strict ISO C mode (@option{-ansi},
4575@option{-std=c89} or @option{-std=c99}). @code{_Exit} is not recognized in
df061a43
RS
4576strict C89 mode (@option{-ansi} or @option{-std=c89}). All these functions
4577have corresponding versions prefixed with @code{__builtin_}, which may be
4578used even in strict C89 mode.
01702459
JM
4579
4580Outside strict ISO C mode, the functions @code{alloca}, @code{bcmp},
b4c984fb
KG
4581@code{bzero}, @code{index}, @code{rindex}, @code{ffs}, @code{fputs_unlocked},
4582@code{printf_unlocked} and @code{fprintf_unlocked} may be handled as
4583built-in functions. All these functions have corresponding versions
9c34dbbf
ZW
4584prefixed with @code{__builtin_}, which may be used even in strict C89
4585mode.
01702459 4586
341e3d11
JM
4587The ISO C99 functions @code{conj}, @code{conjf}, @code{conjl},
4588@code{creal}, @code{crealf}, @code{creall}, @code{cimag}, @code{cimagf},
9c34dbbf 4589@code{cimagl}, @code{llabs} and @code{imaxabs} are handled as built-in
3764f879 4590functions except in strict ISO C90 mode. There are also built-in
9c34dbbf 4591versions of the ISO C99 functions @code{cosf}, @code{cosl},
e7b489c8
RS
4592@code{expf}, @code{expl}, @code{fabsf}, @code{fabsl},
4593@code{logf}, @code{logl}, @code{sinf}, @code{sinl}, @code{sqrtf}, and
3764f879 4594@code{sqrtl}, that are recognized in any mode since ISO C90 reserves
9c34dbbf
ZW
4595these names for the purpose to which ISO C99 puts them. All these
4596functions have corresponding versions prefixed with @code{__builtin_}.
4597
e7b489c8
RS
4598The ISO C90 functions @code{abs}, @code{cos}, @code{exp}, @code{fabs},
4599@code{fprintf}, @code{fputs}, @code{labs}, @code{log},
4600@code{memcmp}, @code{memcpy},
18f988a0
KG
4601@code{memset}, @code{printf}, @code{sin}, @code{sqrt}, @code{strcat},
4602@code{strchr}, @code{strcmp}, @code{strcpy}, @code{strcspn},
4603@code{strlen}, @code{strncat}, @code{strncmp}, @code{strncpy},
9c34dbbf
ZW
4604@code{strpbrk}, @code{strrchr}, @code{strspn}, and @code{strstr} are all
4605recognized as built-in functions unless @option{-fno-builtin} is
7d14c755 4606specified (or @option{-fno-builtin-@var{function}} is specified for an
dc6f4158
AJ
4607individual function). All of these functions have corresponding
4608versions prefixed with @code{__builtin_}.
9c34dbbf
ZW
4609
4610GCC provides built-in versions of the ISO C99 floating point comparison
4611macros that avoid raising exceptions for unordered operands. They have
4612the same names as the standard macros ( @code{isgreater},
4613@code{isgreaterequal}, @code{isless}, @code{islessequal},
4614@code{islessgreater}, and @code{isunordered}) , with @code{__builtin_}
4615prefixed. We intend for a library implementor to be able to simply
4616@code{#define} each standard macro to its built-in equivalent.
185ebd6c 4617
ecbcf7b3
AH
4618@deftypefn {Built-in Function} int __builtin_types_compatible_p (@var{type1}, @var{type2})
4619
4620You can use the built-in function @code{__builtin_types_compatible_p} to
4621determine whether two types are the same.
4622
4623This built-in function returns 1 if the unqualified versions of the
4624types @var{type1} and @var{type2} (which are types, not expressions) are
4625compatible, 0 otherwise. The result of this built-in function can be
4626used in integer constant expressions.
4627
4628This built-in function ignores top level qualifiers (e.g., @code{const},
4629@code{volatile}). For example, @code{int} is equivalent to @code{const
4630int}.
4631
4632The type @code{int[]} and @code{int[5]} are compatible. On the other
4633hand, @code{int} and @code{char *} are not compatible, even if the size
4634of their types, on the particular architecture are the same. Also, the
4635amount of pointer indirection is taken into account when determining
4636similarity. Consequently, @code{short *} is not similar to
4637@code{short **}. Furthermore, two types that are typedefed are
4638considered compatible if their underlying types are compatible.
4639
4640An @code{enum} type is considered to be compatible with another
4641@code{enum} type. For example, @code{enum @{foo, bar@}} is similar to
4642@code{enum @{hot, dog@}}.
4643
4644You would typically use this function in code whose execution varies
4645depending on the arguments' types. For example:
4646
4647@smallexample
6e5bb5ad
JM
4648#define foo(x) \
4649 (@{ \
4650 typeof (x) tmp; \
4651 if (__builtin_types_compatible_p (typeof (x), long double)) \
4652 tmp = foo_long_double (tmp); \
4653 else if (__builtin_types_compatible_p (typeof (x), double)) \
4654 tmp = foo_double (tmp); \
4655 else if (__builtin_types_compatible_p (typeof (x), float)) \
4656 tmp = foo_float (tmp); \
4657 else \
4658 abort (); \
4659 tmp; \
ecbcf7b3
AH
4660 @})
4661@end smallexample
4662
4663@emph{Note:} This construct is only available for C.
4664
4665@end deftypefn
4666
4667@deftypefn {Built-in Function} @var{type} __builtin_choose_expr (@var{const_exp}, @var{exp1}, @var{exp2})
4668
4669You can use the built-in function @code{__builtin_choose_expr} to
4670evaluate code depending on the value of a constant expression. This
4671built-in function returns @var{exp1} if @var{const_exp}, which is a
4672constant expression that must be able to be determined at compile time,
4673is nonzero. Otherwise it returns 0.
4674
4675This built-in function is analogous to the @samp{? :} operator in C,
4676except that the expression returned has its type unaltered by promotion
4677rules. Also, the built-in function does not evaluate the expression
4678that was not chosen. For example, if @var{const_exp} evaluates to true,
4679@var{exp2} is not evaluated even if it has side-effects.
4680
4681This built-in function can return an lvalue if the chosen argument is an
4682lvalue.
4683
4684If @var{exp1} is returned, the return type is the same as @var{exp1}'s
4685type. Similarly, if @var{exp2} is returned, its return type is the same
4686as @var{exp2}.
4687
4688Example:
4689
4690@smallexample
478c9e72
JJ
4691#define foo(x) \
4692 __builtin_choose_expr ( \
4693 __builtin_types_compatible_p (typeof (x), double), \
4694 foo_double (x), \
4695 __builtin_choose_expr ( \
4696 __builtin_types_compatible_p (typeof (x), float), \
4697 foo_float (x), \
4698 /* @r{The void expression results in a compile-time error} \
4699 @r{when assigning the result to something.} */ \
ecbcf7b3
AH
4700 (void)0))
4701@end smallexample
4702
4703@emph{Note:} This construct is only available for C. Furthermore, the
4704unused expression (@var{exp1} or @var{exp2} depending on the value of
4705@var{const_exp}) may still generate syntax errors. This may change in
4706future revisions.
4707
4708@end deftypefn
4709
84330467
JM
4710@deftypefn {Built-in Function} int __builtin_constant_p (@var{exp})
4711You can use the built-in function @code{__builtin_constant_p} to
185ebd6c 4712determine if a value is known to be constant at compile-time and hence
f0523f02 4713that GCC can perform constant-folding on expressions involving that
185ebd6c
RH
4714value. The argument of the function is the value to test. The function
4715returns the integer 1 if the argument is known to be a compile-time
4716constant and 0 if it is not known to be a compile-time constant. A
4717return of 0 does not indicate that the value is @emph{not} a constant,
f0523f02 4718but merely that GCC cannot prove it is a constant with the specified
84330467 4719value of the @option{-O} option.
185ebd6c
RH
4720
4721You would typically use this function in an embedded application where
4722memory was a critical resource. If you have some complex calculation,
4723you may want it to be folded if it involves constants, but need to call
4724a function if it does not. For example:
4725
4d390518 4726@smallexample
310668e8
JM
4727#define Scale_Value(X) \
4728 (__builtin_constant_p (X) \
4729 ? ((X) * SCALE + OFFSET) : Scale (X))
185ebd6c
RH
4730@end smallexample
4731
84330467 4732You may use this built-in function in either a macro or an inline
185ebd6c 4733function. However, if you use it in an inlined function and pass an
f0523f02 4734argument of the function as the argument to the built-in, GCC will
185ebd6c 4735never return 1 when you call the inline function with a string constant
4b404517 4736or compound literal (@pxref{Compound Literals}) and will not return 1
185ebd6c 4737when you pass a constant numeric value to the inline function unless you
84330467 4738specify the @option{-O} option.
13104975
ZW
4739
4740You may also use @code{__builtin_constant_p} in initializers for static
4741data. For instance, you can write
4742
4743@smallexample
79323c50 4744static const int table[] = @{
13104975 4745 __builtin_constant_p (EXPRESSION) ? (EXPRESSION) : -1,
0d893a63 4746 /* @r{@dots{}} */
79323c50 4747@};
13104975
ZW
4748@end smallexample
4749
4750@noindent
4751This is an acceptable initializer even if @var{EXPRESSION} is not a
4752constant expression. GCC must be more conservative about evaluating the
4753built-in in this case, because it has no opportunity to perform
4754optimization.
4755
4756Previous versions of GCC did not accept this built-in in data
4757initializers. The earliest version where it is completely safe is
47583.0.1.
84330467 4759@end deftypefn
185ebd6c 4760
84330467
JM
4761@deftypefn {Built-in Function} long __builtin_expect (long @var{exp}, long @var{c})
4762@opindex fprofile-arcs
02f52e19 4763You may use @code{__builtin_expect} to provide the compiler with
994a57cd 4764branch prediction information. In general, you should prefer to
84330467 4765use actual profile feedback for this (@option{-fprofile-arcs}), as
994a57cd 4766programmers are notoriously bad at predicting how their programs
60b6e1f5 4767actually perform. However, there are applications in which this
994a57cd
RH
4768data is hard to collect.
4769
4770The return value is the value of @var{exp}, which should be an
4771integral expression. The value of @var{c} must be a compile-time
84330467 4772constant. The semantics of the built-in are that it is expected
994a57cd
RH
4773that @var{exp} == @var{c}. For example:
4774
4775@smallexample
4776if (__builtin_expect (x, 0))
4777 foo ();
4778@end smallexample
4779
4780@noindent
4781would indicate that we do not expect to call @code{foo}, since
4782we expect @code{x} to be zero. Since you are limited to integral
4783expressions for @var{exp}, you should use constructions such as
4784
4785@smallexample
4786if (__builtin_expect (ptr != NULL, 1))
4787 error ();
4788@end smallexample
4789
4790@noindent
4791when testing pointer or floating-point values.
84330467 4792@end deftypefn
994a57cd 4793
3bca17dd 4794@deftypefn {Built-in Function} void __builtin_prefetch (const void *@var{addr}, ...)
a9ccbb60
JJ
4795This function is used to minimize cache-miss latency by moving data into
4796a cache before it is accessed.
4797You can insert calls to @code{__builtin_prefetch} into code for which
4798you know addresses of data in memory that is likely to be accessed soon.
4799If the target supports them, data prefetch instructions will be generated.
4800If the prefetch is done early enough before the access then the data will
4801be in the cache by the time it is accessed.
4802
4803The value of @var{addr} is the address of the memory to prefetch.
e83d297b 4804There are two optional arguments, @var{rw} and @var{locality}.
a9ccbb60 4805The value of @var{rw} is a compile-time constant one or zero; one
e83d297b
JJ
4806means that the prefetch is preparing for a write to the memory address
4807and zero, the default, means that the prefetch is preparing for a read.
a9ccbb60
JJ
4808The value @var{locality} must be a compile-time constant integer between
4809zero and three. A value of zero means that the data has no temporal
4810locality, so it need not be left in the cache after the access. A value
4811of three means that the data has a high degree of temporal locality and
4812should be left in all levels of cache possible. Values of one and two
e83d297b
JJ
4813mean, respectively, a low or moderate degree of temporal locality. The
4814default is three.
a9ccbb60
JJ
4815
4816@smallexample
4817for (i = 0; i < n; i++)
4818 @{
4819 a[i] = a[i] + b[i];
4820 __builtin_prefetch (&a[i+j], 1, 1);
4821 __builtin_prefetch (&b[i+j], 0, 1);
0d893a63 4822 /* @r{@dots{}} */
a9ccbb60
JJ
4823 @}
4824@end smallexample
4825
f282ffb3 4826Data prefetch does not generate faults if @var{addr} is invalid, but
a9ccbb60
JJ
4827the address expression itself must be valid. For example, a prefetch
4828of @code{p->next} will not fault if @code{p->next} is not a valid
4829address, but evaluation will fault if @code{p} is not a valid address.
4830
4831If the target does not support data prefetch, the address expression
4832is evaluated if it includes side effects but no other code is generated
4833and GCC does not issue a warning.
4834@end deftypefn
4835
ab5e2615
RH
4836@deftypefn {Built-in Function} double __builtin_huge_val (void)
4837Returns a positive infinity, if supported by the floating-point format,
4838else @code{DBL_MAX}. This function is suitable for implementing the
4839ISO C macro @code{HUGE_VAL}.
4840@end deftypefn
4841
4842@deftypefn {Built-in Function} float __builtin_huge_valf (void)
4843Similar to @code{__builtin_huge_val}, except the return type is @code{float}.
4844@end deftypefn
4845
4846@deftypefn {Built-in Function} long double __builtin_huge_vall (void)
4847Similar to @code{__builtin_huge_val}, except the return
4848type is @code{long double}.
4849@end deftypefn
4850
4851@deftypefn {Built-in Function} double __builtin_inf (void)
4852Similar to @code{__builtin_huge_val}, except a warning is generated
4853if the target floating-point format does not support infinities.
4854This function is suitable for implementing the ISO C99 macro @code{INFINITY}.
4855@end deftypefn
4856
4857@deftypefn {Built-in Function} float __builtin_inff (void)
4858Similar to @code{__builtin_inf}, except the return type is @code{float}.
4859@end deftypefn
4860
4861@deftypefn {Built-in Function} long double __builtin_infl (void)
4862Similar to @code{__builtin_inf}, except the return
4863type is @code{long double}.
4864@end deftypefn
4865
0975678f
JM
4866@node Target Builtins
4867@section Built-in Functions Specific to Particular Target Machines
4868
4869On some target machines, GCC supports many built-in functions specific
4870to those machines. Generally these generate calls to specific machine
4871instructions, but allow the compiler to schedule those calls.
4872
4873@menu
6d8fd7bb 4874* Alpha Built-in Functions::
0975678f 4875* X86 Built-in Functions::
333c8841 4876* PowerPC AltiVec Built-in Functions::
0975678f
JM
4877@end menu
4878
6d8fd7bb
RH
4879@node Alpha Built-in Functions
4880@subsection Alpha Built-in Functions
4881
4882These built-in functions are available for the Alpha family of
4883processors, depending on the command-line switches used.
4884
95b1627e 4885The following built-in functions are always available. They
6d8fd7bb
RH
4886all generate the machine instruction that is part of the name.
