@c Copyright (C) 1988, 1989, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, @c 1999, 2000, 2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc. @c This is part of the GCC manual. @c For copying conditions, see the file gcc.texi. @node Trouble @chapter Known Causes of Trouble with GCC @cindex bugs, known @cindex installation trouble @cindex known causes of trouble This section describes known problems that affect users of GCC@. Most of these are not GCC bugs per se---if they were, we would fix them. But the result for a user may be like the result of a bug. Some of these problems are due to bugs in other software, some are missing features that are too much work to add, and some are places where people's opinions differ as to what is best. @menu * Actual Bugs:: Bugs we will fix later. * Cross-Compiler Problems:: Common problems of cross compiling with GCC. * Interoperation:: Problems using GCC with other compilers, and with certain linkers, assemblers and debuggers. * External Bugs:: Problems compiling certain programs. * Incompatibilities:: GCC is incompatible with traditional C. * Fixed Headers:: GCC uses corrected versions of system header files. This is necessary, but doesn't always work smoothly. * Standard Libraries:: GCC uses the system C library, which might not be compliant with the ISO C standard. * Disappointments:: Regrettable things we can't change, but not quite bugs. * C++ Misunderstandings:: Common misunderstandings with GNU C++. * Protoize Caveats:: Things to watch out for when using @code{protoize}. * Non-bugs:: Things we think are right, but some others disagree. * Warnings and Errors:: Which problems in your code get warnings, and which get errors. @end menu @node Actual Bugs @section Actual Bugs We Haven't Fixed Yet @itemize @bullet @item The @code{fixincludes} script interacts badly with automounters; if the directory of system header files is automounted, it tends to be unmounted while @code{fixincludes} is running. This would seem to be a bug in the automounter. We don't know any good way to work around it. @item The @code{fixproto} script will sometimes add prototypes for the @code{sigsetjmp} and @code{siglongjmp} functions that reference the @code{jmp_buf} type before that type is defined. To work around this, edit the offending file and place the typedef in front of the prototypes. @item @opindex pedantic-errors When @option{-pedantic-errors} is specified, GCC will incorrectly give an error message when a function name is specified in an expression involving the comma operator. @end itemize @node Cross-Compiler Problems @section Cross-Compiler Problems You may run into problems with cross compilation on certain machines, for several reasons. @itemize @bullet @item Cross compilation can run into trouble for certain machines because some target machines' assemblers require floating point numbers to be written as @emph{integer} constants in certain contexts. The compiler writes these integer constants by examining the floating point value as an integer and printing that integer, because this is simple to write and independent of the details of the floating point representation. But this does not work if the compiler is running on a different machine with an incompatible floating point format, or even a different byte-ordering. In addition, correct constant folding of floating point values requires representing them in the target machine's format. (The C standard does not quite require this, but in practice it is the only way to win.) It is now possible to overcome these problems by defining macros such as @code{REAL_VALUE_TYPE}. But doing so is a substantial amount of work for each target machine. @xref{Cross-compilation,,Cross Compilation and Floating Point, gccint, GNU Compiler Collection (GCC) Internals}. @item At present, the program @file{mips-tfile} which adds debug support to object files on MIPS systems does not work in a cross compile environment. @end itemize @node Interoperation @section Interoperation This section lists various difficulties encountered in using GCC together with other compilers or with the assemblers, linkers, libraries and debuggers on certain systems. @itemize @bullet @item On many platforms, GCC supports a different ABI for C++ than do other compilers, so the object files compiled by GCC cannot be used with object files generated by another C++ compiler. An area where the difference is most apparent is name mangling. The use of different name mangling is intentional, to protect you from more subtle problems. Compilers differ as to many internal details of C++ implementation, including: how class instances are laid out, how multiple inheritance is implemented, and how virtual function calls are handled. If the name encoding were made the same, your programs would link against libraries provided from other compilers---but the programs would then crash when run. Incompatible libraries are then detected at link time, rather than at run time. @item Older GDB versions sometimes fail to read the output of GCC version 2. If you have trouble, get GDB version 4.4 or later. @item @cindex DBX DBX rejects some files produced by GCC, though it accepts similar constructs in output from PCC@. Until someone can supply a coherent description of what is valid DBX input and what is not, there is nothing I can do about these problems. You are on your own. @item The GNU assembler (GAS) does not support PIC@. To generate PIC code, you must use some other assembler, such as @file{/bin/as}. @item On some BSD systems, including some versions of Ultrix, use of profiling causes static variable destructors (currently used only in C++) not to be run. @ignore @cindex @code{vfork}, for the Sun-4 @item There is a bug in @code{vfork} on the Sun-4 which causes the registers of the child process to clobber those of the parent. Because of this, programs that call @code{vfork} are likely to lose when compiled optimized with GCC when the child code alters registers which contain C variables in the parent. This affects variables which are live in the parent across the call to @code{vfork}. If you encounter this, you can work around the problem by declaring variables @code{volatile} in the function that calls @code{vfork}, until the problem goes away, or by not declaring them @code{register} and not using @option{-O} for those source files. @end ignore @item On some SGI systems, when you use @option{-lgl_s} as an option, it gets translated magically to @samp{-lgl_s -lX11_s -lc_s}. Naturally, this does not happen when you use GCC@. You must specify all three options explicitly. @item On a SPARC, GCC aligns all values of type @code{double} on an 8-byte boundary, and it expects every @code{double} to be so aligned. The Sun compiler usually gives @code{double} values 8-byte alignment, with one exception: function arguments of type @code{double} may not be aligned. As a result, if a function compiled with Sun CC takes the address of an argument of type @code{double} and