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| .\" ======================================================================== |
| .\" |
| .IX Title "GCC 1" |
| .TH GCC 1 "2014-08-11" "gcc-4.8.4" "GNU" |
| .\" For nroff, turn off justification. Always turn off hyphenation; it makes |
| .\" way too many mistakes in technical documents. |
| .if n .ad l |
| .nh |
| .SH "NAME" |
| gcc \- GNU project C and C++ compiler |
| .SH "SYNOPSIS" |
| .IX Header "SYNOPSIS" |
| gcc [\fB\-c\fR|\fB\-S\fR|\fB\-E\fR] [\fB\-std=\fR\fIstandard\fR] |
| [\fB\-g\fR] [\fB\-pg\fR] [\fB\-O\fR\fIlevel\fR] |
| [\fB\-W\fR\fIwarn\fR...] [\fB\-Wpedantic\fR] |
| [\fB\-I\fR\fIdir\fR...] [\fB\-L\fR\fIdir\fR...] |
| [\fB\-D\fR\fImacro\fR[=\fIdefn\fR]...] [\fB\-U\fR\fImacro\fR] |
| [\fB\-f\fR\fIoption\fR...] [\fB\-m\fR\fImachine-option\fR...] |
| [\fB\-o\fR \fIoutfile\fR] [@\fIfile\fR] \fIinfile\fR... |
| .PP |
| Only the most useful options are listed here; see below for the |
| remainder. \fBg++\fR accepts mostly the same options as \fBgcc\fR. |
| .SH "DESCRIPTION" |
| .IX Header "DESCRIPTION" |
| When you invoke \s-1GCC\s0, it normally does preprocessing, compilation, |
| assembly and linking. The \*(L"overall options\*(R" allow you to stop this |
| process at an intermediate stage. For example, the \fB\-c\fR option |
| says not to run the linker. Then the output consists of object files |
| output by the assembler. |
| .PP |
| Other options are passed on to one stage of processing. Some options |
| control the preprocessor and others the compiler itself. Yet other |
| options control the assembler and linker; most of these are not |
| documented here, since you rarely need to use any of them. |
| .PP |
| Most of the command-line options that you can use with \s-1GCC\s0 are useful |
| for C programs; when an option is only useful with another language |
| (usually \*(C+), the explanation says so explicitly. If the description |
| for a particular option does not mention a source language, you can use |
| that option with all supported languages. |
| .PP |
| The \fBgcc\fR program accepts options and file names as operands. Many |
| options have multi-letter names; therefore multiple single-letter options |
| may \fInot\fR be grouped: \fB\-dv\fR is very different from \fB\-d\ \-v\fR. |
| .PP |
| You can mix options and other arguments. For the most part, the order |
| you use doesn't matter. Order does matter when you use several |
| options of the same kind; for example, if you specify \fB\-L\fR more |
| than once, the directories are searched in the order specified. Also, |
| the placement of the \fB\-l\fR option is significant. |
| .PP |
| Many options have long names starting with \fB\-f\fR or with |
| \&\fB\-W\fR\-\-\-for example, |
| \&\fB\-fmove\-loop\-invariants\fR, \fB\-Wformat\fR and so on. Most of |
| these have both positive and negative forms; the negative form of |
| \&\fB\-ffoo\fR is \fB\-fno\-foo\fR. This manual documents |
| only one of these two forms, whichever one is not the default. |
| .SH "OPTIONS" |
| .IX Header "OPTIONS" |
| .SS "Option Summary" |
| .IX Subsection "Option Summary" |
| Here is a summary of all the options, grouped by type. Explanations are |
| in the following sections. |
| .IP "\fIOverall Options\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "Overall Options" |