4887
4888@example
4889long __builtin_alpha_implver (void)
4890long __builtin_alpha_rpcc (void)
4891long __builtin_alpha_amask (long)
4892long __builtin_alpha_cmpbge (long, long)
c4b50f1a
RH
4893long __builtin_alpha_extbl (long, long)
4894long __builtin_alpha_extwl (long, long)
4895long __builtin_alpha_extll (long, long)
6d8fd7bb 4896long __builtin_alpha_extql (long, long)
c4b50f1a
RH
4897long __builtin_alpha_extwh (long, long)
4898long __builtin_alpha_extlh (long, long)
6d8fd7bb 4899long __builtin_alpha_extqh (long, long)
c4b50f1a
RH
4900long __builtin_alpha_insbl (long, long)
4901long __builtin_alpha_inswl (long, long)
4902long __builtin_alpha_insll (long, long)
4903long __builtin_alpha_insql (long, long)
4904long __builtin_alpha_inswh (long, long)
4905long __builtin_alpha_inslh (long, long)
4906long __builtin_alpha_insqh (long, long)
4907long __builtin_alpha_mskbl (long, long)
4908long __builtin_alpha_mskwl (long, long)
4909long __builtin_alpha_mskll (long, long)
4910long __builtin_alpha_mskql (long, long)
4911long __builtin_alpha_mskwh (long, long)
4912long __builtin_alpha_msklh (long, long)
4913long __builtin_alpha_mskqh (long, long)
4914long __builtin_alpha_umulh (long, long)
6d8fd7bb
RH
4915long __builtin_alpha_zap (long, long)
4916long __builtin_alpha_zapnot (long, long)
4917@end example
4918
4919The following built-in functions are always with @option{-mmax}
4920or @option{-mcpu=@var{cpu}} where @var{cpu} is @code{pca56} or
4921later. They all generate the machine instruction that is part
4922of the name.
4923
4924@example
4925long __builtin_alpha_pklb (long)
4926long __builtin_alpha_pkwb (long)
4927long __builtin_alpha_unpkbl (long)
4928long __builtin_alpha_unpkbw (long)
4929long __builtin_alpha_minub8 (long, long)
4930long __builtin_alpha_minsb8 (long, long)
4931long __builtin_alpha_minuw4 (long, long)
4932long __builtin_alpha_minsw4 (long, long)
4933long __builtin_alpha_maxub8 (long, long)
4934long __builtin_alpha_maxsb8 (long, long)
4935long __builtin_alpha_maxuw4 (long, long)
4936long __builtin_alpha_maxsw4 (long, long)
4937long __builtin_alpha_perr (long, long)
4938@end example
4939
c4b50f1a
RH
4940The following built-in functions are always with @option{-mcix}
4941or @option{-mcpu=@var{cpu}} where @var{cpu} is @code{ev67} or
4942later. They all generate the machine instruction that is part
4943of the name.
4944
4945@example
4946long __builtin_alpha_cttz (long)
4947long __builtin_alpha_ctlz (long)
4948long __builtin_alpha_ctpop (long)
4949@end example
4950
116b7a5e
RH
4951The following builtins are available on systems that use the OSF/1
4952PALcode. Normally they invoke the @code{rduniq} and @code{wruniq}
4953PAL calls, but when invoked with @option{-mtls-kernel}, they invoke
4954@code{rdval} and @code{wrval}.
4955
4956@example
4957void *__builtin_thread_pointer (void)
4958void __builtin_set_thread_pointer (void *)
4959@end example
4960
0975678f
JM
4961@node X86 Built-in Functions
4962@subsection X86 Built-in Functions
4963
4964These built-in functions are available for the i386 and x86-64 family
4965of computers, depending on the command-line switches used.
4966
4967The following machine modes are available for use with MMX built-in functions
333c8841
AH
4968(@pxref{Vector Extensions}): @code{V2SI} for a vector of two 32-bit integers,
4969@code{V4HI} for a vector of four 16-bit integers, and @code{V8QI} for a
4970vector of eight 8-bit integers. Some of the built-in functions operate on
4971MMX registers as a whole 64-bit entity, these use @code{DI} as their mode.
0975678f
JM
4972
4973If 3Dnow extensions are enabled, @code{V2SF} is used as a mode for a vector
333c8841 4974of two 32-bit floating point values.
0975678f 4975
333c8841
AH
4976If SSE extensions are enabled, @code{V4SF} is used for a vector of four 32-bit
4977floating point values. Some instructions use a vector of four 32-bit
0975678f 4978integers, these use @code{V4SI}. Finally, some instructions operate on an
333c8841 4979entire vector register, interpreting it as a 128-bit integer, these use mode
0975678f
JM
4980@code{TI}.
4981
4982The following built-in functions are made available by @option{-mmmx}.
4983All of them generate the machine instruction that is part of the name.
4984
4985@example
4986v8qi __builtin_ia32_paddb (v8qi, v8qi)
4987v4hi __builtin_ia32_paddw (v4hi, v4hi)
4988v2si __builtin_ia32_paddd (v2si, v2si)
4989v8qi __builtin_ia32_psubb (v8qi, v8qi)
4990v4hi __builtin_ia32_psubw (v4hi, v4hi)
4991v2si __builtin_ia32_psubd (v2si, v2si)
4992v8qi __builtin_ia32_paddsb (v8qi, v8qi)
4993v4hi __builtin_ia32_paddsw (v4hi, v4hi)
4994v8qi __builtin_ia32_psubsb (v8qi, v8qi)
4995v4hi __builtin_ia32_psubsw (v4hi, v4hi)
4996v8qi __builtin_ia32_paddusb (v8qi, v8qi)
4997v4hi __builtin_ia32_paddusw (v4hi, v4hi)
4998v8qi __builtin_ia32_psubusb (v8qi, v8qi)
4999v4hi __builtin_ia32_psubusw (v4hi, v4hi)
5000v4hi __builtin_ia32_pmullw (v4hi, v4hi)
5001v4hi __builtin_ia32_pmulhw (v4hi, v4hi)
5002di __builtin_ia32_pand (di, di)
5003di __builtin_ia32_pandn (di,di)
5004di __builtin_ia32_por (di, di)
5005di __builtin_ia32_pxor (di, di)
5006v8qi __builtin_ia32_pcmpeqb (v8qi, v8qi)
5007v4hi __builtin_ia32_pcmpeqw (v4hi, v4hi)
5008v2si __builtin_ia32_pcmpeqd (v2si, v2si)
5009v8qi __builtin_ia32_pcmpgtb (v8qi, v8qi)
5010v4hi __builtin_ia32_pcmpgtw (v4hi, v4hi)
5011v2si __builtin_ia32_pcmpgtd (v2si, v2si)
5012v8qi __builtin_ia32_punpckhbw (v8qi, v8qi)
5013v4hi __builtin_ia32_punpckhwd (v4hi, v4hi)
5014v2si __builtin_ia32_punpckhdq (v2si, v2si)
5015v8qi __builtin_ia32_punpcklbw (v8qi, v8qi)
5016v4hi __builtin_ia32_punpcklwd (v4hi, v4hi)
5017v2si __builtin_ia32_punpckldq (v2si, v2si)
5018v8qi __builtin_ia32_packsswb (v4hi, v4hi)
5019v4hi __builtin_ia32_packssdw (v2si, v2si)
5020v8qi __builtin_ia32_packuswb (v4hi, v4hi)
5021@end example
5022
5023The following built-in functions are made available either with
5024@option{-msse}, or with a combination of @option{-m3dnow} and
5025@option{-march=athlon}. All of them generate the machine
5026instruction that is part of the name.
5027
5028@example
5029v4hi __builtin_ia32_pmulhuw (v4hi, v4hi)
5030v8qi __builtin_ia32_pavgb (v8qi, v8qi)
5031v4hi __builtin_ia32_pavgw (v4hi, v4hi)
5032v4hi __builtin_ia32_psadbw (v8qi, v8qi)
5033v8qi __builtin_ia32_pmaxub (v8qi, v8qi)
5034v4hi __builtin_ia32_pmaxsw (v4hi, v4hi)
5035v8qi __builtin_ia32_pminub (v8qi, v8qi)
5036v4hi __builtin_ia32_pminsw (v4hi, v4hi)
5037int __builtin_ia32_pextrw (v4hi, int)
5038v4hi __builtin_ia32_pinsrw (v4hi, int, int)
5039int __builtin_ia32_pmovmskb (v8qi)
5040void __builtin_ia32_maskmovq (v8qi, v8qi, char *)
5041void __builtin_ia32_movntq (di *, di)
5042void __builtin_ia32_sfence (void)
5043@end example
5044
5045The following built-in functions are available when @option{-msse} is used.
5046All of them generate the machine instruction that is part of the name.
5047
5048@example
5049int __builtin_ia32_comieq (v4sf, v4sf)
5050int __builtin_ia32_comineq (v4sf, v4sf)
5051int __builtin_ia32_comilt (v4sf, v4sf)
5052int __builtin_ia32_comile (v4sf, v4sf)
5053int __builtin_ia32_comigt (v4sf, v4sf)
5054int __builtin_ia32_comige (v4sf, v4sf)
5055int __builtin_ia32_ucomieq (v4sf, v4sf)
5056int __builtin_ia32_ucomineq (v4sf, v4sf)
5057int __builtin_ia32_ucomilt (v4sf, v4sf)
5058int __builtin_ia32_ucomile (v4sf, v4sf)
5059int __builtin_ia32_ucomigt (v4sf, v4sf)
5060int __builtin_ia32_ucomige (v4sf, v4sf)
5061v4sf __builtin_ia32_addps (v4sf, v4sf)
5062v4sf __builtin_ia32_subps (v4sf, v4sf)
5063v4sf __builtin_ia32_mulps (v4sf, v4sf)
5064v4sf __builtin_ia32_divps (v4sf, v4sf)
5065v4sf __builtin_ia32_addss (v4sf, v4sf)
5066v4sf __builtin_ia32_subss (v4sf, v4sf)
5067v4sf __builtin_ia32_mulss (v4sf, v4sf)
5068v4sf __builtin_ia32_divss (v4sf, v4sf)
5069v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpeqps (v4sf, v4sf)
5070v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpltps (v4sf, v4sf)
5071v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpleps (v4sf, v4sf)
5072v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpgtps (v4sf, v4sf)
5073v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpgeps (v4sf, v4sf)
5074v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpunordps (v4sf, v4sf)
5075v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpneqps (v4sf, v4sf)
5076v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpnltps (v4sf, v4sf)
5077v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpnleps (v4sf, v4sf)
5078v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpngtps (v4sf, v4sf)
5079v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpngeps (v4sf, v4sf)
5080v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpordps (v4sf, v4sf)
5081v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpeqss (v4sf, v4sf)
5082v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpltss (v4sf, v4sf)
5083v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpless (v4sf, v4sf)
5084v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpgtss (v4sf, v4sf)
5085v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpgess (v4sf, v4sf)
5086v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpunordss (v4sf, v4sf)
5087v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpneqss (v4sf, v4sf)
5088v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpnlts (v4sf, v4sf)
5089v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpnless (v4sf, v4sf)
5090v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpngtss (v4sf, v4sf)
5091v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpngess (v4sf, v4sf)
5092v4si __builtin_ia32_cmpordss (v4sf, v4sf)
5093v4sf __builtin_ia32_maxps (v4sf, v4sf)
5094v4sf __builtin_ia32_maxss (v4sf, v4sf)
5095v4sf __builtin_ia32_minps (v4sf, v4sf)
5096v4sf __builtin_ia32_minss (v4sf, v4sf)
5097v4sf __builtin_ia32_andps (v4sf, v4sf)
5098v4sf __builtin_ia32_andnps (v4sf, v4sf)
5099v4sf __builtin_ia32_orps (v4sf, v4sf)
5100v4sf __builtin_ia32_xorps (v4sf, v4sf)
5101v4sf __builtin_ia32_movss (v4sf, v4sf)
5102v4sf __builtin_ia32_movhlps (v4sf, v4sf)
5103v4sf __builtin_ia32_movlhps (v4sf, v4sf)
5104v4sf __builtin_ia32_unpckhps (v4sf, v4sf)
5105v4sf __builtin_ia32_unpcklps (v4sf, v4sf)
5106v4sf __builtin_ia32_cvtpi2ps (v4sf, v2si)
5107v4sf __builtin_ia32_cvtsi2ss (v4sf, int)
5108v2si __builtin_ia32_cvtps2pi (v4sf)
5109int __builtin_ia32_cvtss2si (v4sf)
5110v2si __builtin_ia32_cvttps2pi (v4sf)
5111int __builtin_ia32_cvttss2si (v4sf)
5112v4sf __builtin_ia32_rcpps (v4sf)
5113v4sf __builtin_ia32_rsqrtps (v4sf)
5114v4sf __builtin_ia32_sqrtps (v4sf)
5115v4sf __builtin_ia32_rcpss (v4sf)
5116v4sf __builtin_ia32_rsqrtss (v4sf)
5117v4sf __builtin_ia32_sqrtss (v4sf)
5118v4sf __builtin_ia32_shufps (v4sf, v4sf, int)
5119void __builtin_ia32_movntps (float *, v4sf)
5120int __builtin_ia32_movmskps (v4sf)
5121@end example
5122
5123The following built-in functions are available when @option{-msse} is used.
5124
5125@table @code
5126@item v4sf __builtin_ia32_loadaps (float *)
5127Generates the @code{movaps} machine instruction as a load from memory.
5128@item void __builtin_ia32_storeaps (float *, v4sf)
5129Generates the @code{movaps} machine instruction as a store to memory.
5130@item v4sf __builtin_ia32_loadups (float *)
5131Generates the @code{movups} machine instruction as a load from memory.
5132@item void __builtin_ia32_storeups (float *, v4sf)
5133Generates the @code{movups} machine instruction as a store to memory.
5134@item v4sf __builtin_ia32_loadsss (float *)
5135Generates the @code{movss} machine instruction as a load from memory.
5136@item void __builtin_ia32_storess (float *, v4sf)
5137Generates the @code{movss} machine instruction as a store to memory.
5138@item v4sf __builtin_ia32_loadhps (v4sf, v2si *)
5139Generates the @code{movhps} machine instruction as a load from memory.
5140@item v4sf __builtin_ia32_loadlps (v4sf, v2si *)
5141Generates the @code{movlps} machine instruction as a load from memory
5142@item void __builtin_ia32_storehps (v4sf, v2si *)
5143Generates the @code{movhps} machine instruction as a store to memory.
5144@item void __builtin_ia32_storelps (v4sf, v2si *)
5145Generates the @code{movlps} machine instruction as a store to memory.
5146@end table
5147
5148The following built-in functions are available when @option{-m3dnow} is used.
5149All of them generate the machine instruction that is part of the name.
5150
5151@example
5152void __builtin_ia32_femms (void)
5153v8qi __builtin_ia32_pavgusb (v8qi, v8qi)
5154v2si __builtin_ia32_pf2id (v2sf)
5155v2sf __builtin_ia32_pfacc (v2sf, v2sf)
5156v2sf __builtin_ia32_pfadd (v2sf, v2sf)
5157v2si __builtin_ia32_pfcmpeq (v2sf, v2sf)
5158v2si __builtin_ia32_pfcmpge (v2sf, v2sf)
5159v2si __builtin_ia32_pfcmpgt (v2sf, v2sf)
5160v2sf __builtin_ia32_pfmax (v2sf, v2sf)
5161v2sf __builtin_ia32_pfmin (v2sf, v2sf)
5162v2sf __builtin_ia32_pfmul (v2sf, v2sf)
5163v2sf __builtin_ia32_pfrcp (v2sf)
5164v2sf __builtin_ia32_pfrcpit1 (v2sf, v2sf)
5165v2sf __builtin_ia32_pfrcpit2 (v2sf, v2sf)
5166v2sf __builtin_ia32_pfrsqrt (v2sf)
5167v2sf __builtin_ia32_pfrsqrtit1 (v2sf, v2sf)
5168v2sf __builtin_ia32_pfsub (v2sf, v2sf)
5169v2sf __builtin_ia32_pfsubr (v2sf, v2sf)
5170v2sf __builtin_ia32_pi2fd (v2si)
5171v4hi __builtin_ia32_pmulhrw (v4hi, v4hi)
5172@end example
5173
5174The following built-in functions are available when both @option{-m3dnow}
5175and @option{-march=athlon} are used. All of them generate the machine
5176instruction that is part of the name.
5177
5178@example
5179v2si __builtin_ia32_pf2iw (v2sf)
5180v2sf __builtin_ia32_pfnacc (v2sf, v2sf)
5181v2sf __builtin_ia32_pfpnacc (v2sf, v2sf)
5182v2sf __builtin_ia32_pi2fw (v2si)
5183v2sf __builtin_ia32_pswapdsf (v2sf)
5184v2si __builtin_ia32_pswapdsi (v2si)
5185@end example
5186
333c8841
AH
5187@node PowerPC AltiVec Built-in Functions
5188@subsection PowerPC AltiVec Built-in Functions
5189
5190These built-in functions are available for the PowerPC family
5191of computers, depending on the command-line switches used.