passes this pointer of type @code{double *} to a function compiled with GCC, dereferencing the pointer may cause a fatal signal. One way to solve this problem is to compile your entire program with GCC@. Another solution is to modify the function that is compiled with Sun CC to copy the argument into a local variable; local variables are always properly aligned. A third solution is to modify the function that uses the pointer to dereference it via the following function @code{access_double} instead of directly with @samp{*}: @smallexample inline double access_double (double *unaligned_ptr) @{ union d2i @{ double d; int i[2]; @}; union d2i *p = (union d2i *) unaligned_ptr; union d2i u; u.i[0] = p->i[0]; u.i[1] = p->i[1]; return u.d; @} @end smallexample @noindent Storing into the pointer can be done likewise with the same union. @item On Solaris, the @code{malloc} function in the @file{libmalloc.a} library may allocate memory that is only 4 byte aligned. Since GCC on the SPARC assumes that doubles are 8 byte aligned, this may result in a fatal signal if doubles are stored in memory allocated by the @file{libmalloc.a} library. The solution is to not use the @file{libmalloc.a} library. Use instead @code{malloc} and related functions from @file{libc.a}; they do not have this problem. @item Sun forgot to include a static version of @file{libdl.a} with some versions of SunOS (mainly 4.1). This results in undefined symbols when linking static binaries (that is, if you use @option{-static}). If you see undefined symbols @code{_dlclose}, @code{_dlsym} or @code{_dlopen} when linking, compile and link against the file @file{mit/util/misc/dlsym.c} from the MIT version of X windows. @item The 128-bit long double format that the SPARC port supports currently works by using the architecturally defined quad-word floating point instructions. Since there is no hardware that supports these instructions they must be emulated by the operating system. Long doubles do not work in Sun OS versions 4.0.3 and earlier, because the kernel emulator uses an obsolete and incompatible format. Long doubles do not work in Sun OS version 4.1.1 due to a problem in a Sun library. Long doubles do work on Sun OS versions 4.1.2 and higher, but GCC does not enable them by default. Long doubles appear to work in Sun OS 5.x (Solaris 2.x). @item On HP-UX version 9.01 on the HP PA, the HP compiler @code{cc} does not compile GCC correctly. We do not yet know why. However, GCC compiled on earlier HP-UX versions works properly on HP-UX 9.01 and can compile itself properly on 9.01. @item On the HP PA machine, ADB sometimes fails to work on functions compiled with GCC@. Specifically, it fails to work on functions that use @code{alloca} or variable-size arrays. This is because GCC doesn't generate HP-UX unwind descriptors for such functions. It may even be impossible to generate them. @item Debugging (@option{-g}) is not supported on the HP PA machine, unless you use the preliminary GNU tools. @item Taking the address of a label may generate errors from the HP-UX PA assembler. GAS for the PA does not have this problem. @item Using floating point parameters for indirect calls to static functions will not work when using the HP assembler. There simply is no way for GCC to specify what registers hold arguments for static functions when using the HP assembler. GAS for the PA does not have this problem. @item In extremely rare cases involving some very large functions you may receive errors from the HP linker complaining about an out of bounds unconditional branch offset. This used to occur more often in previous versions of GCC, but is now exceptionally rare. If you should run into it, you can work around by making your function smaller. @item GCC compiled code sometimes emits warnings from the HP-UX assembler of the form: @smallexample (warning) Use of GR3 when frame >= 8192 may cause conflict. @end smallexample These warnings are harmless and can be safely ignored. @item On the IBM RS/6000, compiling code of the form @smallexample extern int foo; @dots{} foo @dots{} static int foo; @end smallexample @noindent will cause the linker to report an undefined symbol @code{foo}. Although this behavior differs from most other systems, it is not a bug because redefining an @code{extern} variable as @code{static} is undefined in ISO C@. @item In extremely rare cases involving some very large functions you may receive errors from the AIX Assembler complaining about a displacement that is too large. If you should run into it, you can work around by making your function smaller. @item The @file{libstdc++.a} library in GCC relies on the SVR4 dynamic linker semantics which merges global symbols between libraries and applications, especially necessary for C++ streams functionality. This is not the default behavior of AIX shared libraries and dynamic linking. @file{libstdc++.a} is built on AIX with ``runtime-linking'' enabled so that symbol merging can occur. To utilize this feature, the application linked with @file{libstdc++.a} must include the @option{-Wl,-brtl} flag on the link line. G++ cannot impose this because this option may interfere with the semantics of the user program and users may not always use @samp{g++} to link his or her application. Applications are not required to use the @option{-Wl,-brtl} flag on the link line---the rest of the @file{libstdc++.a} library which is not dependent on the symbol merging semantics will continue to function correctly. @item An application can interpose its own definition of functions for functions invoked by @file{libstdc++.a} with ``runtime-linking'' enabled on AIX. To accomplish this the application must be linked with ``runtime-linking'' option and the functions explicitly must be exported by the application (@option{-Wl,-brtl,-bE:exportfile}). @item AIX on the RS/6000 provides support (NLS) for environments outside of the United States. Compilers and assemblers use NLS to support locale-specific representations of various objects including floating-point numbers (@samp{.