We don't use any GNU-specific printf args, but this prevents warnings about
%z, observed on MinGW even though every libc anyone is likely to use there
supports %z perfectly well, and we're not stopping using it just because
MinGW complains. Doing this means we stand more chance of seeing *actual*
problems on such platforms without them being drowned in noise.
We turn this off on clang, which doesn't support __gnu_printf__.
Suggested by Eli Zaretskii.
libctf/
PR libctf/31863
* ctf-impl.h (_libctf_printflike_): Use __gnu_printf__.
macros glibc may introduce, which have names of the pattern
__attribute_blah__. */
+#if defined (__clang__)
#define _libctf_printflike_(string_index,first_to_check) \
__attribute__ ((__format__ (__printf__, (string_index), (first_to_check))))
+#else
+#define _libctf_printflike_(string_index,first_to_check) \
+ __attribute__ ((__format__ (__gnu_printf__, (string_index), (first_to_check))))
+#endif
#define _libctf_unlikely_(x) __builtin_expect ((x), 0)
#define _libctf_unused_ __attribute__ ((__unused__))
#define _libctf_malloc_ __attribute__((__malloc__))