5192
5193The following machine modes are available for use with AltiVec built-in
5194functions (@pxref{Vector Extensions}): @code{V4SI} for a vector of four
519532-bit integers, @code{V4SF} for a vector of four 32-bit floating point
5196numbers, @code{V8HI} for a vector of eight 16-bit integers, and
5197@code{V16QI} for a vector of sixteen 8-bit integers.
5198
5199The following functions are made available by including
5200@code{<altivec.h>} and using @option{-maltivec} and
5201@option{-mabi=altivec}. The functions implement the functionality
5202described in Motorola's AltiVec Programming Interface Manual.
5203
90989b26
AH
5204There are a few differences from Motorola's documentation and GCC's
5205implementation. Vector constants are done with curly braces (not
5206parentheses). Vector initializers require no casts if the vector
5207constant is of the same type as the variable it is initializing. The
5208@code{vector bool} type is deprecated and will be discontinued in
5209further revisions. Use @code{vector signed} instead. If @code{signed}
5210or @code{unsigned} is omitted, the vector type will default to
8254cb45 5211@code{signed}. Lastly, all overloaded functions are implemented with macros
90989b26
AH
5212for the C implementation. So code the following example will not work:
5213
5214@smallexample
8254cb45 5215 vec_add ((vector signed int)@{1, 2, 3, 4@}, foo);
90989b26
AH
5216@end smallexample
5217
5218Since vec_add is a macro, the vector constant in the above example will
5219be treated as four different arguments. Wrap the entire argument in
5220parentheses for this to work. The C++ implementation does not use
5221macros.
5222
ae4b4a02
AH
5223@emph{Note:} Only the @code{<altivec.h>} interface is supported.
5224Internally, GCC uses built-in functions to achieve the functionality in
5225the aforementioned header file, but they are not supported and are
5226subject to change without notice.
5227
333c8841
AH
5228@smallexample
5229vector signed char vec_abs (vector signed char, vector signed char);
5230vector signed short vec_abs (vector signed short, vector signed short);
5231vector signed int vec_abs (vector signed int, vector signed int);
5232vector signed float vec_abs (vector signed float, vector signed float);
5233
5234vector signed char vec_abss (vector signed char, vector signed char);
5235vector signed short vec_abss (vector signed short, vector signed short);
5236
5237vector signed char vec_add (vector signed char, vector signed char);
5238vector unsigned char vec_add (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
5239
5240vector unsigned char vec_add (vector unsigned char, vector signed char);
5241
924fcc4e
JM
5242vector unsigned char vec_add (vector unsigned char,
5243 vector unsigned char);
333c8841 5244vector signed short vec_add (vector signed short, vector signed short);
924fcc4e
JM
5245vector unsigned short vec_add (vector signed short,
5246 vector unsigned short);
5247vector unsigned short vec_add (vector unsigned short,
5248 vector signed short);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5249vector unsigned short vec_add (vector unsigned short,
5250 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5251vector signed int vec_add (vector signed int, vector signed int);
5252vector unsigned int vec_add (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
5253vector unsigned int vec_add (vector unsigned int, vector signed int);
5254vector unsigned int vec_add (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
5255vector float vec_add (vector float, vector float);
5256
5257vector unsigned int vec_addc (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
5258
924fcc4e
JM
5259vector unsigned char vec_adds (vector signed char,
5260 vector unsigned char);
5261vector unsigned char vec_adds (vector unsigned char,
5262 vector signed char);
5263vector unsigned char vec_adds (vector unsigned char,
5264 vector unsigned char);
333c8841 5265vector signed char vec_adds (vector signed char, vector signed char);
924fcc4e
JM
5266vector unsigned short vec_adds (vector signed short,
5267 vector unsigned short);
5268vector unsigned short vec_adds (vector unsigned short,
5269 vector signed short);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5270vector unsigned short vec_adds (vector unsigned short,
5271 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5272vector signed short vec_adds (vector signed short, vector signed short);
5273
5274vector unsigned int vec_adds (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
5275vector unsigned int vec_adds (vector unsigned int, vector signed int);
5276vector unsigned int vec_adds (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
5277
5278vector signed int vec_adds (vector signed int, vector signed int);
5279
5280vector float vec_and (vector float, vector float);
5281vector float vec_and (vector float, vector signed int);
5282vector float vec_and (vector signed int, vector float);
5283vector signed int vec_and (vector signed int, vector signed int);
5284vector unsigned int vec_and (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
5285vector unsigned int vec_and (vector unsigned int, vector signed int);
5286vector unsigned int vec_and (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
5287vector signed short vec_and (vector signed short, vector signed short);
924fcc4e
JM
5288vector unsigned short vec_and (vector signed short,
5289 vector unsigned short);
5290vector unsigned short vec_and (vector unsigned short,
5291 vector signed short);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5292vector unsigned short vec_and (vector unsigned short,
5293 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5294vector signed char vec_and (vector signed char, vector signed char);
5295vector unsigned char vec_and (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
5296
5297vector unsigned char vec_and (vector unsigned char, vector signed char);
5298
924fcc4e
JM
5299vector unsigned char vec_and (vector unsigned char,
5300 vector unsigned char);
333c8841
AH
5301
5302vector float vec_andc (vector float, vector float);
5303vector float vec_andc (vector float, vector signed int);
5304vector float vec_andc (vector signed int, vector float);
5305vector signed int vec_andc (vector signed int, vector signed int);
5306vector unsigned int vec_andc (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
5307vector unsigned int vec_andc (vector unsigned int, vector signed int);
5308vector unsigned int vec_andc (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
5309
5310vector signed short vec_andc (vector signed short, vector signed short);
5311
924fcc4e
JM
5312vector unsigned short vec_andc (vector signed short,
5313 vector unsigned short);
5314vector unsigned short vec_andc (vector unsigned short,
5315 vector signed short);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5316vector unsigned short vec_andc (vector unsigned short,
5317 vector unsigned short);
333c8841 5318vector signed char vec_andc (vector signed char, vector signed char);
924fcc4e
JM
5319vector unsigned char vec_andc (vector signed char,
5320 vector unsigned char);
5321vector unsigned char vec_andc (vector unsigned char,
5322 vector signed char);
5323vector unsigned char vec_andc (vector unsigned char,
5324 vector unsigned char);
333c8841 5325
924fcc4e
JM
5326vector unsigned char vec_avg (vector unsigned char,
5327 vector unsigned char);
333c8841 5328vector signed char vec_avg (vector signed char, vector signed char);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5329vector unsigned short vec_avg (vector unsigned short,
5330 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5331vector signed short vec_avg (vector signed short, vector signed short);
5332vector unsigned int vec_avg (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
5333vector signed int vec_avg (vector signed int, vector signed int);
5334
5335vector float vec_ceil (vector float);
5336
5337vector signed int vec_cmpb (vector float, vector float);
5338
5339vector signed char vec_cmpeq (vector signed char, vector signed char);
924fcc4e
JM
5340vector signed char vec_cmpeq (vector unsigned char,
5341 vector unsigned char);
5342vector signed short vec_cmpeq (vector signed short,
5343 vector signed short);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5344vector signed short vec_cmpeq (vector unsigned short,
5345 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5346vector signed int vec_cmpeq (vector signed int, vector signed int);
5347vector signed int vec_cmpeq (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
5348vector signed int vec_cmpeq (vector float, vector float);
5349
5350vector signed int vec_cmpge (vector float, vector float);
5351
924fcc4e
JM
5352vector signed char vec_cmpgt (vector unsigned char,
5353 vector unsigned char);
333c8841 5354vector signed char vec_cmpgt (vector signed char, vector signed char);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5355vector signed short vec_cmpgt (vector unsigned short,
5356 vector unsigned short);
924fcc4e
JM
5357vector signed short vec_cmpgt (vector signed short,
5358 vector signed short);
333c8841
AH
5359vector signed int vec_cmpgt (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
5360vector signed int vec_cmpgt (vector signed int, vector signed int);
5361vector signed int vec_cmpgt (vector float, vector float);
5362
5363vector signed int vec_cmple (vector float, vector float);
5364
924fcc4e
JM
5365vector signed char vec_cmplt (vector unsigned char,
5366 vector unsigned char);
333c8841 5367vector signed char vec_cmplt (vector signed char, vector signed char);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5368vector signed short vec_cmplt (vector unsigned short,
5369 vector unsigned short);
924fcc4e
JM
5370vector signed short vec_cmplt (vector signed short,
5371 vector signed short);
333c8841
AH
5372vector signed int vec_cmplt (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
5373vector signed int vec_cmplt (vector signed int, vector signed int);
5374vector signed int vec_cmplt (vector float, vector float);
5375
5376vector float vec_ctf (vector unsigned int, const char);
5377vector float vec_ctf (vector signed int, const char);
5378
5379vector signed int vec_cts (vector float, const char);
5380
5381vector unsigned int vec_ctu (vector float, const char);
5382
5383void vec_dss (const char);
5384
5385void vec_dssall (void);
5386
5387void vec_dst (void *, int, const char);
5388
5389void vec_dstst (void *, int, const char);
5390
5391void vec_dststt (void *, int, const char);
5392
5393void vec_dstt (void *, int, const char);
5394
5395vector float vec_expte (vector float, vector float);
5396
5397vector float vec_floor (vector float, vector float);
5398
5399vector float vec_ld (int, vector float *);
5400vector float vec_ld (int, float *):
5401vector signed int vec_ld (int, int *);
5402vector signed int vec_ld (int, vector signed int *);
5403vector unsigned int vec_ld (int, vector unsigned int *);
5404vector unsigned int vec_ld (int, unsigned int *);
5405vector signed short vec_ld (int, short *, vector signed short *);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5406vector unsigned short vec_ld (int, unsigned short *,
5407 vector unsigned short *);
333c8841
AH
5408vector signed char vec_ld (int, signed char *);
5409vector signed char vec_ld (int, vector signed char *);
5410vector unsigned char vec_ld (int, unsigned char *);
5411vector unsigned char vec_ld (int, vector unsigned char *);
5412
5413vector signed char vec_lde (int, signed char *);
5414vector unsigned char vec_lde (int, unsigned char *);
5415vector signed short vec_lde (int, short *);
5416vector unsigned short vec_lde (int, unsigned short *);
5417vector float vec_lde (int, float *);
5418vector signed int vec_lde (int, int *);
5419vector unsigned int vec_lde (int, unsigned int *);
5420
5421void float vec_ldl (int, float *);
5422void float vec_ldl (int, vector float *);
5423void signed int vec_ldl (int, vector signed int *);
5424void signed int vec_ldl (int, int *);
5425void unsigned int vec_ldl (int, unsigned int *);
5426void unsigned int vec_ldl (int, vector unsigned int *);
5427void signed short vec_ldl (int, vector signed short *);
5428void signed short vec_ldl (int, short *);
5429void unsigned short vec_ldl (int, vector unsigned short *);
5430void unsigned short vec_ldl (int, unsigned short *);
5431void signed char vec_ldl (int, vector signed char *);
5432void signed char vec_ldl (int, signed char *);
5433void unsigned char vec_ldl (int, vector unsigned char *);
5434void unsigned char vec_ldl (int, unsigned char *);
5435
5436vector float vec_loge (vector float);
5437
5438vector unsigned char vec_lvsl (int, void *, int *);
5439
5440vector unsigned char vec_lvsr (int, void *, int *);
5441
5442vector float vec_madd (vector float, vector float, vector float);
5443
6e5bb5ad
JM
5444vector signed short vec_madds (vector signed short, vector signed short,
5445 vector signed short);
333c8841
AH
5446
5447vector unsigned char vec_max (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
5448
5449vector unsigned char vec_max (vector unsigned char, vector signed char);
5450
924fcc4e
JM
5451vector unsigned char vec_max (vector unsigned char,
5452 vector unsigned char);
333c8841 5453vector signed char vec_max (vector signed char, vector signed char);
924fcc4e
JM
5454vector unsigned short vec_max (vector signed short,
5455 vector unsigned short);
5456vector unsigned short vec_max (vector unsigned short,
5457 vector signed short);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5458vector unsigned short vec_max (vector unsigned short,
5459 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5460vector signed short vec_max (vector signed short, vector signed short);
5461vector unsigned int vec_max (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
5462vector unsigned int vec_max (vector unsigned int, vector signed int);
5463vector unsigned int vec_max (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
5464vector signed int vec_max (vector signed int, vector signed int);
5465vector float vec_max (vector float, vector float);
5466
5467vector signed char vec_mergeh (vector signed char, vector signed char);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5468vector unsigned char vec_mergeh (vector unsigned char,
5469 vector unsigned char);
924fcc4e
JM
5470vector signed short vec_mergeh (vector signed short,
5471 vector signed short);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5472vector unsigned short vec_mergeh (vector unsigned short,
5473 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5474vector float vec_mergeh (vector float, vector float);
5475vector signed int vec_mergeh (vector signed int, vector signed int);
924fcc4e
JM
5476vector unsigned int vec_mergeh (vector unsigned int,
5477 vector unsigned int);
333c8841
AH
5478
5479vector signed char vec_mergel (vector signed char, vector signed char);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5480vector unsigned char vec_mergel (vector unsigned char,
5481 vector unsigned char);
924fcc4e
JM
5482vector signed short vec_mergel (vector signed short,
5483 vector signed short);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5484vector unsigned short vec_mergel (vector unsigned short,
5485 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5486vector float vec_mergel (vector float, vector float);
5487vector signed int vec_mergel (vector signed int, vector signed int);
924fcc4e
JM
5488vector unsigned int vec_mergel (vector unsigned int,
5489 vector unsigned int);
333c8841
AH
5490
5491vector unsigned short vec_mfvscr (void);
5492
5493vector unsigned char vec_min (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
5494
5495vector unsigned char vec_min (vector unsigned char, vector signed char);
5496
924fcc4e
JM
5497vector unsigned char vec_min (vector unsigned char,
5498 vector unsigned char);
333c8841 5499vector signed char vec_min (vector signed char, vector signed char);
924fcc4e
JM
5500vector unsigned short vec_min (vector signed short,
5501 vector unsigned short);
5502vector unsigned short vec_min (vector unsigned short,
5503 vector signed short);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5504vector unsigned short vec_min (vector unsigned short,
5505 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5506vector signed short vec_min (vector signed short, vector signed short);
5507vector unsigned int vec_min (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
5508vector unsigned int vec_min (vector unsigned int, vector signed int);
5509vector unsigned int vec_min (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
5510vector signed int vec_min (vector signed int, vector signed int);
5511vector float vec_min (vector float, vector float);
5512
6e5bb5ad
JM
5513vector signed short vec_mladd (vector signed short, vector signed short,
5514 vector signed short);
924fcc4e
JM
5515vector signed short vec_mladd (vector signed short,
5516 vector unsigned short,
6e5bb5ad 5517 vector unsigned short);
924fcc4e
JM
5518vector signed short vec_mladd (vector unsigned short,
5519 vector signed short,
6e5bb5ad
JM
5520 vector signed short);
5521vector unsigned short vec_mladd (vector unsigned short,
5522 vector unsigned short,
5523 vector unsigned short);
5524
924fcc4e
JM
5525vector signed short vec_mradds (vector signed short,
5526 vector signed short,
6e5bb5ad
JM
5527 vector signed short);
5528
924fcc4e
JM
5529vector unsigned int vec_msum (vector unsigned char,
5530 vector unsigned char,
6e5bb5ad
JM
5531 vector unsigned int);
5532vector signed int vec_msum (vector signed char, vector unsigned char,
5533 vector signed int);
924fcc4e
JM
5534vector unsigned int vec_msum (vector unsigned short,
5535 vector unsigned short,
6e5bb5ad
JM
5536 vector unsigned int);
5537vector signed int vec_msum (vector signed short, vector signed short,
5538 vector signed int);
5539
5540vector unsigned int vec_msums (vector unsigned short,
924fcc4e
JM
5541 vector unsigned short,
5542 vector unsigned int);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5543vector signed int vec_msums (vector signed short, vector signed short,
5544 vector signed int);
333c8841
AH
5545
5546void vec_mtvscr (vector signed int);
5547void vec_mtvscr (vector unsigned int);
5548void vec_mtvscr (vector signed short);
5549void vec_mtvscr (vector unsigned short);
5550void vec_mtvscr (vector signed char);
5551void vec_mtvscr (vector unsigned char);
5552
924fcc4e
JM
5553vector unsigned short vec_mule (vector unsigned char,
5554 vector unsigned char);
333c8841 5555vector signed short vec_mule (vector signed char, vector signed char);
924fcc4e
JM
5556vector unsigned int vec_mule (vector unsigned short,
5557 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5558vector signed int vec_mule (vector signed short, vector signed short);