} vs @samp{,} for separating decimal fractions). There have been problems reported where the library linked with GCC does not produce the same floating-point formats that the assembler accepts. If you have this problem, set the @env{LANG} environment variable to @samp{C} or @samp{En_US}. @item @opindex fdollars-in-identifiers Even if you specify @option{-fdollars-in-identifiers}, you cannot successfully use @samp{$} in identifiers on the RS/6000 due to a restriction in the IBM assembler. GAS supports these identifiers. @cindex VAX calling convention @cindex Ultrix calling convention @item @opindex fcall-saved On Ultrix, the Fortran compiler expects registers 2 through 5 to be saved by function calls. However, the C compiler uses conventions compatible with BSD Unix: registers 2 through 5 may be clobbered by function calls. GCC uses the same convention as the Ultrix C compiler. You can use these options to produce code compatible with the Fortran compiler: @smallexample -fcall-saved-r2 -fcall-saved-r3 -fcall-saved-r4 -fcall-saved-r5 @end smallexample @item On the Alpha, you may get assembler errors about invalid syntax as a result of floating point constants. This is due to a bug in the C library functions @code{ecvt}, @code{fcvt} and @code{gcvt}. Given valid floating point numbers, they sometimes print @samp{NaN}. @end itemize @node External Bugs @section Problems Compiling Certain Programs @c prevent bad page break with this line Certain programs have problems compiling. @itemize @bullet @item Parse errors may occur compiling X11 on a Decstation running Ultrix 4.2 because of problems in DEC's versions of the X11 header files @file{X11/Xlib.h} and @file{X11/Xutil.h}. People recommend adding @option{-I/usr/include/mit} to use the MIT versions of the header files, or fixing the header files by adding this: @example #ifdef __STDC__ #define NeedFunctionPrototypes 0 #endif @end example @item On various 386 Unix systems derived from System V, including SCO, ISC, and ESIX, you may get error messages about running out of virtual memory while compiling certain programs. You can prevent this problem by linking GCC with the GNU malloc (which thus replaces the malloc that comes with the system). GNU malloc is available as a separate package, and also in the file @file{src/gmalloc.c} in the GNU Emacs 19 distribution. If you have installed GNU malloc as a separate library package, use this option when you relink GCC: @example MALLOC=/usr/local/lib/libgmalloc.a @end example Alternatively, if you have compiled @file{gmalloc.c} from Emacs 19, copy the object file to @file{gmalloc.o} and use this option when you relink GCC: @example MALLOC=gmalloc.o @end example @end itemize @node Incompatibilities @section Incompatibilities of GCC @cindex incompatibilities of GCC @opindex traditional There are several noteworthy incompatibilities between GNU C and K&R (non-ISO) versions of C@. @itemize @bullet @cindex string constants @cindex read-only strings @cindex shared strings @item GCC normally makes string constants read-only. If several identical-looking string constants are used, GCC stores only one copy of the string. @cindex @code{mktemp}, and constant strings One consequence is that you cannot call @code{mktemp} with a string constant argument. The function @code{mktemp} always alters the string its argument points to. @cindex @code{sscanf}, and constant strings @cindex @code{fscanf}, and constant strings @cindex @code{scanf}, and constant strings Another consequence is that @code{sscanf} does not work on some systems when passed a string constant as its format control string or input. This is because @code{sscanf} incorrectly tries to write into the string constant. Likewise @code{fscanf} and @code{scanf}. @opindex fwritable-strings The best solution to these problems is to change the program to use @code{char}-array variables with initialization strings for these purposes instead of string constants. But if this is not possible, you can use the @option{-fwritable-strings} flag, which directs GCC to handle string constants the same way most C compilers do. @item @code{-2147483648} is positive. This is because 2147483648 cannot fit in the type @code{int}, so (following the ISO C rules) its data type is @code{unsigned long int}. Negating this value yields 2147483648 again. @item GCC does not substitute macro arguments when they appear inside of string constants. For example, the following macro in GCC @example #define foo(a) "a" @end example @noindent will produce output @code{"a"} regardless of what the argument @var{a} is. @cindex @code{setjmp} incompatibilities @cindex @code{longjmp} incompatibilities @item When you use @code{setjmp} and @code{longjmp}, the only automatic variables guaranteed to remain valid are those declared @code{volatile}. This is a consequence of automatic register allocation. Consider this function: @example jmp_buf j; foo () @{ int a, b; a = fun1 (); if (setjmp (j)) return a; a = fun2 (); /* @r{@code{longjmp (j)} may occur in @code{fun3}.} */ return a + fun3 (); @} @end example Here @code{a} may or may not be restored to its first value when the @code{longjmp} occurs. If @code{a} is allocated in a register, then its first value is restored; otherwise, it keeps the last value stored in it. @opindex W If you use the @option{-W} option with the @option{-O} option, you will get a warning when GCC thinks such a problem might be possible. @item Programs that use preprocessing directives in the middle of macro arguments do not work with GCC@. For example, a program like this will not work: @example @group foobar ( #define luser hack) @end group @end example ISO C does not permit such a construct. @item K&R compilers allow comments to cross over an inclusion boundary (i.e.@: started in an include file and ended in the including file). I think this would be quite ugly and can't imagine it could be needed. @cindex external declaration scope @cindex scope of external declarations @cindex declaration scope @item Declarations of external variables and functions within a block apply only to the block containing the declaration. In other words, they have the same scope as any other declaration in the same place. In some other C compilers, a @code{extern} declaration affects all the rest of the file even if it happens within a block. @item In traditional C, you can combine @code{long}, etc., with a typedef name, as shown here: @example typedef int foo; typedef long foo bar; @end example In ISO C, this is not allowed: @code{long} and other type modifiers require an explicit @code{int}. @cindex typedef names as function parameters @item PCC allows typedef names to be used as function parameters. @item Traditional C allows the following erroneous pair of declarations to appear together in a given scope: @example typedef int foo; typedef foo foo; @end example @item GCC treats all characters of identifiers as significant. According to K&R-1 (2.2), ``No more than the first eight characters are significant, although more may be used.''