5559
924fcc4e
JM
5560vector unsigned short vec_mulo (vector unsigned char,
5561 vector unsigned char);
333c8841 5562vector signed short vec_mulo (vector signed char, vector signed char);
924fcc4e
JM
5563vector unsigned int vec_mulo (vector unsigned short,
5564 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5565vector signed int vec_mulo (vector signed short, vector signed short);
5566
5567vector float vec_nmsub (vector float, vector float, vector float);
5568
5569vector float vec_nor (vector float, vector float);
5570vector signed int vec_nor (vector signed int, vector signed int);
5571vector unsigned int vec_nor (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
5572vector signed short vec_nor (vector signed short, vector signed short);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5573vector unsigned short vec_nor (vector unsigned short,
5574 vector unsigned short);
333c8841 5575vector signed char vec_nor (vector signed char, vector signed char);
924fcc4e
JM
5576vector unsigned char vec_nor (vector unsigned char,
5577 vector unsigned char);
333c8841
AH
5578
5579vector float vec_or (vector float, vector float);
5580vector float vec_or (vector float, vector signed int);
5581vector float vec_or (vector signed int, vector float);
5582vector signed int vec_or (vector signed int, vector signed int);
5583vector unsigned int vec_or (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
5584vector unsigned int vec_or (vector unsigned int, vector signed int);
5585vector unsigned int vec_or (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
5586vector signed short vec_or (vector signed short, vector signed short);
924fcc4e
JM
5587vector unsigned short vec_or (vector signed short,
5588 vector unsigned short);
5589vector unsigned short vec_or (vector unsigned short,
5590 vector signed short);
5591vector unsigned short vec_or (vector unsigned short,
5592 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5593vector signed char vec_or (vector signed char, vector signed char);
5594vector unsigned char vec_or (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
5595vector unsigned char vec_or (vector unsigned char, vector signed char);
924fcc4e
JM
5596vector unsigned char vec_or (vector unsigned char,
5597 vector unsigned char);
333c8841
AH
5598
5599vector signed char vec_pack (vector signed short, vector signed short);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5600vector unsigned char vec_pack (vector unsigned short,
5601 vector unsigned short);
333c8841 5602vector signed short vec_pack (vector signed int, vector signed int);
924fcc4e
JM
5603vector unsigned short vec_pack (vector unsigned int,
5604 vector unsigned int);
333c8841 5605
924fcc4e
JM
5606vector signed short vec_packpx (vector unsigned int,
5607 vector unsigned int);
333c8841 5608
6e5bb5ad
JM
5609vector unsigned char vec_packs (vector unsigned short,
5610 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5611vector signed char vec_packs (vector signed short, vector signed short);
5612
924fcc4e
JM
5613vector unsigned short vec_packs (vector unsigned int,
5614 vector unsigned int);
333c8841
AH
5615vector signed short vec_packs (vector signed int, vector signed int);
5616
6e5bb5ad
JM
5617vector unsigned char vec_packsu (vector unsigned short,
5618 vector unsigned short);
924fcc4e
JM
5619vector unsigned char vec_packsu (vector signed short,
5620 vector signed short);
5621vector unsigned short vec_packsu (vector unsigned int,
5622 vector unsigned int);
333c8841
AH
5623vector unsigned short vec_packsu (vector signed int, vector signed int);
5624
924fcc4e
JM
5625vector float vec_perm (vector float, vector float,
5626 vector unsigned char);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5627vector signed int vec_perm (vector signed int, vector signed int,
5628 vector unsigned char);
5629vector unsigned int vec_perm (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int,
5630 vector unsigned char);
5631vector signed short vec_perm (vector signed short, vector signed short,
5632 vector unsigned char);
5633vector unsigned short vec_perm (vector unsigned short,
5634 vector unsigned short,
5635 vector unsigned char);
5636vector signed char vec_perm (vector signed char, vector signed char,
5637 vector unsigned char);
924fcc4e
JM
5638vector unsigned char vec_perm (vector unsigned char,
5639 vector unsigned char,
6e5bb5ad 5640 vector unsigned char);
333c8841
AH
5641
5642vector float vec_re (vector float);
5643
5644vector signed char vec_rl (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
924fcc4e
JM
5645vector unsigned char vec_rl (vector unsigned char,
5646 vector unsigned char);
333c8841
AH
5647vector signed short vec_rl (vector signed short, vector unsigned short);
5648
924fcc4e
JM
5649vector unsigned short vec_rl (vector unsigned short,
5650 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5651vector signed int vec_rl (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
5652vector unsigned int vec_rl (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
5653
5654vector float vec_round (vector float);
5655
5656vector float vec_rsqrte (vector float);
5657
5658vector float vec_sel (vector float, vector float, vector signed int);
5659vector float vec_sel (vector float, vector float, vector unsigned int);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5660vector signed int vec_sel (vector signed int, vector signed int,
5661 vector signed int);
5662vector signed int vec_sel (vector signed int, vector signed int,
5663 vector unsigned int);
5664vector unsigned int vec_sel (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int,
5665 vector signed int);
5666vector unsigned int vec_sel (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int,
5667 vector unsigned int);
5668vector signed short vec_sel (vector signed short, vector signed short,
5669 vector signed short);
5670vector signed short vec_sel (vector signed short, vector signed short,
5671 vector unsigned short);
5672vector unsigned short vec_sel (vector unsigned short,
924fcc4e
JM
5673 vector unsigned short,
5674 vector signed short);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5675vector unsigned short vec_sel (vector unsigned short,
5676 vector unsigned short,
5677 vector unsigned short);
5678vector signed char vec_sel (vector signed char, vector signed char,
5679 vector signed char);
5680vector signed char vec_sel (vector signed char, vector signed char,
5681 vector unsigned char);
924fcc4e
JM
5682vector unsigned char vec_sel (vector unsigned char,
5683 vector unsigned char,
6e5bb5ad 5684 vector signed char);
924fcc4e
JM
5685vector unsigned char vec_sel (vector unsigned char,
5686 vector unsigned char,
6e5bb5ad 5687 vector unsigned char);
333c8841
AH
5688
5689vector signed char vec_sl (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
924fcc4e
JM
5690vector unsigned char vec_sl (vector unsigned char,
5691 vector unsigned char);
333c8841
AH
5692vector signed short vec_sl (vector signed short, vector unsigned short);
5693
924fcc4e
JM
5694vector unsigned short vec_sl (vector unsigned short,
5695 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5696vector signed int vec_sl (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
5697vector unsigned int vec_sl (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
5698
5699vector float vec_sld (vector float, vector float, const char);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5700vector signed int vec_sld (vector signed int, vector signed int,
5701 const char);
5702vector unsigned int vec_sld (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int,
5703 const char);
5704vector signed short vec_sld (vector signed short, vector signed short,
5705 const char);
5706vector unsigned short vec_sld (vector unsigned short,
5707 vector unsigned short, const char);
5708vector signed char vec_sld (vector signed char, vector signed char,
5709 const char);
924fcc4e
JM
5710vector unsigned char vec_sld (vector unsigned char,
5711 vector unsigned char,
6e5bb5ad 5712 const char);
333c8841
AH
5713
5714vector signed int vec_sll (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
5715vector signed int vec_sll (vector signed int, vector unsigned short);
5716vector signed int vec_sll (vector signed int, vector unsigned char);
5717vector unsigned int vec_sll (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
924fcc4e
JM
5718vector unsigned int vec_sll (vector unsigned int,
5719 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5720vector unsigned int vec_sll (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned char);
5721
5722vector signed short vec_sll (vector signed short, vector unsigned int);
924fcc4e
JM
5723vector signed short vec_sll (vector signed short,
5724 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5725vector signed short vec_sll (vector signed short, vector unsigned char);
5726
924fcc4e
JM
5727vector unsigned short vec_sll (vector unsigned short,
5728 vector unsigned int);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5729vector unsigned short vec_sll (vector unsigned short,
5730 vector unsigned short);
924fcc4e
JM
5731vector unsigned short vec_sll (vector unsigned short,
5732 vector unsigned char);
333c8841
AH
5733vector signed char vec_sll (vector signed char, vector unsigned int);
5734vector signed char vec_sll (vector signed char, vector unsigned short);
5735vector signed char vec_sll (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
924fcc4e
JM
5736vector unsigned char vec_sll (vector unsigned char,
5737 vector unsigned int);
5738vector unsigned char vec_sll (vector unsigned char,
5739 vector unsigned short);
5740vector unsigned char vec_sll (vector unsigned char,
5741 vector unsigned char);
333c8841
AH
5742
5743vector float vec_slo (vector float, vector signed char);
5744vector float vec_slo (vector float, vector unsigned char);
5745vector signed int vec_slo (vector signed int, vector signed char);
5746vector signed int vec_slo (vector signed int, vector unsigned char);
5747vector unsigned int vec_slo (vector unsigned int, vector signed char);
5748vector unsigned int vec_slo (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned char);
5749
5750vector signed short vec_slo (vector signed short, vector signed char);
5751vector signed short vec_slo (vector signed short, vector unsigned char);
5752
924fcc4e
JM
5753vector unsigned short vec_slo (vector unsigned short,
5754 vector signed char);
5755vector unsigned short vec_slo (vector unsigned short,
5756 vector unsigned char);
333c8841
AH
5757vector signed char vec_slo (vector signed char, vector signed char);
5758vector signed char vec_slo (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
5759vector unsigned char vec_slo (vector unsigned char, vector signed char);
5760
924fcc4e
JM
5761vector unsigned char vec_slo (vector unsigned char,
5762 vector unsigned char);
333c8841
AH
5763
5764vector signed char vec_splat (vector signed char, const char);
5765vector unsigned char vec_splat (vector unsigned char, const char);
5766vector signed short vec_splat (vector signed short, const char);
5767vector unsigned short vec_splat (vector unsigned short, const char);
5768vector float vec_splat (vector float, const char);
5769vector signed int vec_splat (vector signed int, const char);
5770vector unsigned int vec_splat (vector unsigned int, const char);
5771
5772vector signed char vec_splat_s8 (const char);
5773
5774vector signed short vec_splat_s16 (const char);
5775
5776vector signed int vec_splat_s32 (const char);
5777
5778vector unsigned char vec_splat_u8 (const char);
5779
5780vector unsigned short vec_splat_u16 (const char);
5781
5782vector unsigned int vec_splat_u32 (const char);
5783
5784vector signed char vec_sr (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
924fcc4e
JM
5785vector unsigned char vec_sr (vector unsigned char,
5786 vector unsigned char);
333c8841
AH
5787vector signed short vec_sr (vector signed short, vector unsigned short);
5788
924fcc4e
JM
5789vector unsigned short vec_sr (vector unsigned short,
5790 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5791vector signed int vec_sr (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
5792vector unsigned int vec_sr (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
5793
5794vector signed char vec_sra (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
924fcc4e
JM
5795vector unsigned char vec_sra (vector unsigned char,
5796 vector unsigned char);
5797vector signed short vec_sra (vector signed short,
5798 vector unsigned short);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5799vector unsigned short vec_sra (vector unsigned short,
5800 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5801vector signed int vec_sra (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
5802vector unsigned int vec_sra (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
5803
5804vector signed int vec_srl (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
5805vector signed int vec_srl (vector signed int, vector unsigned short);
5806vector signed int vec_srl (vector signed int, vector unsigned char);
5807vector unsigned int vec_srl (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
924fcc4e
JM
5808vector unsigned int vec_srl (vector unsigned int,
5809 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5810vector unsigned int vec_srl (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned char);
5811
5812vector signed short vec_srl (vector signed short, vector unsigned int);
924fcc4e
JM
5813vector signed short vec_srl (vector signed short,
5814 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5815vector signed short vec_srl (vector signed short, vector unsigned char);
5816
924fcc4e
JM
5817vector unsigned short vec_srl (vector unsigned short,
5818 vector unsigned int);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5819vector unsigned short vec_srl (vector unsigned short,
5820 vector unsigned short);
924fcc4e
JM
5821vector unsigned short vec_srl (vector unsigned short,
5822 vector unsigned char);
333c8841
AH
5823vector signed char vec_srl (vector signed char, vector unsigned int);
5824vector signed char vec_srl (vector signed char, vector unsigned short);
5825vector signed char vec_srl (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
924fcc4e
JM
5826vector unsigned char vec_srl (vector unsigned char,
5827 vector unsigned int);
5828vector unsigned char vec_srl (vector unsigned char,
5829 vector unsigned short);
5830vector unsigned char vec_srl (vector unsigned char,
5831 vector unsigned char);
333c8841
AH
5832
5833vector float vec_sro (vector float, vector signed char);
5834vector float vec_sro (vector float, vector unsigned char);
5835vector signed int vec_sro (vector signed int, vector signed char);
5836vector signed int vec_sro (vector signed int, vector unsigned char);
5837vector unsigned int vec_sro (vector unsigned int, vector signed char);
5838vector unsigned int vec_sro (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned char);
5839
5840vector signed short vec_sro (vector signed short, vector signed char);
5841vector signed short vec_sro (vector signed short, vector unsigned char);
5842
924fcc4e
JM
5843vector unsigned short vec_sro (vector unsigned short,
5844 vector signed char);
5845vector unsigned short vec_sro (vector unsigned short,
5846 vector unsigned char);
333c8841
AH
5847vector signed char vec_sro (vector signed char, vector signed char);
5848vector signed char vec_sro (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
5849vector unsigned char vec_sro (vector unsigned char, vector signed char);
5850
924fcc4e
JM
5851vector unsigned char vec_sro (vector unsigned char,
5852 vector unsigned char);
333c8841
AH
5853
5854void vec_st (vector float, int, float *);
5855void vec_st (vector float, int, vector float *);
5856void vec_st (vector signed int, int, int *);
5857void vec_st (vector signed int, int, unsigned int *);
5858void vec_st (vector unsigned int, int, unsigned int *);
5859void vec_st (vector unsigned int, int, vector unsigned int *);
5860void vec_st (vector signed short, int, short *);
5861void vec_st (vector signed short, int, vector unsigned short *);
5862void vec_st (vector signed short, int, vector signed short *);
5863void vec_st (vector unsigned short, int, unsigned short *);
5864void vec_st (vector unsigned short, int, vector unsigned short *);
5865void vec_st (vector signed char, int, signed char *);
5866void vec_st (vector signed char, int, unsigned char *);
5867void vec_st (vector signed char, int, vector signed char *);
5868void vec_st (vector unsigned char, int, unsigned char *);
5869void vec_st (vector unsigned char, int, vector unsigned char *);
5870
5871void vec_ste (vector signed char, int, unsigned char *);
5872void vec_ste (vector signed char, int, signed char *);
5873void vec_ste (vector unsigned char, int, unsigned char *);
5874void vec_ste (vector signed short, int, short *);
5875void vec_ste (vector signed short, int, unsigned short *);
5876void vec_ste (vector unsigned short, int, void *);
5877void vec_ste (vector signed int, int, unsigned int *);
5878void vec_ste (vector signed int, int, int *);
5879void vec_ste (vector unsigned int, int, unsigned int *);
5880void vec_ste (vector float, int, float *);
5881
5882void vec_stl (vector float, int, vector float *);
5883void vec_stl (vector float, int, float *);
5884void vec_stl (vector signed int, int, vector signed int *);
5885void vec_stl (vector signed int, int, int *);
5886void vec_stl (vector signed int, int, unsigned int *);
5887void vec_stl (vector unsigned int, int, vector unsigned int *);
5888void vec_stl (vector unsigned int, int, unsigned int *);
5889void vec_stl (vector signed short, int, short *);
5890void vec_stl (vector signed short, int, unsigned short *);
5891void vec_stl (vector signed short, int, vector signed short *);
5892void vec_stl (vector unsigned short, int, unsigned short *);
5893void vec_stl (vector unsigned short, int, vector signed short *);
5894void vec_stl (vector signed char, int, signed char *);
5895void vec_stl (vector signed char, int, unsigned char *);
5896void vec_stl (vector signed char, int, vector signed char *);
5897void vec_stl (vector unsigned char, int, unsigned char *);
5898void vec_stl (vector unsigned char, int, vector unsigned char *);
5899
5900vector signed char vec_sub (vector signed char, vector signed char);
5901vector unsigned char vec_sub (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
5902
5903vector unsigned char vec_sub (vector unsigned char, vector signed char);
5904
924fcc4e
JM
5905vector unsigned char vec_sub (vector unsigned char,
5906 vector unsigned char);
333c8841 5907vector signed short vec_sub (vector signed short, vector signed short);
924fcc4e
JM
5908vector unsigned short vec_sub (vector signed short,
5909 vector unsigned short);
5910vector unsigned short vec_sub (vector unsigned short,
5911 vector signed short);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5912vector unsigned short vec_sub (vector unsigned short,
5913 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5914vector signed int vec_sub (vector signed int, vector signed int);
5915vector unsigned int vec_sub (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
5916vector unsigned int vec_sub (vector unsigned int, vector signed int);
5917vector unsigned int vec_sub (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
5918vector float vec_sub (vector float, vector float);
5919
5920vector unsigned int vec_subc (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
5921
924fcc4e
JM
5922vector unsigned char vec_subs (vector signed char,
5923 vector unsigned char);
5924vector unsigned char vec_subs (vector unsigned char,
5925 vector signed char);
5926vector unsigned char vec_subs (vector unsigned char,
5927 vector unsigned char);
333c8841 5928vector signed char vec_subs (vector signed char, vector signed char);
924fcc4e
JM
5929vector unsigned short vec_subs (vector signed short,
5930 vector unsigned short);
5931vector unsigned short vec_subs (vector unsigned short,
5932 vector signed short);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5933vector unsigned short vec_subs (vector unsigned short,
5934 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5935vector signed short vec_subs (vector signed short, vector signed short);
5936
5937vector unsigned int vec_subs (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
5938vector unsigned int vec_subs (vector unsigned int, vector signed int);
5939vector unsigned int vec_subs (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
5940
5941vector signed int vec_subs (vector signed int, vector signed int);
5942
924fcc4e
JM
5943vector unsigned int vec_sum4s (vector unsigned char,
5944 vector unsigned int);
333c8841
AH
5945vector signed int vec_sum4s (vector signed char, vector signed int);
5946vector signed int vec_sum4s (vector signed short, vector signed int);
5947
5948vector signed int vec_sum2s (vector signed int, vector signed int);
5949
5950vector signed int vec_sums (vector signed int, vector signed int);
5951
5952vector float vec_trunc (vector float);
5953
5954vector signed short vec_unpackh (vector signed char);
5955vector unsigned int vec_unpackh (vector signed short);
5956vector signed int vec_unpackh (vector signed short);
5957
5958vector signed short vec_unpackl (vector signed char);
5959vector unsigned int vec_unpackl (vector signed short);
5960vector signed int vec_unpackl (vector signed short);
5961
5962vector float vec_xor (vector float, vector float);
5963vector float vec_xor (vector float, vector signed int);
5964vector float vec_xor (vector signed int, vector float);
5965vector signed int vec_xor (vector signed int, vector signed int);
5966vector unsigned int vec_xor (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
5967vector unsigned int vec_xor (vector unsigned int, vector signed int);
5968vector unsigned int vec_xor (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
5969vector signed short vec_xor (vector signed short, vector signed short);
924fcc4e
JM
5970vector unsigned short vec_xor (vector signed short,
5971 vector unsigned short);
5972vector unsigned short vec_xor (vector unsigned short,
5973 vector signed short);
6e5bb5ad
JM
5974vector unsigned short vec_xor (vector unsigned short,
5975 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5976vector signed char vec_xor (vector signed char, vector signed char);
5977vector unsigned char vec_xor (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
5978
5979vector unsigned char vec_xor (vector unsigned char, vector signed char);
5980
924fcc4e
JM
5981vector unsigned char vec_xor (vector unsigned char,
5982 vector unsigned char);
333c8841
AH
5983
5984vector signed int vec_all_eq (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
5985
5986vector signed int vec_all_eq (vector signed char, vector signed char);
5987vector signed int vec_all_eq (vector unsigned char, vector signed char);
5988
924fcc4e
JM
5989vector signed int vec_all_eq (vector unsigned char,
5990 vector unsigned char);
5991vector signed int vec_all_eq (vector signed short,
5992 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5993vector signed int vec_all_eq (vector signed short, vector signed short);
5994
924fcc4e
JM
5995vector signed int vec_all_eq (vector unsigned short,
5996 vector signed short);
5997vector signed int vec_all_eq (vector unsigned short,
5998 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
5999vector signed int vec_all_eq (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
6000vector signed int vec_all_eq (vector signed int, vector signed int);
6001vector signed int vec_all_eq (vector unsigned int, vector signed int);
6002vector signed int vec_all_eq (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
6003
6004vector signed int vec_all_eq (vector float, vector float);
6005
6006vector signed int vec_all_ge (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
6007
6008vector signed int vec_all_ge (vector unsigned char, vector signed char);
6009
924fcc4e
JM
6010vector signed int vec_all_ge (vector unsigned char,
6011 vector unsigned char);
333c8841 6012vector signed int vec_all_ge (vector signed char, vector signed char);
924fcc4e
JM
6013vector signed int vec_all_ge (vector signed short,
6014 vector unsigned short);
6015vector signed int vec_all_ge (vector unsigned short,
6016 vector signed short);
6017vector signed int vec_all_ge (vector unsigned short,
6018 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
6019vector signed int vec_all_ge (vector signed short, vector signed short);
6020
6021vector signed int vec_all_ge (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
6022vector signed int vec_all_ge (vector unsigned int, vector signed int);
6023vector signed int vec_all_ge (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
6024
6025vector signed int vec_all_ge (vector signed int, vector signed int);
6026vector signed int vec_all_ge (vector float, vector float);
6027
6028vector signed int vec_all_gt (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
6029
6030vector signed int vec_all_gt (vector unsigned char, vector signed char);
6031
924fcc4e
JM
6032vector signed int vec_all_gt (vector unsigned char,
6033 vector unsigned char);
333c8841 6034vector signed int vec_all_gt (vector signed char, vector signed char);
924fcc4e
JM
6035vector signed int vec_all_gt (vector signed short,
6036 vector unsigned short);
f282ffb3 6037vector signed int vec_all_gt (vector unsigned short,
924fcc4e
JM
6038 vector signed short);
6039vector signed int vec_all_gt (vector unsigned short,
6040 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
6041vector signed int vec_all_gt (vector signed short, vector signed short);
6042
6043vector signed int vec_all_gt (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
6044vector signed int vec_all_gt (vector unsigned int, vector signed int);
6045vector signed int vec_all_gt (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
6046
6047vector signed int vec_all_gt (vector signed int, vector signed int);
6048vector signed int vec_all_gt (vector float, vector float);
6049
6050vector signed int vec_all_in (vector float, vector float);
6051
6052vector signed int vec_all_le (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
6053
6054vector signed int vec_all_le (vector unsigned char, vector signed char);
6055
924fcc4e
JM
6056vector signed int vec_all_le (vector unsigned char,
6057 vector unsigned char);
333c8841 6058vector signed int vec_all_le (vector signed char, vector signed char);
924fcc4e
JM
6059vector signed int vec_all_le (vector signed short,
6060 vector unsigned short);
6061vector signed int vec_all_le (vector unsigned short,
6062 vector signed short);
6063vector signed int vec_all_le (vector unsigned short,
6064 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
6065vector signed int vec_all_le (vector signed short, vector signed short);
6066
6067vector signed int vec_all_le (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
6068vector signed int vec_all_le (vector unsigned int, vector signed int);
6069vector signed int vec_all_le (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
6070
6071vector signed int vec_all_le (vector signed int, vector signed int);
6072vector signed int vec_all_le (vector float, vector float);
6073
6074vector signed int vec_all_lt (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
6075
6076vector signed int vec_all_lt (vector unsigned char, vector signed char);
6077
924fcc4e
JM
6078vector signed int vec_all_lt (vector unsigned char,
6079 vector unsigned char);
333c8841 6080vector signed int vec_all_lt (vector signed char, vector signed char);
924fcc4e
JM
6081vector signed int vec_all_lt (vector signed short,
6082 vector unsigned short);
6083vector signed int vec_all_lt (vector unsigned short,
6084 vector signed short);
6085vector signed int vec_all_lt (vector unsigned short,
6086 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
6087vector signed int vec_all_lt (vector signed short, vector signed short);
6088
6089vector signed int vec_all_lt (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
6090vector signed int vec_all_lt (vector unsigned int, vector signed int);
6091vector signed int vec_all_lt (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
6092
6093vector signed int vec_all_lt (vector signed int, vector signed int);
6094vector signed int vec_all_lt (vector float, vector float);
6095
6096vector signed int vec_all_nan (vector float);
6097
6098vector signed int vec_all_ne (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
6099
6100vector signed int vec_all_ne (vector signed char, vector signed char);
6101vector signed int vec_all_ne (vector unsigned char, vector signed char);
6102
924fcc4e
JM
6103vector signed int vec_all_ne (vector unsigned char,
6104 vector unsigned char);
6105vector signed int vec_all_ne (vector signed short,
6106 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
6107vector signed int vec_all_ne (vector signed short, vector signed short);
6108
924fcc4e
JM
6109vector signed int vec_all_ne (vector unsigned short,
6110 vector signed short);
6111vector signed int vec_all_ne (vector unsigned short,
6112 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
6113vector signed int vec_all_ne (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
6114vector signed int vec_all_ne (vector signed int, vector signed int);
6115vector signed int vec_all_ne (vector unsigned int, vector signed int);
6116vector signed int vec_all_ne (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
6117
6118vector signed int vec_all_ne (vector float, vector float);
6119
6120vector signed int vec_all_nge (vector float, vector float);
6121
6122vector signed int vec_all_ngt (vector float, vector float);
6123
6124vector signed int vec_all_nle (vector float, vector float);
6125
6126vector signed int vec_all_nlt (vector float, vector float);
6127
6128vector signed int vec_all_numeric (vector float);
6129
6130vector signed int vec_any_eq (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
6131
6132vector signed int vec_any_eq (vector signed char, vector signed char);
6133vector signed int vec_any_eq (vector unsigned char, vector signed char);
6134
924fcc4e
JM
6135vector signed int vec_any_eq (vector unsigned char,
6136 vector unsigned char);
6137vector signed int vec_any_eq (vector signed short,
6138 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
6139vector signed int vec_any_eq (vector signed short, vector signed short);
6140
924fcc4e
JM
6141vector signed int vec_any_eq (vector unsigned short,
6142 vector signed short);
6143vector signed int vec_any_eq (vector unsigned short,
6144 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
6145vector signed int vec_any_eq (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
6146vector signed int vec_any_eq (vector signed int, vector signed int);
6147vector signed int vec_any_eq (vector unsigned int, vector signed int);
6148vector signed int vec_any_eq (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
6149
6150vector signed int vec_any_eq (vector float, vector float);
6151
6152vector signed int vec_any_ge (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
6153
6154vector signed int vec_any_ge (vector unsigned char, vector signed char);
6155
924fcc4e
JM
6156vector signed int vec_any_ge (vector unsigned char,
6157 vector unsigned char);
333c8841 6158vector signed int vec_any_ge (vector signed char, vector signed char);
924fcc4e
JM
6159vector signed int vec_any_ge (vector signed short,
6160 vector unsigned short);
6161vector signed int vec_any_ge (vector unsigned short,
6162 vector signed short);
6163vector signed int vec_any_ge (vector unsigned short,
6164 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
6165vector signed int vec_any_ge (vector signed short, vector signed short);
6166
6167vector signed int vec_any_ge (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
6168vector signed int vec_any_ge (vector unsigned int, vector signed int);
6169vector signed int vec_any_ge (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
6170
6171vector signed int vec_any_ge (vector signed int, vector signed int);
6172vector signed int vec_any_ge (vector float, vector float);
6173
6174vector signed int vec_any_gt (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
6175
6176vector signed int vec_any_gt (vector unsigned char, vector signed char);
6177
924fcc4e
JM
6178vector signed int vec_any_gt (vector unsigned char,
6179 vector unsigned char);
333c8841 6180vector signed int vec_any_gt (vector signed char, vector signed char);
924fcc4e
JM
6181vector signed int vec_any_gt (vector signed short,
6182 vector unsigned short);
6183vector signed int vec_any_gt (vector unsigned short,
6184 vector signed short);
6185vector signed int vec_any_gt (vector unsigned short,
6186 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
6187vector signed int vec_any_gt (vector signed short, vector signed short);
6188
6189vector signed int vec_any_gt (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
6190vector signed int vec_any_gt (vector unsigned int, vector signed int);
6191vector signed int vec_any_gt (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
6192
6193vector signed int vec_any_gt (vector signed int, vector signed int);
6194vector signed int vec_any_gt (vector float, vector float);
6195
6196vector signed int vec_any_le (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
6197
6198vector signed int vec_any_le (vector unsigned char, vector signed char);
6199
924fcc4e
JM
6200vector signed int vec_any_le (vector unsigned char,
6201 vector unsigned char);
333c8841 6202vector signed int vec_any_le (vector signed char, vector signed char);
924fcc4e
JM
6203vector signed int vec_any_le (vector signed short,
6204 vector unsigned short);
6205vector signed int vec_any_le (vector unsigned short,
6206 vector signed short);
6207vector signed int vec_any_le (vector unsigned short,
6208 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
6209vector signed int vec_any_le (vector signed short, vector signed short);
6210
6211vector signed int vec_any_le (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
6212vector signed int vec_any_le (vector unsigned int, vector signed int);
6213vector signed int vec_any_le (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
6214
6215vector signed int vec_any_le (vector signed int, vector signed int);
6216vector signed int vec_any_le (vector float, vector float);
6217
6218vector signed int vec_any_lt (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
6219
6220vector signed int vec_any_lt (vector unsigned char, vector signed char);
6221
924fcc4e
JM
6222vector signed int vec_any_lt (vector unsigned char,
6223 vector unsigned char);
333c8841 6224vector signed int vec_any_lt (vector signed char, vector signed char);
924fcc4e
JM
6225vector signed int vec_any_lt (vector signed short,
6226 vector unsigned short);
6227vector signed int vec_any_lt (vector unsigned short,
6228 vector signed short);
6229vector signed int vec_any_lt (vector unsigned short,
6230 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
6231vector signed int vec_any_lt (vector signed short, vector signed short);
6232
6233vector signed int vec_any_lt (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
6234vector signed int vec_any_lt (vector unsigned int, vector signed int);
6235vector signed int vec_any_lt (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
6236
6237vector signed int vec_any_lt (vector signed int, vector signed int);
6238vector signed int vec_any_lt (vector float, vector float);
6239
6240vector signed int vec_any_nan (vector float);
6241
6242vector signed int vec_any_ne (vector signed char, vector unsigned char);
6243
6244vector signed int vec_any_ne (vector signed char, vector signed char);
6245vector signed int vec_any_ne (vector unsigned char, vector signed char);
6246
924fcc4e
JM
6247vector signed int vec_any_ne (vector unsigned char,
6248 vector unsigned char);
6249vector signed int vec_any_ne (vector signed short,
6250 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
6251vector signed int vec_any_ne (vector signed short, vector signed short);
6252
924fcc4e
JM
6253vector signed int vec_any_ne (vector unsigned short,
6254 vector signed short);
6255vector signed int vec_any_ne (vector unsigned short,
6256 vector unsigned short);
333c8841
AH
6257vector signed int vec_any_ne (vector signed int, vector unsigned int);
6258vector signed int vec_any_ne (vector signed int, vector signed int);
6259vector signed int vec_any_ne (vector unsigned int, vector signed int);
6260vector signed int vec_any_ne (vector unsigned int, vector unsigned int);
6261
6262vector signed int vec_any_ne (vector float, vector float);
6263
6264vector signed int vec_any_nge (vector float, vector float);
6265
6266vector signed int vec_any_ngt (vector float, vector float);
6267
6268vector signed int vec_any_nle (vector float, vector float);
6269
6270vector signed int vec_any_nlt (vector float, vector float);
6271
6272vector signed int vec_any_numeric (vector float);
6273
6274vector signed int vec_any_out (vector float, vector float);
6275@end smallexample
6276
0168a849
SS
6277@node Pragmas
6278@section Pragmas Accepted by GCC
6279@cindex pragmas
6280@cindex #pragma
6281
6282GCC supports several types of pragmas, primarily in order to compile
6283code originally written for other compilers. Note that in general
6284we do not recommend the use of pragmas; @xref{Function Attributes},
6285for further explanation.