. Also according to K&R-1 (2.2), ``An identifier is a sequence of letters and digits; the first character must be a letter. The underscore _ counts as a letter.'', but GCC also allows dollar signs in identifiers. @cindex whitespace @item PCC allows whitespace in the middle of compound assignment operators such as @samp{+=}. GCC, following the ISO standard, does not allow this. @cindex apostrophes @cindex ' @item GCC complains about unterminated character constants inside of preprocessing conditionals that fail. Some programs have English comments enclosed in conditionals that are guaranteed to fail; if these comments contain apostrophes, GCC will probably report an error. For example, this code would produce an error: @example #if 0 You can't expect this to work. #endif @end example The best solution to such a problem is to put the text into an actual C comment delimited by @samp{/*@dots{}*/}. @item Many user programs contain the declaration @samp{long time ();}. In the past, the system header files on many systems did not actually declare @code{time}, so it did not matter what type your program declared it to return. But in systems with ISO C headers, @code{time} is declared to return @code{time_t}, and if that is not the same as @code{long}, then @samp{long time ();} is erroneous. The solution is to change your program to use appropriate system headers (@code{} on systems with ISO C headers) and not to declare @code{time} if the system header files declare it, or failing that to use @code{time_t} as the return type of @code{time}. @cindex @code{float} as function value type @item When compiling functions that return @code{float}, PCC converts it to a double. GCC actually returns a @code{float}. If you are concerned with PCC compatibility, you should declare your functions to return @code{double}; you might as well say what you mean. @cindex structures @cindex unions @item When compiling functions that return structures or unions, GCC output code normally uses a method different from that used on most versions of Unix. As a result, code compiled with GCC cannot call a structure-returning function compiled with PCC, and vice versa. The method used by GCC is as follows: a structure or union which is 1, 2, 4 or 8 bytes long is returned like a scalar. A structure or union with any other size is stored into an address supplied by the caller (usually in a special, fixed register, but on some machines it is passed on the stack). The machine-description macros @code{STRUCT_VALUE} and @code{STRUCT_INCOMING_VALUE} tell GCC where to pass this address. By contrast, PCC on most target machines returns structures and unions of any size by copying the data into an area of static storage, and then returning the address of that storage as if it were a pointer value. The caller must copy the data from that memory area to the place where the value is wanted. GCC does not use this method because it is slower and nonreentrant. On some newer machines, PCC uses a reentrant convention for all structure and union returning. GCC on most of these machines uses a compatible convention when returning structures and unions in memory, but still returns small structures and unions in registers. @opindex fpcc-struct-return You can tell GCC to use a compatible convention for all structure and union returning with the option @option{-fpcc-struct-return}. @cindex preprocessing tokens @cindex preprocessing numbers @item GCC complains about program fragments such as @samp{0x74ae-0x4000} which appear to be two hexadecimal constants separated by the minus operator. Actually, this string is a single @dfn{preprocessing token}. Each such token must correspond to one token in C@. Since this does not, GCC prints an error message. Although it may appear obvious that what is meant is an operator and two values, the ISO C standard specifically requires that this be treated as erroneous. A @dfn{preprocessing token} is a @dfn{preprocessing number} if it begins with a digit and is followed by letters, underscores, digits, periods and @samp{e+}, @samp{e-}, @samp{E+}, @samp{E-}, @samp{p+}, @samp{p-}, @samp{P+}, or @samp{P-} character sequences. (In strict C89 mode, the sequences @samp{p+}, @samp{p-}, @samp{P+} and @samp{P-} cannot appear in preprocessing numbers.) To make the above program fragment valid, place whitespace in front of the minus sign. This whitespace will end the preprocessing number. @end itemize @node Fixed Headers @section Fixed Header Files GCC needs to install corrected versions of some system header files. This is because most target systems have some header files that won't work with GCC unless they are changed. Some have bugs, some are incompatible with ISO C, and some depend on special features of other compilers. Installing GCC automatically creates and installs the fixed header files, by running a program called @code{fixincludes} (or for certain targets an alternative such as @code{fixinc.svr4}). Normally, you don't need to pay attention to this. But there are cases where it doesn't do the right thing automatically. @itemize @bullet @item If you update the system's header files, such as by installing a new system version, the fixed header files of GCC are not automatically updated. The easiest way to update them is to reinstall GCC@. (If you want to be clever, look in the makefile and you can find a shortcut.) @item On some systems, in particular SunOS 4, header file directories contain machine-specific symbolic links in certain places. This makes it possible to share most of the header files among hosts running the same version of SunOS 4 on different machine models. The programs that fix the header files do not understand this special way of using symbolic links; therefore, the directory of fixed header files is good only for the machine model used to build it. In SunOS 4, only programs that look inside the kernel will notice the difference between machine models. Therefore, for most purposes, you need not be concerned about this. It is possible to make separate sets of fixed header files for the different machine models, and arrange a structure of symbolic links so as to use the proper set, but you'll have to do this by hand. @item On Lynxos, GCC by default does not fix the header files. This is because bugs in the shell cause the @code{fixincludes} script to fail. This means you will encounter problems due to bugs in the system header files. It may be no comfort that they aren't GCC's fault, but it does mean that there's nothing for us to do about them. @end itemize @node Standard Libraries @section Standard Libraries @opindex Wall GCC by itself attempts to be a conforming freestanding implementation. @xref{Standards,,Language Standards Supported by GCC}, for details of what this means. Beyond the library facilities required of such an implementation, the rest of the C library is supplied by the vendor of the operating system. If that C library doesn't conform to the C standards, then your programs might get warnings (especially when using @option{-Wall}) that you don't expect. For example, the @code{sprintf} function on SunOS 4.1.3 returns @code{char *} while the C standard says that @code{sprintf} returns an @code{int}. The @code{fixincludes} program could make the prototype for this function match the Standard, but that would be wrong, since the function will still return @code{char *}. If you need a Standard compliant library, then you need to find one, as GCC does not provide one. The GNU C library (called @code{glibc}) provides ISO C, POSIX, BSD, SystemV and X/Open compatibility for GNU/Linux and HURD-based GNU systems; no recent version of it supports other systems, though some very old versions did. Version 2.2 of the GNU C library includes nearly complete C99 support. You could also ask your operating system vendor if newer libraries are available. @node Disappointments @section Disappointments and