6286
6287@menu
6288* ARM Pragmas::
a5c76ee6 6289* RS/6000 and PowerPC Pragmas::
0168a849 6290* Darwin Pragmas::
41c64394
RH
6291* Solaris Pragmas::
6292* Tru64 Pragmas::
0168a849
SS
6293@end menu
6294
6295@node ARM Pragmas
6296@subsection ARM Pragmas
6297
6298The ARM target defines pragmas for controlling the default addition of
6299@code{long_call} and @code{short_call} attributes to functions.
6300@xref{Function Attributes}, for information about the effects of these
6301attributes.
6302
6303@table @code
6304@item long_calls
6305@cindex pragma, long_calls
6306Set all subsequent functions to have the @code{long_call} attribute.
6307
6308@item no_long_calls
6309@cindex pragma, no_long_calls
6310Set all subsequent functions to have the @code{short_call} attribute.
6311
6312@item long_calls_off
6313@cindex pragma, long_calls_off
6314Do not affect the @code{long_call} or @code{short_call} attributes of
6315subsequent functions.
6316@end table
6317
a5c76ee6
ZW
6318@node RS/6000 and PowerPC Pragmas
6319@subsection RS/6000 and PowerPC Pragmas
6320
6321The RS/6000 and PowerPC targets define one pragma for controlling
6322whether or not the @code{longcall} attribute is added to function
6323declarations by default. This pragma overrides the @option{-mlongcall}
95b1627e 6324option, but not the @code{longcall} and @code{shortcall} attributes.
a5c76ee6
ZW
6325@xref{RS/6000 and PowerPC Options}, for more information about when long
6326calls are and are not necessary.
6327
6328@table @code
6329@item longcall (1)
6330@cindex pragma, longcall
6331Apply the @code{longcall} attribute to all subsequent function
6332declarations.
6333
6334@item longcall (0)
6335Do not apply the @code{longcall} attribute to subsequent function
6336declarations.
6337@end table
6338
0168a849
SS
6339@c Describe c4x pragmas here.
6340@c Describe h8300 pragmas here.
6341@c Describe i370 pragmas here.
6342@c Describe i960 pragmas here.
6343@c Describe sh pragmas here.
6344@c Describe v850 pragmas here.
6345
6346@node Darwin Pragmas
6347@subsection Darwin Pragmas
6348
6349The following pragmas are available for all architectures running the
6350Darwin operating system. These are useful for compatibility with other
6351MacOS compilers.
6352
6353@table @code
6354@item mark @var{tokens}@dots{}
6355@cindex pragma, mark
6356This pragma is accepted, but has no effect.
6357
6358@item options align=@var{alignment}
6359@cindex pragma, options align
6360This pragma sets the alignment of fields in structures. The values of
6361@var{alignment} may be @code{mac68k}, to emulate m68k alignment, or
6362@code{power}, to emulate PowerPC alignment. Uses of this pragma nest
6363properly; to restore the previous setting, use @code{reset} for the
6364@var{alignment}.
6365
6366@item segment @var{tokens}@dots{}
6367@cindex pragma, segment
6368This pragma is accepted, but has no effect.
6369
6370@item unused (@var{var} [, @var{var}]@dots{})
6371@cindex pragma, unused
6372This pragma declares variables to be possibly unused. GCC will not
6373produce warnings for the listed variables. The effect is similar to
6374that of the @code{unused} attribute, except that this pragma may appear
6375anywhere within the variables' scopes.
6376@end table
6377
41c64394
RH
6378@node Solaris Pragmas
6379@subsection Solaris Pragmas
6380
6381For compatibility with the SunPRO compiler, the following pragma
6382is supported.
6383
6384@table @code
6385@item redefine_extname @var{oldname} @var{newname}
6386@cindex pragma, redefine_extname
6387
6388This pragma gives the C function @var{oldname} the assembler label
6389@var{newname}. The pragma must appear before the function declaration.
6390This pragma is equivalent to the asm labels extension (@pxref{Asm
6391Labels}). The preprocessor defines @code{__PRAGMA_REDEFINE_EXTNAME}
6392if the pragma is available.
6393@end table
6394
6395@node Tru64 Pragmas
6396@subsection Tru64 Pragmas
6397
6398For compatibility with the Compaq C compiler, the following pragma
6399is supported.
6400
6401@table @code
6402@item extern_prefix @var{string}
6403@cindex pragma, extern_prefix
6404
6405This pragma renames all subsequent function and variable declarations
6406such that @var{string} is prepended to the name. This effect may be
95b1627e 6407terminated by using another @code{extern_prefix} pragma with the
41c64394
RH
6408empty string.
6409
6410This pragma is similar in intent to to the asm labels extension
6411(@pxref{Asm Labels}) in that the system programmer wants to change
6412the assembly-level ABI without changing the source-level API. The
6413preprocessor defines @code{__EXTERN_PREFIX} if the pragma is available.
6414@end table
6415
3e96a2fd
DD
6416@node Unnamed Fields
6417@section Unnamed struct/union fields within structs/unions.
6418@cindex struct
6419@cindex union
6420
6421For compatibility with other compilers, GCC allows you to define
6422a structure or union that contains, as fields, structures and unions
6423without names. For example:
6424
6425@example
6426struct @{
6427 int a;
6428 union @{
6429 int b;
6430 float c;
6431 @};
6432 int d;
6433@} foo;
6434@end example
6435
6436In this example, the user would be able to access members of the unnamed
6437union with code like @samp{foo.b}. Note that only unnamed structs and
6438unions are allowed, you may not have, for example, an unnamed
6439@code{int}.
6440
6441You must never create such structures that cause ambiguous field definitions.
6442For example, this structure:
6443
6444@example
6445struct @{
6446 int a;
6447 struct @{
6448 int a;
6449 @};
6450@} foo;
6451@end example
6452
6453It is ambiguous which @code{a} is being referred to with @samp{foo.a}.
6454Such constructs are not supported and must be avoided. In the future,
6455such constructs may be detected and treated as compilation errors.
6456
3d78f2e9
RH
6457@node Thread-Local
6458@section Thread-Local Storage
6459@cindex Thread-Local Storage
9217ef40 6460@cindex @acronym{TLS}
3d78f2e9
RH
6461@cindex __thread
6462
9217ef40
RH
6463Thread-local storage (@acronym{TLS}) is a mechanism by which variables
6464are allocated such that there is one instance of the variable per extant
3d78f2e9
RH
6465thread. The run-time model GCC uses to implement this originates
6466in the IA-64 processor-specific ABI, but has since been migrated
6467to other processors as well. It requires significant support from
6468the linker (@command{ld}), dynamic linker (@command{ld.so}), and
6469system libraries (@file{libc.so} and @file{libpthread.so}), so it
9217ef40 6470is not available everywhere.
3d78f2e9
RH
6471
6472At the user level, the extension is visible with a new storage
6473class keyword: @code{__thread}. For example:
6474
6475@example
6476__thread int i;
6477extern __thread struct state s;
6478static __thread char *p;
6479@end example
6480
6481The @code{__thread} specifier may be used alone, with the @code{extern}
6482or @code{static} specifiers, but with no other storage class specifier.
6483When used with @code{extern} or @code{static}, @code{__thread} must appear
6484immediately after the other storage class specifier.
6485
6486The @code{__thread} specifier may be applied to any global, file-scoped
244c2241
RH
6487static, function-scoped static, or static data member of a class. It may
6488not be applied to block-scoped automatic or non-static data member.
3d78f2e9
RH
6489
6490When the address-of operator is applied to a thread-local variable, it is
6491evaluated at run-time and returns the address of the current thread's
6492instance of that variable. An address so obtained may be used by any
6493thread. When a thread terminates, any pointers to thread-local variables
6494in that thread become invalid.
6495
6496No static initialization may refer to the address of a thread-local variable.
6497
244c2241
RH
6498In C++, if an initializer is present for a thread-local variable, it must
6499be a @var{constant-expression}, as defined in 5.19.2 of the ANSI/ISO C++
6500standard.
3d78f2e9
RH
6501
6502See @uref{http://people.redhat.com/drepper/tls.pdf,
6503ELF Handling For Thread-Local Storage} for a detailed explanation of
6504the four thread-local storage addressing models, and how the run-time
6505is expected to function.
6506
9217ef40
RH
6507@menu
6508* C99 Thread-Local Edits::
6509* C++98 Thread-Local Edits::
6510@end menu
6511
6512@node C99 Thread-Local Edits
6513@subsection ISO/IEC 9899:1999 Edits for Thread-Local Storage
6514
6515The following are a set of changes to ISO/IEC 9899:1999 (aka C99)
6516that document the exact semantics of the language extension.
6517
6518@itemize @bullet
6519@item
6520@cite{5.1.2 Execution environments}
6521
6522Add new text after paragraph 1
6523
6524@quotation
6525Within either execution environment, a @dfn{thread} is a flow of
6526control within a program. It is implementation defined whether
6527or not there may be more than one thread associated with a program.
6528It is implementation defined how threads beyond the first are
6529created, the name and type of the function called at thread
6530startup, and how threads may be terminated. However, objects
6531with thread storage duration shall be initialized before thread
6532startup.
6533@end quotation
6534
6535@item
6536@cite{6.2.4 Storage durations of objects}
6537
6538Add new text before paragraph 3
6539
6540@quotation
6541An object whose identifier is declared with the storage-class
6542specifier @w{@code{__thread}} has @dfn{thread storage duration}.
6543Its lifetime is the entire execution of the thread, and its
6544stored value is initialized only once, prior to thread startup.
6545@end quotation
6546
6547@item
6548@cite{6.4.1 Keywords}
6549
6550Add @code{__thread}.
6551
6552@item
6553@cite{6.7.1 Storage-class specifiers}
6554
6555Add @code{__thread} to the list of storage class specifiers in
6556paragraph 1.
6557
6558Change paragraph 2 to
6559
6560@quotation
6561With the exception of @code{__thread}, at most one storage-class
6562specifier may be given [@dots{}]. The @code{__thread} specifier may
6563be used alone, or immediately following @code{extern} or
6564@code{static}.
6565@end quotation
6566
6567Add new text after paragraph 6
6568
6569@quotation
6570The declaration of an identifier for a variable that has
6571block scope that specifies @code{__thread} shall also
6572specify either @code{extern} or @code{static}.
6573
6574The @code{__thread} specifier shall be used only with
6575variables.
6576@end quotation
6577@end itemize
6578
6579@node C++98 Thread-Local Edits
6580@subsection ISO/IEC 14882:1998 Edits for Thread-Local Storage
6581
6582The following are a set of changes to ISO/IEC 14882:1998 (aka C++98)
6583that document the exact semantics of the language extension.
6584
6585@itemize @bullet
6586@b{[intro.execution]}
6587
6588New text after paragraph 4
6589
6590@quotation
6591A @dfn{thread} is a flow of control within the abstract machine.
6592It is implementation defined whether or not there may be more than
6593one thread.
6594@end quotation
6595
6596New text after paragraph 7
6597
6598@quotation
95b1627e 6599It is unspecified whether additional action must be taken to
9217ef40
RH
6600ensure when and whether side effects are visible to other threads.
6601@end quotation
6602
6603@item
6604@b{[lex.key]}
6605
6606Add @code{__thread}.
6607
6608@item
6609@b{[basic.start.main]}
6610
6611Add after paragraph 5
6612
6613@quotation
6614The thread that begins execution at the @code{main} function is called
95b1627e 6615the @dfn{main thread}. It is implementation defined how functions
9217ef40
RH
6616beginning threads other than the main thread are designated or typed.
6617A function so designated, as well as the @code{main} function, is called
6618a @dfn{thread startup function}. It is implementation defined what
6619happens if a thread startup function returns. It is implementation
6620defined what happens to other threads when any thread calls @code{exit}.
6621@end quotation
6622
6623@item
6624@b{[basic.start.init]}
6625
6626Add after paragraph 4
6627
6628@quotation
6629The storage for an object of thread storage duration shall be
6630staticly initialized before the first statement of the thread startup
6631function. An object of thread storage duration shall not require
6632dynamic initialization.
6633@end quotation
6634
6635@item
6636@b{[basic.start.term]}
6637
6638Add after paragraph 3
6639
6640@quotation
244c2241
RH
6641The type of an object with thread storage duration shall not have a
6642non-trivial destructor, nor shall it be an array type whose elements
6643(directly or indirectly) have non-trivial destructors.
9217ef40
RH
6644@end quotation
6645
6646@item
6647@b{[basic.stc]}
6648
6649Add ``thread storage duration'' to the list in paragraph 1.
6650
6651Change paragraph 2
6652
6653@quotation
6654Thread, static, and automatic storage durations are associated with
6655objects introduced by declarations [@dots{}].
6656@end quotation
6657
6658Add @code{__thread} to the list of specifiers in paragraph 3.
6659
6660@item
6661@b{[basic.stc.thread]}
6662
6663New section before @b{[basic.stc.static]}
6664
6665@quotation
6666The keyword @code{__thread} applied to an non-local object gives the
6667object thread storage duration.
6668
6669A local variable or class data member declared both @code{static}
6670and @code{__thread} gives the variable or member thread storage
6671duration.
6672@end quotation
6673
6674@item
6675@b{[basic.stc.static]}
6676
6677Change paragraph 1
6678
6679@quotation
6680All objects which have neither thread storage duration, dynamic
6681storage duration nor are local [@dots{}].
6682@end quotation
6683
6684@item
6685@b{[dcl.stc]}
6686
6687Add @code{__thread} to the list in paragraph 1.
6688
6689Change paragraph 1
6690
6691@quotation
6692With the exception of @code{__thread}, at most one
6693@var{storage-class-specifier} shall appear in a given
6694@var{decl-specifier-seq}. The @code{__thread} specifier may
6695be used alone, or immediately following the @code{extern} or
6696@code{static} specifiers. [@dots{}]
6697@end quotation
6698
6699Add after paragraph 5
6700
6701@quotation
6702The @code{__thread} specifier can be applied only to the names of objects
6703and to anonymous unions.
6704@end quotation
6705
6706@item
6707@b{[class.mem]}
6708
6709Add after paragraph 6
6710
6711@quotation
6712Non-@code{static} members shall not be @code{__thread}.
6713@end quotation
6714@end itemize
6715
c1f7febf
RK
6716@node C++ Extensions
6717@chapter Extensions to the C++ Language
6718@cindex extensions, C++ language
6719@cindex C++ language extensions
6720
6721The GNU compiler provides these extensions to the C++ language (and you
6722can also use most of the C language extensions in your C++ programs). If you
6723want to write code that checks whether these features are available, you can
6724test for the GNU compiler the same way as for C programs: check for a
6725predefined macro @code{__GNUC__}. You can also use @code{__GNUG__} to
6726test specifically for GNU C++ (@pxref{Standard Predefined,,Standard
6727Predefined Macros,cpp.info,The C Preprocessor}).