Misunderstandings These problems are perhaps regrettable, but we don't know any practical way around them. @itemize @bullet @item Certain local variables aren't recognized by debuggers when you compile with optimization. This occurs because sometimes GCC optimizes the variable out of existence. There is no way to tell the debugger how to compute the value such a variable ``would have had'', and it is not clear that would be desirable anyway. So GCC simply does not mention the eliminated variable when it writes debugging information. You have to expect a certain amount of disagreement between the executable and your source code, when you use optimization. @cindex conflicting types @cindex scope of declaration @item Users often think it is a bug when GCC reports an error for code like this: @example int foo (struct mumble *); struct mumble @{ @dots{} @}; int foo (struct mumble *x) @{ @dots{} @} @end example This code really is erroneous, because the scope of @code{struct mumble} in the prototype is limited to the argument list containing it. It does not refer to the @code{struct mumble} defined with file scope immediately below---they are two unrelated types with similar names in different scopes. But in the definition of @code{foo}, the file-scope type is used because that is available to be inherited. Thus, the definition and the prototype do not match, and you get an error. This behavior may seem silly, but it's what the ISO standard specifies. It is easy enough for you to make your code work by moving the definition of @code{struct mumble} above the prototype. It's not worth being incompatible with ISO C just to avoid an error for the example shown above. @item Accesses to bit-fields even in volatile objects works by accessing larger objects, such as a byte or a word. You cannot rely on what size of object is accessed in order to read or write the bit-field; it may even vary for a given bit-field according to the precise usage. If you care about controlling the amount of memory that is accessed, use volatile but do not use bit-fields. @item GCC comes with shell scripts to fix certain known problems in system header files. They install corrected copies of various header files in a special directory where only GCC will normally look for them. The scripts adapt to various systems by searching all the system header files for the problem cases that we know about. If new system header files are installed, nothing automatically arranges to update the corrected header files. You will have to reinstall GCC to fix the new header files. More specifically, go to the build directory and delete the files @file{stmp-fixinc} and @file{stmp-headers}, and the subdirectory @code{include}; then do @samp{make install} again. @item @cindex floating point precision On 68000 and x86 systems, for instance, you can get paradoxical results if you test the precise values of floating point numbers. For example, you can find that a floating point value which is not a NaN is not equal to itself. This results from the fact that the floating point registers hold a few more bits of precision than fit in a @code{double} in memory. Compiled code moves values between memory and floating point registers at its convenience, and moving them into memory truncates them. @opindex ffloat-store You can partially avoid this problem by using the @option{-ffloat-store} option (@pxref{Optimize Options}). @item On AIX and other platforms without weak symbol support, templates need to be instantiated explicitly and symbols for static members of templates will not be generated. @item On AIX, GCC scans object files and library archives for static constructors and destructors when linking an application before the linker prunes unreferenced symbols. This is necessary to prevent the AIX linker from mistakenly assuming that static constructor or destructor are unused and removing them before the scanning can occur. All static constructors and destructors found will be referenced even though the modules in which they occur may not be used by the program. This may lead to both increased executable size and unexpected symbol references. @end itemize @node C++ Misunderstandings @section Common Misunderstandings with GNU C++ @cindex misunderstandings in C++ @cindex surprises in C++ @cindex C++ misunderstandings C++ is a complex language and an evolving one, and its standard definition (the ISO C++ standard) was only recently completed. As a result, your C++ compiler may occasionally surprise you, even when its behavior is correct. This section discusses some areas that frequently give rise to questions of this sort. @menu * Static Definitions:: Static member declarations are not definitions * Name lookup:: Name lookup, templates, and accessing members of base classes * Temporaries:: Temporaries may vanish before you expect * Copy Assignment:: Copy Assignment operators copy virtual bases twice @end menu @node Static Definitions @subsection Declare @emph{and} Define Static Members @cindex C++ static data, declaring and defining @cindex static data in C++, declaring and defining @cindex declaring static data in C++ @cindex defining static data in C++ When a class has static data members, it is not enough to @emph{declare} the static member; you must also @emph{define} it. For example: @example class Foo @{ @dots{} void method(); static int bar; @}; @end example This declaration only establishes that the class @code{Foo} has an @code{int} named @code{Foo::bar}, and a member function named @code{Foo::method}. But you still need to define @emph{both} @code{method} and @code{bar} elsewhere. According to the ISO standard, you must supply an initializer in one (and only one) source file, such as: @example int Foo::bar = 0; @end example Other C++ compilers may not correctly implement the standard behavior. As a result, when you switch to @command{g++} from one of these compilers, you may discover that a program that appeared to work correctly in fact does not conform to the standard: @command{g++} reports as undefined symbols any static data members that lack definitions. @node Name lookup @subsection Name lookup, templates, and accessing members of base classes @cindex base class members @cindex two-stage name lookup @cindex dependent name lookup The C++ standard prescribes that all names that are not dependent on template parameters are bound to their present definitions when parsing a template function or class.@footnote{The C++ standard just uses the term ``dependent'' for names that depend on the type or value of template parameters. This shorter term will also be used in the rest of this section.