6728
6729@menu
c1f7febf 6730* Min and Max:: C++ Minimum and maximum operators.
02cac427 6731* Volatiles:: What constitutes an access to a volatile object.
49419c8f 6732* Restricted Pointers:: C99 restricted pointers and references.
7a81cf7f 6733* Vague Linkage:: Where G++ puts inlines, vtables and such.
c1f7febf 6734* C++ Interface:: You can use a single C++ header file for both
e6f3b89d 6735 declarations and definitions.
c1f7febf 6736* Template Instantiation:: Methods for ensuring that exactly one copy of
e6f3b89d 6737 each needed template instantiation is emitted.
0ded1f18
JM
6738* Bound member functions:: You can extract a function pointer to the
6739 method denoted by a @samp{->*} or @samp{.*} expression.
e6f3b89d 6740* C++ Attributes:: Variable, function, and type attributes for C++ only.
1f730ff7 6741* Java Exceptions:: Tweaking exception handling to work with Java.
e6f3b89d
PE
6742* Deprecated Features:: Things might disappear from g++.
6743* Backwards Compatibility:: Compatibilities with earlier definitions of C++.
c1f7febf
RK
6744@end menu
6745
c1f7febf
RK
6746@node Min and Max
6747@section Minimum and Maximum Operators in C++
6748
6749It is very convenient to have operators which return the ``minimum'' or the
6750``maximum'' of two arguments. In GNU C++ (but not in GNU C),
6751
6752@table @code
6753@item @var{a} <? @var{b}
6754@findex <?
6755@cindex minimum operator
6756is the @dfn{minimum}, returning the smaller of the numeric values
6757@var{a} and @var{b};
6758
6759@item @var{a} >? @var{b}
6760@findex >?
6761@cindex maximum operator
6762is the @dfn{maximum}, returning the larger of the numeric values @var{a}
6763and @var{b}.
6764@end table
6765
6766These operations are not primitive in ordinary C++, since you can
6767use a macro to return the minimum of two things in C++, as in the
6768following example.
6769
6770@example
6771#define MIN(X,Y) ((X) < (Y) ? : (X) : (Y))
6772@end example
6773
6774@noindent
6775You might then use @w{@samp{int min = MIN (i, j);}} to set @var{min} to
6776the minimum value of variables @var{i} and @var{j}.
6777
6778However, side effects in @code{X} or @code{Y} may cause unintended
6779behavior. For example, @code{MIN (i++, j++)} will fail, incrementing
6780the smaller counter twice. A GNU C extension allows you to write safe
6781macros that avoid this kind of problem (@pxref{Naming Types,,Naming an
6782Expression's Type}). However, writing @code{MIN} and @code{MAX} as
6783macros also forces you to use function-call notation for a
6784fundamental arithmetic operation. Using GNU C++ extensions, you can
6785write @w{@samp{int min = i <? j;}} instead.
6786
6787Since @code{<?} and @code{>?} are built into the compiler, they properly
6788handle expressions with side-effects; @w{@samp{int min = i++ <? j++;}}
6789works correctly.
6790
02cac427
NS
6791@node Volatiles
6792@section When is a Volatile Object Accessed?
6793@cindex accessing volatiles
6794@cindex volatile read
6795@cindex volatile write
6796@cindex volatile access
6797
767094dd
JM
6798Both the C and C++ standard have the concept of volatile objects. These
6799are normally accessed by pointers and used for accessing hardware. The
8117da65 6800standards encourage compilers to refrain from optimizations
02cac427 6801concerning accesses to volatile objects that it might perform on
767094dd
JM
6802non-volatile objects. The C standard leaves it implementation defined
6803as to what constitutes a volatile access. The C++ standard omits to
02cac427 6804specify this, except to say that C++ should behave in a similar manner
767094dd 6805to C with respect to volatiles, where possible. The minimum either
8117da65 6806standard specifies is that at a sequence point all previous accesses to
02cac427 6807volatile objects have stabilized and no subsequent accesses have
767094dd 6808occurred. Thus an implementation is free to reorder and combine
02cac427 6809volatile accesses which occur between sequence points, but cannot do so
767094dd 6810for accesses across a sequence point. The use of volatiles does not
02cac427
NS
6811allow you to violate the restriction on updating objects multiple times
6812within a sequence point.
6813
6814In most expressions, it is intuitively obvious what is a read and what is
767094dd 6815a write. For instance
02cac427
NS
6816
6817@example
c771326b
JM
6818volatile int *dst = @var{somevalue};
6819volatile int *src = @var{someothervalue};
02cac427
NS
6820*dst = *src;
6821@end example
6822
6823@noindent
6824will cause a read of the volatile object pointed to by @var{src} and stores the
767094dd 6825value into the volatile object pointed to by @var{dst}. There is no
02cac427
NS
6826guarantee that these reads and writes are atomic, especially for objects
6827larger than @code{int}.
6828
6829Less obvious expressions are where something which looks like an access
767094dd 6830is used in a void context. An example would be,
02cac427
NS
6831
6832@example
c771326b 6833volatile int *src = @var{somevalue};
02cac427
NS
6834*src;
6835@end example
6836
6837With C, such expressions are rvalues, and as rvalues cause a read of
f0523f02 6838the object, GCC interprets this as a read of the volatile being pointed
767094dd 6839to. The C++ standard specifies that such expressions do not undergo
02cac427 6840lvalue to rvalue conversion, and that the type of the dereferenced
767094dd 6841object may be incomplete. The C++ standard does not specify explicitly
02cac427 6842that it is this lvalue to rvalue conversion which is responsible for
767094dd
JM
6843causing an access. However, there is reason to believe that it is,
6844because otherwise certain simple expressions become undefined. However,
f0523f02 6845because it would surprise most programmers, G++ treats dereferencing a
02cac427 6846pointer to volatile object of complete type in a void context as a read
767094dd 6847of the object. When the object has incomplete type, G++ issues a
02cac427
NS
6848warning.
6849
6850@example
6851struct S;
6852struct T @{int m;@};
c771326b
JM
6853volatile S *ptr1 = @var{somevalue};
6854volatile T *ptr2 = @var{somevalue};
02cac427
NS
6855*ptr1;
6856*ptr2;
6857@end example
6858
6859In this example, a warning is issued for @code{*ptr1}, and @code{*ptr2}
767094dd 6860causes a read of the object pointed to. If you wish to force an error on
02cac427
NS
6861the first case, you must force a conversion to rvalue with, for instance
6862a static cast, @code{static_cast<S>(*ptr1)}.
6863
f0523f02 6864When using a reference to volatile, G++ does not treat equivalent
02cac427 6865expressions as accesses to volatiles, but instead issues a warning that
767094dd 6866no volatile is accessed. The rationale for this is that otherwise it
02cac427
NS
6867becomes difficult to determine where volatile access occur, and not
6868possible to ignore the return value from functions returning volatile
767094dd 6869references. Again, if you wish to force a read, cast the reference to
02cac427
NS
6870an rvalue.
6871
535233a8
NS
6872@node Restricted Pointers
6873@section Restricting Pointer Aliasing
6874@cindex restricted pointers
6875@cindex restricted references
6876@cindex restricted this pointer
6877
49419c8f 6878As with gcc, g++ understands the C99 feature of restricted pointers,
535233a8 6879specified with the @code{__restrict__}, or @code{__restrict} type
767094dd 6880qualifier. Because you cannot compile C++ by specifying the @option{-std=c99}
535233a8
NS
6881language flag, @code{restrict} is not a keyword in C++.
6882
6883In addition to allowing restricted pointers, you can specify restricted
6884references, which indicate that the reference is not aliased in the local
6885context.
6886
6887@example
6888void fn (int *__restrict__ rptr, int &__restrict__ rref)
6889@{
0d893a63 6890 /* @r{@dots{}} */
535233a8
NS
6891@}
6892@end example
6893
6894@noindent
6895In the body of @code{fn}, @var{rptr} points to an unaliased integer and
6896@var{rref} refers to a (different) unaliased integer.
6897
6898You may also specify whether a member function's @var{this} pointer is
6899unaliased by using @code{__restrict__} as a member function qualifier.
6900
6901@example
6902void T::fn () __restrict__
6903@{
0d893a63 6904 /* @r{@dots{}} */
535233a8
NS
6905@}
6906@end example
6907
6908@noindent
6909Within the body of @code{T::fn}, @var{this} will have the effective
767094dd 6910definition @code{T *__restrict__ const this}. Notice that the
535233a8
NS
6911interpretation of a @code{__restrict__} member function qualifier is
6912different to that of @code{const} or @code{volatile} qualifier, in that it
767094dd 6913is applied to the pointer rather than the object. This is consistent with
535233a8
NS
6914other compilers which implement restricted pointers.
6915
6916As with all outermost parameter qualifiers, @code{__restrict__} is
767094dd 6917ignored in function definition matching. This means you only need to
535233a8
NS
6918specify @code{__restrict__} in a function definition, rather than
6919in a function prototype as well.
6920
7a81cf7f
JM
6921@node Vague Linkage
6922@section Vague Linkage
6923@cindex vague linkage
6924
6925There are several constructs in C++ which require space in the object
6926file but are not clearly tied to a single translation unit. We say that
6927these constructs have ``vague linkage''. Typically such constructs are
6928emitted wherever they are needed, though sometimes we can be more
6929clever.
6930
6931@table @asis
6932@item Inline Functions
6933Inline functions are typically defined in a header file which can be
6934included in many different compilations. Hopefully they can usually be
6935inlined, but sometimes an out-of-line copy is necessary, if the address
6936of the function is taken or if inlining fails. In general, we emit an
6937out-of-line copy in all translation units where one is needed. As an
6938exception, we only emit inline virtual functions with the vtable, since
6939it will always require a copy.
6940
6941Local static variables and string constants used in an inline function
6942are also considered to have vague linkage, since they must be shared
6943between all inlined and out-of-line instances of the function.
6944
6945@item VTables
6946@cindex vtable
6947C++ virtual functions are implemented in most compilers using a lookup
6948table, known as a vtable. The vtable contains pointers to the virtual
6949functions provided by a class, and each object of the class contains a
6950pointer to its vtable (or vtables, in some multiple-inheritance
6951situations). If the class declares any non-inline, non-pure virtual
6952functions, the first one is chosen as the ``key method'' for the class,
6953and the vtable is only emitted in the translation unit where the key
6954method is defined.
6955
6956@emph{Note:} If the chosen key method is later defined as inline, the
6957vtable will still be emitted in every translation unit which defines it.
6958Make sure that any inline virtuals are declared inline in the class
6959body, even if they are not defined there.
6960
6961@item type_info objects
6962@cindex type_info
6963@cindex RTTI
6964C++ requires information about types to be written out in order to
6965implement @samp{dynamic_cast}, @samp{typeid} and exception handling.
6966For polymorphic classes (classes with virtual functions), the type_info
6967object is written out along with the vtable so that @samp{dynamic_cast}
6968can determine the dynamic type of a class object at runtime. For all
6969other types, we write out the type_info object when it is used: when
6970applying @samp{typeid} to an expression, throwing an object, or
6971referring to a type in a catch clause or exception specification.
6972
6973@item Template Instantiations
6974Most everything in this section also applies to template instantiations,
6975but there are other options as well.
6976@xref{Template Instantiation,,Where's the Template?}.
6977
6978@end table
6979
6980When used with GNU ld version 2.8 or later on an ELF system such as
6981Linux/GNU or Solaris 2, or on Microsoft Windows, duplicate copies of
6982these constructs will be discarded at link time. This is known as
6983COMDAT support.
6984
6985On targets that don't support COMDAT, but do support weak symbols, GCC
6986will use them. This way one copy will override all the others, but
6987the unused copies will still take up space in the executable.
6988
6989For targets which do not support either COMDAT or weak symbols,
6990most entities with vague linkage will be emitted as local symbols to
6991avoid duplicate definition errors from the linker. This will not happen
6992for local statics in inlines, however, as having multiple copies will
6993almost certainly break things.
6994
6995@xref{C++ Interface,,Declarations and Definitions in One Header}, for
6996another way to control placement of these constructs.
6997
c1f7febf
RK
6998@node C++ Interface
6999@section Declarations and Definitions in One Header
7000
7001@cindex interface and implementation headers, C++
7002@cindex C++ interface and implementation headers
7003C++ object definitions can be quite complex. In principle, your source
7004code will need two kinds of things for each object that you use across
7005more than one source file. First, you need an @dfn{interface}
7006specification, describing its structure with type declarations and
7007function prototypes. Second, you need the @dfn{implementation} itself.
7008It can be tedious to maintain a separate interface description in a
7009header file, in parallel to the actual implementation. It is also
7010dangerous, since separate interface and implementation definitions may
7011not remain parallel.
7012
7013@cindex pragmas, interface and implementation
7014With GNU C++, you can use a single header file for both purposes.
7015
7016@quotation
7017@emph{Warning:} The mechanism to specify this is in transition. For the
7018nonce, you must use one of two @code{#pragma} commands; in a future
7019release of GNU C++, an alternative mechanism will make these
7020@code{#pragma} commands unnecessary.
7021@end quotation
7022
7023The header file contains the full definitions, but is marked with
7024@samp{#pragma interface} in the source code. This allows the compiler
7025to use the header file only as an interface specification when ordinary
7026source files incorporate it with @code{#include}. In the single source
7027file where the full implementation belongs, you can use either a naming
7028convention or @samp{#pragma implementation} to indicate this alternate
7029use of the header file.
7030
7031@table @code
7032@item #pragma interface
7033@itemx #pragma interface "@var{subdir}/@var{objects}.h"
7034@kindex #pragma interface
7035Use this directive in @emph{header files} that define object classes, to save
7036space in most of the object files that use those classes. Normally,
7037local copies of certain information (backup copies of inline member
7038functions, debugging information, and the internal tables that implement
7039virtual functions) must be kept in each object file that includes class
7040definitions. You can use this pragma to avoid such duplication. When a
7041header file containing @samp{#pragma interface} is included in a
7042compilation, this auxiliary information will not be generated (unless
7043the main input source file itself uses @samp{#pragma implementation}).
7044Instead, the object files will contain references to be resolved at link
7045time.
7046
7047The second form of this directive is useful for the case where you have
7048multiple headers with the same name in different directories. If you
7049use this form, you must specify the same string to @samp{#pragma
7050implementation}.
7051
7052@item #pragma implementation
7053@itemx #pragma implementation "@var{objects}.h"
7054@kindex #pragma implementation
7055Use this pragma in a @emph{main input file}, when you want full output from
7056included header files to be generated (and made globally visible). The
7057included header file, in turn, should use @samp{#pragma interface}.
7058Backup copies of inline member functions, debugging information, and the
7059internal tables used to implement virtual functions are all generated in
7060implementation files.
7061
7062@cindex implied @code{#pragma implementation}
7063@cindex @code{#pragma implementation}, implied
7064@cindex naming convention, implementation headers
7065If you use @samp{#pragma implementation} with no argument, it applies to
7066an include file with the same basename@footnote{A file's @dfn{basename}
7067was the name stripped of all leading path information and of trailing
7068suffixes, such as @samp{.h} or @samp{.C} or @samp{.cc}.} as your source
7069file. For example, in @file{allclass.cc}, giving just
7070@samp{#pragma implementation}
7071by itself is equivalent to @samp{#pragma implementation "allclass.h"}.
7072
7073In versions of GNU C++ prior to 2.6.0 @file{allclass.h} was treated as
7074an implementation file whenever you would include it from
7075@file{allclass.cc} even if you never specified @samp{#pragma
7076implementation}. This was deemed to be more trouble than it was worth,
7077however, and disabled.
7078
7079If you use an explicit @samp{#pragma implementation}, it must appear in
7080your source file @emph{before} you include the affected header files.
7081
7082Use the string argument if you want a single implementation file to
7083include code from multiple header files. (You must also use
7084@samp{#include} to include the header file; @samp{#pragma
7085implementation} only specifies how to use the file---it doesn't actually
7086include it.)
7087
7088There is no way to split up the contents of a single header file into
7089multiple implementation files.
7090@end table
7091
7092@cindex inlining and C++ pragmas
7093@cindex C++ pragmas, effect on inlining
7094@cindex pragmas in C++, effect on inlining
7095@samp{#pragma implementation} and @samp{#pragma interface} also have an
7096effect on function inlining.
7097
7098If you define a class in a header file marked with @samp{#pragma
7099interface}, the effect on a function defined in that class is similar to
7100an explicit @code{extern} declaration---the compiler emits no code at
7101all to define an independent version of the function. Its definition
7102is used only for inlining with its callers.
7103
84330467 7104@opindex fno-implement-inlines
c1f7febf
RK
7105Conversely, when you include the same header file in a main source file
7106that declares it as @samp{#pragma implementation}, the compiler emits
7107code for the function itself; this defines a version of the function
7108that can be found via pointers (or by callers compiled without
7109inlining). If all calls to the function can be inlined, you can avoid
84330467 7110emitting the function by compiling with @option{-fno-implement-inlines}.
c1f7febf
RK
7111If any calls were not inlined, you will get linker errors.
7112
7113@node Template Instantiation
7114@section Where's the Template?
7115
7116@cindex template instantiation
7117
7118C++ templates are the first language feature to require more
7119intelligence from the environment than one usually finds on a UNIX
7120system. Somehow the compiler and linker have to make sure that each
7121template instance occurs exactly once in the executable if it is needed,
7122and not at all otherwise. There are two basic approaches to this
7123problem, which I will refer to as the Borland model and the Cfront model.
7124
7125@table @asis
7126@item Borland model
7127Borland C++ solved the template instantiation problem by adding the code
469b759e
JM
7128equivalent of common blocks to their linker; the compiler emits template
7129instances in each translation unit that uses them, and the linker
7130collapses them together. The advantage of this model is that the linker
7131only has to consider the object files themselves; there is no external
7132complexity to worry about. This disadvantage is that compilation time
7133is increased because the template code is being compiled repeatedly.
7134Code written for this model tends to include definitions of all
7135templates in the header file, since they must be seen to be
7136instantiated.
c1f7febf
RK
7137
7138@item Cfront model
7139The AT&T C++ translator, Cfront, solved the template instantiation
7140problem by creating the notion of a template repository, an
469b759e
JM
7141automatically maintained place where template instances are stored. A
7142more modern version of the repository works as follows: As individual
7143object files are built, the compiler places any template definitions and
7144instantiations encountered in the repository. At link time, the link
7145wrapper adds in the objects in the repository and compiles any needed
7146instances that were not previously emitted. The advantages of this
7147model are more optimal compilation speed and the ability to use the
7148system linker; to implement the Borland model a compiler vendor also
c1f7febf 7149needs to replace the linker. The disadvantages are vastly increased
469b759e
JM
7150complexity, and thus potential for error; for some code this can be
7151just as transparent, but in practice it can been very difficult to build
c1f7febf 7152multiple programs in one directory and one program in multiple
469b759e
JM
7153directories. Code written for this model tends to separate definitions
7154of non-inline member templates into a separate file, which should be
7155compiled separately.
c1f7febf
RK
7156@end table
7157
469b759e 7158When used with GNU ld version 2.8 or later on an ELF system such as
a4b3b54a
JM
7159Linux/GNU or Solaris 2, or on Microsoft Windows, g++ supports the
7160Borland model. On other systems, g++ implements neither automatic
7161model.
469b759e
JM
7162
7163A future version of g++ will support a hybrid model whereby the compiler
7164will emit any instantiations for which the template definition is
7165included in the compile, and store template definitions and
7166instantiation context information into the object file for the rest.
7167The link wrapper will extract that information as necessary and invoke
7168the compiler to produce the remaining instantiations. The linker will
7169then combine duplicate instantiations.
7170
7171In the mean time, you have the following options for dealing with
7172template instantiations:
c1f7febf
RK
7173
7174@enumerate
d863830b 7175@item
84330467
JM
7176@opindex frepo
7177Compile your template-using code with @option{-frepo}. The compiler will
d863830b
JL
7178generate files with the extension @samp{.rpo} listing all of the
7179template instantiations used in the corresponding object files which
7180could be instantiated there; the link wrapper, @samp{collect2}, will
7181then update the @samp{.rpo} files to tell the compiler where to place
7182those instantiations and rebuild any affected object files. The
7183link-time overhead is negligible after the first pass, as the compiler
7184will continue to place the instantiations in the same files.
7185
7186This is your best option for application code written for the Borland
7187model, as it will just work. Code written for the Cfront model will
7188need to be modified so that the template definitions are available at
7189one or more points of instantiation; usually this is as simple as adding
7190@code{#include <tmethods.cc>} to the end of each template header.
7191
7192For library code, if you want the library to provide all of the template
7193instantiations it needs, just try to link all of its object files
7194together; the link will fail, but cause the instantiations to be
7195generated as a side effect. Be warned, however, that this may cause
7196conflicts if multiple libraries try to provide the same instantiations.
7197For greater control, use explicit instantiation as described in the next
7198option.
7199
c1f7febf 7200@item
84330467
JM
7201@opindex fno-implicit-templates
7202Compile your code with @option{-fno-implicit-templates} to disable the
c1f7febf
RK
7203implicit generation of template instances, and explicitly instantiate
7204all the ones you use. This approach requires more knowledge of exactly
7205which instances you need than do the others, but it's less
7206mysterious and allows greater control. You can scatter the explicit
7207instantiations throughout your program, perhaps putting them in the
7208translation units where the instances are used or the translation units
7209that define the templates themselves; you can put all of the explicit
7210instantiations you need into one big file; or you can create small files
7211like
7212
7213@example
7214#include "Foo.h"
7215#include "Foo.cc"
7216
7217template class Foo<int>;
7218template ostream& operator <<
7219 (ostream&, const Foo<int>&);
7220@end example
7221
7222for each of the instances you need, and create a template instantiation
7223library from those.
7224
7225If you are using Cfront-model code, you can probably get away with not
84330467 7226using @option{-fno-implicit-templates} when compiling files that don't
c1f7febf
RK
7227@samp{#include} the member template definitions.
7228
7229If you use one big file to do the instantiations, you may want to
84330467 7230compile it without @option{-fno-implicit-templates} so you get all of the
c1f7febf
RK
7231instances required by your explicit instantiations (but not by any
7232other files) without having to specify them as well.
7233
7234g++ has extended the template instantiation syntax outlined in the
03d0f4af 7235Working Paper to allow forward declaration of explicit instantiations
4003d7f9 7236(with @code{extern}), instantiation of the compiler support data for a
e979f9e8 7237template class (i.e.@: the vtable) without instantiating any of its
4003d7f9
JM
7238members (with @code{inline}), and instantiation of only the static data
7239members of a template class, without the support data or member
7240functions (with (@code{static}):
c1f7febf
RK
7241
7242@example
7243extern template int max (int, int);
c1f7febf 7244inline template class Foo<int>;
4003d7f9 7245static template class Foo<int>;
c1f7febf
RK
7246@end example
7247
7248@item
7249Do nothing. Pretend g++ does implement automatic instantiation
7250management. Code written for the Borland model will work fine, but
7251each translation unit will contain instances of each of the templates it
7252uses. In a large program, this can lead to an unacceptable amount of code
7253duplication.
7254
c1f7febf
RK
7255@xref{C++ Interface,,Declarations and Definitions in One Header}, for
7256more discussion of these pragmas.
7257@end enumerate
7258
0ded1f18
JM
7259@node Bound member functions
7260@section Extracting the function pointer from a bound pointer to member function
7261
7262@cindex pmf
7263@cindex pointer to member function
7264@cindex bound pointer to member function
7265
7266In C++, pointer to member functions (PMFs) are implemented using a wide
7267pointer of sorts to handle all the possible call mechanisms; the PMF
7268needs to store information about how to adjust the @samp{this} pointer,
7269and if the function pointed to is virtual, where to find the vtable, and
7270where in the vtable to look for the member function. If you are using
7271PMFs in an inner loop, you should really reconsider that decision. If
7272that is not an option, you can extract the pointer to the function that
7273would be called for a given object/PMF pair and call it directly inside
7274the inner loop, to save a bit of time.
7275
7276Note that you will still be paying the penalty for the call through a
7277function pointer; on most modern architectures, such a call defeats the
161d7b59 7278branch prediction features of the CPU@. This is also true of normal
0ded1f18
JM
7279virtual function calls.
7280
7281The syntax for this extension is
7282
7283@example
7284extern A a;
7285extern int (A::*fp)();
7286typedef int (*fptr)(A *);
7287
7288fptr p = (fptr)(a.*fp);
7289@end example
7290
e979f9e8 7291For PMF constants (i.e.@: expressions of the form @samp{&Klasse::Member}),
767094dd 7292no object is needed to obtain the address of the function. They can be
0fb6bbf5
ML
7293converted to function pointers directly:
7294
7295@example
7296fptr p1 = (fptr)(&A::foo);
7297@end example
7298
84330467
JM
7299@opindex Wno-pmf-conversions
7300You must specify @option{-Wno-pmf-conversions} to use this extension.
0ded1f18 7301
5c25e11d
PE
7302@node C++ Attributes
7303@section C++-Specific Variable, Function, and Type Attributes
7304
7305Some attributes only make sense for C++ programs.
7306
7307@table @code
7308@item init_priority (@var{priority})
7309@cindex init_priority attribute
7310
7311
7312In Standard C++, objects defined at namespace scope are guaranteed to be
7313initialized in an order in strict accordance with that of their definitions
7314@emph{in a given translation unit}. No guarantee is made for initializations
7315across translation units. However, GNU C++ allows users to control the
3844cd2e 7316order of initialization of objects defined at namespace scope with the
5c25e11d
PE
7317@code{init_priority} attribute by specifying a relative @var{priority},
7318a constant integral expression currently bounded between 101 and 65535
7319inclusive. Lower numbers indicate a higher priority.
7320
7321In the following example, @code{A} would normally be created before
7322@code{B}, but the @code{init_priority} attribute has reversed that order:
7323
478c9e72 7324@smallexample
5c25e11d
PE
7325Some_Class A __attribute__ ((init_priority (2000)));
7326Some_Class B __attribute__ ((init_priority (543)));
478c9e72 7327@end smallexample
5c25e11d
PE
7328
7329@noindent
7330Note that the particular values of @var{priority} do not matter; only their
7331relative ordering.
7332
60c87482
BM
7333@item java_interface
7334@cindex java_interface attribute
7335
02f52e19 7336This type attribute informs C++ that the class is a Java interface. It may
60c87482 7337only be applied to classes declared within an @code{extern "Java"} block.
02f52e19
AJ
7338Calls to methods declared in this interface will be dispatched using GCJ's
7339interface table mechanism, instead of regular virtual table dispatch.
60c87482 7340
5c25e11d
PE
7341@end table
7342
1f730ff7
ZW
7343@node Java Exceptions
7344@section Java Exceptions
7345
7346The Java language uses a slightly different exception handling model
7347from C++. Normally, GNU C++ will automatically detect when you are
7348writing C++ code that uses Java exceptions, and handle them
7349appropriately. However, if C++ code only needs to execute destructors
7350when Java exceptions are thrown through it, GCC will guess incorrectly.
9c34dbbf 7351Sample problematic code is:
1f730ff7 7352
478c9e72 7353@smallexample
1f730ff7 7354 struct S @{ ~S(); @};
9c34dbbf 7355 extern void bar(); // is written in Java, and may throw exceptions
1f730ff7
ZW
7356 void foo()
7357 @{
7358 S s;
7359 bar();
7360 @}
478c9e72 7361@end smallexample
1f730ff7
ZW
7362
7363@noindent
7364The usual effect of an incorrect guess is a link failure, complaining of
7365a missing routine called @samp{__gxx_personality_v0}.
7366
7367You can inform the compiler that Java exceptions are to be used in a
7368translation unit, irrespective of what it might think, by writing
7369@samp{@w{#pragma GCC java_exceptions}} at the head of the file. This
7370@samp{#pragma} must appear before any functions that throw or catch
7371exceptions, or run destructors when exceptions are thrown through them.
7372
7373You cannot mix Java and C++ exceptions in the same translation unit. It
7374is believed to be safe to throw a C++ exception from one file through
9c34dbbf
ZW
7375another file compiled for the Java exception model, or vice versa, but
7376there may be bugs in this area.
1f730ff7 7377
e6f3b89d
PE
7378@node Deprecated Features
7379@section Deprecated Features
7380
7381In the past, the GNU C++ compiler was extended to experiment with new
767094dd 7382features, at a time when the C++ language was still evolving. Now that
e6f3b89d 7383the C++ standard is complete, some of those features are superseded by
767094dd
JM
7384superior alternatives. Using the old features might cause a warning in
7385some cases that the feature will be dropped in the future. In other
e6f3b89d
PE
7386cases, the feature might be gone already.
7387
7388While the list below is not exhaustive, it documents some of the options
7389that are now deprecated:
7390
7391@table @code
7392@item -fexternal-templates
7393@itemx -falt-external-templates
7394These are two of the many ways for g++ to implement template
767094dd 7395instantiation. @xref{Template Instantiation}. The C++ standard clearly
e6f3b89d 7396defines how template definitions have to be organized across
767094dd 7397implementation units. g++ has an implicit instantiation mechanism that
e6f3b89d
PE
7398should work just fine for standard-conforming code.
7399
7400@item -fstrict-prototype
7401@itemx -fno-strict-prototype
7402Previously it was possible to use an empty prototype parameter list to
7403indicate an unspecified number of parameters (like C), rather than no
767094dd 7404parameters, as C++ demands. This feature has been removed, except where
e6f3b89d
PE
7405it is required for backwards compatibility @xref{Backwards Compatibility}.
7406@end table
7407
ad1a6d45
NS
7408The named return value extension has been deprecated, and is now
7409removed from g++.
e6f3b89d 7410
82c18d5c 7411The use of initializer lists with new expressions has been deprecated,
ad1a6d45
NS
7412and is now removed from g++.
7413
7414Floating and complex non-type template parameters have been deprecated,
7415and are now removed from g++.
7416
7417The implicit typename extension has been deprecated and will be removed
7418from g++ at some point. In some cases g++ determines that a dependant
7419type such as @code{TPL<T>::X} is a type without needing a
7420@code{typename} keyword, contrary to the standard.
82c18d5c 7421
e6f3b89d
PE
7422@node Backwards Compatibility
7423@section Backwards Compatibility
7424@cindex Backwards Compatibility
7425@cindex ARM [Annotated C++ Reference Manual]
7426
aee96fe9 7427Now that there is a definitive ISO standard C++, G++ has a specification
767094dd 7428to adhere to. The C++ language evolved over time, and features that
e6f3b89d 7429used to be acceptable in previous drafts of the standard, such as the ARM
767094dd 7430[Annotated C++ Reference Manual], are no longer accepted. In order to allow
aee96fe9 7431compilation of C++ written to such drafts, G++ contains some backwards
767094dd 7432compatibilities. @emph{All such backwards compatibility features are
aee96fe9 7433liable to disappear in future versions of G++.} They should be considered
e6f3b89d
PE
7434deprecated @xref{Deprecated Features}.
7435
7436@table @code
7437@item For scope
7438If a variable is declared at for scope, it used to remain in scope until
7439the end of the scope which contained the for statement (rather than just
aee96fe9 7440within the for scope). G++ retains this, but issues a warning, if such a
e6f3b89d
PE
7441variable is accessed outside the for scope.
7442
ad1a6d45 7443@item Implicit C language
630d3d5a 7444Old C system header files did not contain an @code{extern "C" @{@dots{}@}}
767094dd
JM
7445scope to set the language. On such systems, all header files are
7446implicitly scoped inside a C language scope. Also, an empty prototype
e6f3b89d
PE
7447@code{()} will be treated as an unspecified number of arguments, rather
7448than no arguments, as C++ demands.
7449@end table