} Only names that are dependent are looked up at the point of instantiation. For example, consider @example void foo(double); struct A @{ template void f () @{ foo (1); // 1 int i = N; // 2 T t; t.bar(); // 3 foo (t); // 4 @} static const int N; @}; @end example Here, the names @code{foo} and @code{N} appear in a context that does not depend on the type of @code{T}. The compiler will thus require that they are defined in the context of use in the template, not only before the point of instantiation, and will here use @code{::foo(double)} and @code{A::N}, respectively. In particular, it will convert the integer value to a @code{double} when passing it to @code{::foo(double)}. Conversely, @code{bar} and the call to @code{foo} in the fourth marked line are used in contexts that do depend on the type of @code{T}, so they are only looked up at the point of instantiation, and you can provide declarations for them after declaring the template, but before instantiating it. In particular, if you instantiate @code{A::f}, the last line will call an overloaded @code{::foo(int)} if one was provided, even if after the declaration of @code{struct A}. This distinction between lookup of dependent and non-dependent names is called two-stage (or dependent) name lookup. G++ implements some features of it since version 3.4 and is moving towards full compliance with the standard. Two-stage name lookup sometimes leads to situations with behavior different from non-template codes. The most common is probably this: @example template struct Base @{ int i; @}; template struct Derived : public Base @{ int get_i() @{ return i; @} @}; @end example In @code{get_i()}, @code{i} is not used in a dependent context, so the compiler will look for a name declared at the enclosing namespace scope (which is the global scope here). It will not look into the base class, since that is dependent and you may declare specializations of @code{Base} even after declaring @code{Derived}, so the compiler can't really know what @code{i} would refer to. If there is no global variable @code{i}, then you will get an error message. In order to make it clear that you want the member of the base class, you need to defer lookup until instantiation time, at which the base class is known. For this, you need to access @code{i} in a dependent context, by either using @code{this->i} (remember that @code{this} is of type @code{Derived*}, so is obviously dependent), or using @code{Base::i}. Alternatively, @code{Base::i} might be brought into scope by a @code{using}-declaration. Note that some compilers get this wrong and accept above code without an error. However, this is spurious, since they just don't implement two-stage name lookup correctly. This includes G++ versions prior to 3.4. @node Temporaries @subsection Temporaries May Vanish Before You Expect @cindex temporaries, lifetime of @cindex portions of temporary objects, pointers to It is dangerous to use pointers or references to @emph{portions} of a temporary object. The compiler may very well delete the object before you expect it to, leaving a pointer to garbage. The most common place where this problem crops up is in classes like string classes, especially ones that define a conversion function to type @code{char *} or @code{const char *}---which is one reason why the standard @code{string} class requires you to call the @code{c_str} member function. However, any class that returns a pointer to some internal structure is potentially subject to this problem. For example, a program may use a function @code{strfunc} that returns @code{string} objects, and another function @code{charfunc} that operates on pointers to @code{char}: @example string strfunc (); void charfunc (const char *); void f () @{ const char *p = strfunc().c_str(); @dots{} charfunc (p); @dots{} charfunc (p); @} @end example @noindent In this situation, it may seem reasonable to save a pointer to the C string returned by the @code{c_str} member function and use that rather than call @code{c_str} repeatedly. However, the temporary string created by the call to @code{strfunc} is destroyed after @code{p} is initialized, at which point @code{p} is left pointing to freed memory. Code like this may run successfully under some other compilers, particularly obsolete cfront-based compilers that delete temporaries along with normal local variables. However, the GNU C++ behavior is standard-conforming, so if your program depends on late destruction of temporaries it is not portable. The safe way to write such code is to give the temporary a name, which forces it to remain until the end of the scope of the name. For example: @example string& tmp = strfunc (); charfunc (tmp.c_str ()); @end example @node Copy Assignment @subsection Implicit Copy-Assignment for Virtual Bases When a base class is virtual, only one subobject of the base class belongs to each full object. Also, the constructors and destructors are invoked only once, and called from the most-derived class. However, such objects behave unspecified when being assigned. For example: @example struct Base@{ char *name; Base(char *n) : name(strdup(n))@{@} Base& operator= (const Base& other)@{ free (name); name = strdup (other.name); @} @}; struct A:virtual Base@{ int val; A():Base("A")@{@} @}; struct B:virtual Base@{ int bval; B():Base("B")@{@} @}; struct Derived:public A, public B@{ Derived():Base("Derived")@{@} @}; void func(Derived &d1, Derived &d2) @{ d1 = d2; @} @end example The C++ standard specifies that @samp{Base::Base} is only called once when constructing or copy-constructing a Derived object. It is unspecified whether @samp{Base::operator=} is called more than once when the implicit copy-assignment for Derived objects is invoked (as it is inside @samp{func} in the example). g++ implements the ``intuitive'' algorithm for copy-assignment: assign all direct bases, then assign all members. In that algorithm, the virtual base subobject can be encountered more than once. In the example, copying proceeds in the following order: @samp{val}, @samp{name} (via @code{strdup}), @samp{bval}, and @samp{name} again. If application code relies on copy-assignment, a user-defined copy-assignment operator removes any uncertainties. With such an operator, the application can define whether and how the virtual base subobject is assigned. @node Protoize Caveats @section Caveats of using @command{protoize} The conversion programs @command{protoize} and @command{unprotoize} can sometimes change a source file in a way that won't work unless you rearrange it. @itemize @bullet @item @command{protoize} can insert references to a type name or type tag before the definition, or in a file where they are not defined. If this happens, compiler error messages should show you where the new references are, so fixing the file by hand is straightforward. @item There are some C constructs which @command{protoize} cannot figure out. For example, it can't determine argument types for declaring a pointer-to-function variable; this you must do by hand. @command{protoize} inserts a comment containing @samp{???} each time it finds such a variable; so you can find all such variables by searching for this string. ISO C does not require declaring the argument types of pointer-to-function types. @item Using @command{unprotoize} can easily introduce bugs. If the program relied on prototypes to bring about conversion of arguments, these conversions will not take place in the program without prototypes. One case in which you can be sure @command{unprotoize} is safe is when you are removing prototypes that were made with @command{protoize}; if the program worked before without any prototypes, it will work again without them. @opindex Wconversion You can find all the places where this problem might occur by compiling the program with the @option{-Wconversion} option. It prints a warning whenever an argument is converted. @item Both conversion programs can be confused if there are macro calls in and around the text to be converted. In other words, the standard syntax for a declaration or definition must not result from expanding a macro. This problem is inherent in the design of C and cannot be fixed. If only a few functions have confusing macro calls, you can easily convert them manually. @item @command{protoize} cannot get the argument types for a function whose definition was not actually compiled due to preprocessing conditionals. When this happens, @command{protoize} changes nothing in regard to such a function. @command{protoize} tries to detect such instances and warn about them. You can generally work around this problem by using @command{protoize} step by step, each time specifying a different set of @option{-D} options for compilation, until all of the functions have been converted. There is no automatic way to verify that you have got them all, however. @item Confusion may result if there is an occasion to convert a function declaration or definition in a region of source code where there is more than one formal parameter list present. Thus, attempts to convert code containing multiple (conditionally compiled) versions of a single function header (in the same vicinity) may not produce the desired (or expected) results. If you plan on converting source files which contain such code, it is recommended that you first make sure that each conditionally compiled region of source code which contains an alternative function header also contains at least one additional follower token (past the final right parenthesis of the function header). This should circumvent the problem. @item @command{unprotoize} can become confused when trying to convert a function definition or declaration which contains a declaration for a pointer-to-function formal argument which has the same name as the function being defined or declared. We recommend you avoid such choices of formal parameter names. @item You might also want to correct some of the indentation by hand and break long lines. (The conversion programs don't write lines longer than eighty characters in any case.) @end itemize @node Non-bugs @section Certain Changes We Don't Want to Make This section lists changes that people frequently request, but which we do not make because we think GCC is better without them. @itemize @bullet @item Checking the number and type of arguments to a function which has an old-fashioned definition and no prototype. Such a feature would work only occasionally---only for calls that appear in the same file as the called function, following the definition. The only way to check all calls reliably is to add a prototype for the function. But adding a prototype eliminates the motivation for this feature. So the feature is not worthwhile. @item Warning about using an expression whose type is signed as a shift count. Shift count operands are probably signed more often than unsigned. Warning about this would cause far more annoyance than good. @item Warning about assigning a signed value to an unsigned variable. Such assignments must be very common; warning about them would cause more annoyance than good. @item Warning when a non-void function value is ignored. Coming as I do from a Lisp background, I balk at the idea that there is something dangerous about discarding a value. There are functions that return values which some callers may find useful; it makes no sense to clutter the program with a cast to @code{void} whenever the value isn't useful. @item @opindex fshort-enums Making @option{-fshort-enums} the default. This would cause storage layout to be incompatible with most other C compilers. And it doesn't seem very important, given that you can get the same result in other ways. The case where it matters most is when the enumeration-valued object is inside a structure, and in that case you can specify a field width explicitly. @item Making bit-fields unsigned by default on particular machines where ``the ABI standard'' says to do so. The ISO C standard leaves it up to the implementation whether a bit-field declared plain @code{int} is signed or not. This in effect creates two alternative dialects of C@. @opindex fsigned-bitfields @opindex funsigned-bitfields The GNU C compiler supports both dialects; you can specify the signed dialect with @option{-fsigned-bitfields} and the unsigned dialect with @option{-funsigned-bitfields}. However, this leaves open the question of which dialect to use by default. Currently, the preferred dialect makes plain bit-fields signed, because this is simplest. Since @code{int} is the same as @code{signed int} in every other context, it is cleanest for them to be the same in bit-fields as well. Some computer manufacturers have published Application Binary Interface standards which specify that plain bit-fields should be unsigned. It is a mistake, however, to say anything about this issue in an ABI@. This is because the handling of plain bit-fields distinguishes two dialects of C@. Both dialects are meaningful on every type of machine. Whether a particular object file was compiled using signed bit-fields or unsigned is of no concern to other object files, even if they access the same bit-fields in the same data structures. A given program is written in one or the other of these two dialects. The program stands a chance to work on most any machine if it is compiled with the proper dialect. It is unlikely to work at all if compiled with the wrong dialect. Many users appreciate the GNU C compiler because it provides an environment that is uniform across machines. These users would be inconvenienced if the compiler treated plain bit-fields differently on certain machines. Occasionally users write programs intended only for a particular machine type. On these occasions, the users would benefit if the GNU C compiler were to support by default the same dialect as the other compilers on that machine. But such applications are rare. And users writing a program to run on more than one type of machine cannot possibly benefit from this kind of compatibility. This is why GCC does and will treat plain bit-fields in the same fashion on all types of machines (by default). There are some arguments for making bit-fields unsigned by default on all machines. If, for example, this becomes a universal de facto standard, it would make sense for GCC to go along with it. This is something to be considered in the future. (Of course, users strongly concerned about portability should indicate explicitly in each bit-field whether it is signed or not. In this way, they write programs which have the same meaning in both C dialects.) @item @opindex ansi @opindex std Undefining @code{__STDC__} when @option{-ansi} is not used. Currently, GCC defines @code{__STDC__} unconditionally. This provides good results in practice. Programmers normally use conditionals on @code{__STDC__} to ask whether it is safe to use certain features of ISO C, such as function prototypes or ISO token concatenation. Since plain @command{gcc} supports all the features of ISO C, the correct answer to these questions is ``yes''. Some users try to use @code{__STDC__} to check for the availability of certain library facilities. This is actually incorrect usage in an ISO C program, because the ISO C standard says that a conforming freestanding implementation should define @code{__STDC__} even though it does not have the library facilities. @samp{gcc -ansi -pedantic} is a conforming freestanding implementation, and it is therefore required to define @code{__STDC__}, even though it does not come with an ISO C library. Sometimes people say that defining @code{__STDC__} in a compiler that does not completely conform to the ISO C standard somehow violates the standard. This is illogical. The standard is a standard for compilers that claim to support ISO C, such as @samp{gcc -ansi}---not for other compilers such as plain @command{gcc}. Whatever the ISO C standard says is relevant to the design of plain @command{gcc} without @option{-ansi} only for pragmatic reasons, not as a requirement. GCC normally defines @code{__STDC__} to be 1, and in addition defines @code{__STRICT_ANSI__} if you specify the @option{-ansi} option, or a @option{-std} option for strict conformance to some version of ISO C@. On some hosts, system include files use a different convention, where @code{__STDC__} is normally 0, but is 1 if the user specifies strict conformance to the C Standard. GCC follows the host convention when processing system include files, but when processing user files it follows the usual GNU C convention. @item Undefining @code{__STDC__} in C++. Programs written to compile with C++-to-C translators get the value of @code{__STDC__} that goes with the C compiler that is subsequently used. These programs must test @code{__STDC__} to determine what kind of C preprocessor that compiler uses: whether they should concatenate tokens in the ISO C fashion or in the traditional fashion. These programs work properly with GNU C++ if @code{__STDC__} is defined. They would not work otherwise. In addition, many header files are written to provide prototypes in ISO C but not in traditional C@. Many of these header files can work without change in C++ provided @code{__STDC__} is defined. If @code{__STDC__} is not defined, they will all fail, and will all need to be changed to test explicitly for C++ as well. @item Deleting ``empty'' loops. Historically, GCC has not deleted ``empty'' loops under the assumption that the most likely reason you would put one in a program is to have a delay, so deleting them will not make real programs run any faster. However, the rationale here is that optimization of a nonempty loop cannot produce an empty one, which holds for C but is not always the case for C++. @opindex funroll-loops Moreover, with @option{-funroll-loops} small ``empty'' loops are already removed, so the current behavior is both sub-optimal and inconsistent and will change in the future. @item Making side effects happen in the same order as in some other compiler. @cindex side effects, order of evaluation @cindex order of evaluation, side effects It is never safe to depend on the order of evaluation of side effects. For example, a function call like this may very well behave differently from one compiler to another: @example void func (int, int); int i = 2; func (i++, i++); @end example There is no guarantee (in either the C or the C++ standard language definitions) that the increments will be evaluated in any particular order. Either increment might happen first. @code{func} might get the arguments @samp{2, 3}, or it might get @samp{3, 2}, or even @samp{2, 2}. @item Not allowing structures with volatile fields in registers. Strictly speaking, there is no prohibition in the ISO C standard against allowing structures with volatile fields in registers, but it does not seem to make any sense and is probably not what you wanted to do. So the compiler will give an error message in this case. @item Making certain warnings into errors by default. Some ISO C testsuites report failure when the compiler does not produce an error message for a certain program. @opindex pedantic-errors ISO C requires a ``diagnostic'' message for certain kinds of invalid programs, but a warning is defined by GCC to count as a diagnostic. If GCC produces a warning but not an error, that is correct ISO C support. If test suites call this ``failure'', they should be run with the GCC option @option{-pedantic-errors}, which will turn these warnings into errors. @end itemize @node Warnings and Errors @section Warning Messages and Error Messages @cindex error messages @cindex warnings vs errors @cindex messages, warning and error The GNU compiler can produce two kinds of diagnostics: errors and warnings. Each kind has a different purpose: @itemize @w{} @item @dfn{Errors} report problems that make it impossible to compile your program. GCC reports errors with the source file name and line number where the problem is apparent. @item @dfn{Warnings} report other unusual conditions in your code that @emph{may} indicate a problem, although compilation can (and does) proceed. Warning messages also report the source file name and line number, but include the text @samp{warning:} to distinguish them from error messages. @end itemize Warnings may indicate danger points where you should check to make sure that your program really does what you intend; or the use of obsolete features; or the use of nonstandard features of GNU C or C++. Many warnings are issued only if you ask for them, with one of the @option{-W} options (for instance, @option{-Wall} requests a variety of useful warnings). @opindex pedantic @opindex pedantic-errors GCC always tries to compile your program if possible; it never gratuitously rejects a program whose meaning is clear merely because (for instance) it fails to conform to a standard. In some cases, however, the C and C++ standards specify that certain extensions are forbidden, and a diagnostic @emph{must} be issued by a conforming compiler. The @option{-pedantic} option tells GCC to issue warnings in such cases; @option{-pedantic-errors} says to make them errors instead. This does not mean that @emph{all} non-ISO constructs get warnings or errors. @xref{Warning Options,,Options to Request or Suppress Warnings}, for more detail on these and related command-line options.