| \&\fB\-c \-S \-E \-o\fR \fIfile\fR \fB\-no\-canonical\-prefixes |
| \&\-pipe \-pass\-exit\-codes |
| \&\-x\fR \fIlanguage\fR \fB\-v \-### \-\-help\fR[\fB=\fR\fIclass\fR[\fB,...\fR]] \fB\-\-target\-help |
| \&\-\-version \-wrapper @\fR\fIfile\fR \fB\-fplugin=\fR\fIfile\fR \fB\-fplugin\-arg\-\fR\fIname\fR\fB=\fR\fIarg\fR |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-ada\-spec\fR[\fB\-slim\fR] \fB\-fada\-spec\-parent=\fR\fIunit\fR \fB\-fdump\-go\-spec=\fR\fIfile\fR |
| .IP "\fIC Language Options\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "C Language Options" |
| \&\fB\-ansi \-std=\fR\fIstandard\fR \fB\-fgnu89\-inline |
| \&\-aux\-info\fR \fIfilename\fR \fB\-fallow\-parameterless\-variadic\-functions |
| \&\-fno\-asm \-fno\-builtin \-fno\-builtin\-\fR\fIfunction\fR |
| \&\fB\-fhosted \-ffreestanding \-fopenmp \-fms\-extensions \-fplan9\-extensions |
| \&\-trigraphs \-traditional \-traditional\-cpp |
| \&\-fallow\-single\-precision \-fcond\-mismatch \-flax\-vector\-conversions |
| \&\-fsigned\-bitfields \-fsigned\-char |
| \&\-funsigned\-bitfields \-funsigned\-char\fR |
| .IP "\fI\*(C+ Language Options\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item " Language Options" |
| \&\fB\-fabi\-version=\fR\fIn\fR \fB\-fno\-access\-control \-fcheck\-new |
| \&\-fconstexpr\-depth=\fR\fIn\fR \fB\-ffriend\-injection |
| \&\-fno\-elide\-constructors |
| \&\-fno\-enforce\-eh\-specs |
| \&\-ffor\-scope \-fno\-for\-scope \-fno\-gnu\-keywords |
| \&\-fno\-implicit\-templates |
| \&\-fno\-implicit\-inline\-templates |
| \&\-fno\-implement\-inlines \-fms\-extensions |
| \&\-fno\-nonansi\-builtins \-fnothrow\-opt \-fno\-operator\-names |
| \&\-fno\-optional\-diags \-fpermissive |
| \&\-fno\-pretty\-templates |
| \&\-frepo \-fno\-rtti \-fstats \-ftemplate\-backtrace\-limit=\fR\fIn\fR |
| \&\fB\-ftemplate\-depth=\fR\fIn\fR |
| \&\fB\-fno\-threadsafe\-statics \-fuse\-cxa\-atexit \-fno\-weak \-nostdinc++ |
| \&\-fno\-default\-inline \-fvisibility\-inlines\-hidden |
| \&\-fvisibility\-ms\-compat |
| \&\-fext\-numeric\-literals |
| \&\-Wabi \-Wconversion\-null \-Wctor\-dtor\-privacy |
| \&\-Wdelete\-non\-virtual\-dtor \-Wliteral\-suffix \-Wnarrowing |
| \&\-Wnoexcept \-Wnon\-virtual\-dtor \-Wreorder |
| \&\-Weffc++ \-Wstrict\-null\-sentinel |
| \&\-Wno\-non\-template\-friend \-Wold\-style\-cast |
| \&\-Woverloaded\-virtual \-Wno\-pmf\-conversions |
| \&\-Wsign\-promo\fR |
| .IP "\fIObjective-C and Objective\-\*(C+ Language Options\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "Objective-C and Objective- Language Options" |
| \&\fB\-fconstant\-string\-class=\fR\fIclass-name\fR |
| \&\fB\-fgnu\-runtime \-fnext\-runtime |
| \&\-fno\-nil\-receivers |
| \&\-fobjc\-abi\-version=\fR\fIn\fR |
| \&\fB\-fobjc\-call\-cxx\-cdtors |
| \&\-fobjc\-direct\-dispatch |
| \&\-fobjc\-exceptions |
| \&\-fobjc\-gc |
| \&\-fobjc\-nilcheck |
| \&\-fobjc\-std=objc1 |
| \&\-freplace\-objc\-classes |
| \&\-fzero\-link |
| \&\-gen\-decls |
| \&\-Wassign\-intercept |
| \&\-Wno\-protocol \-Wselector |
| \&\-Wstrict\-selector\-match |
| \&\-Wundeclared\-selector\fR |
| .IP "\fILanguage Independent Options\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "Language Independent Options" |
| \&\fB\-fmessage\-length=\fR\fIn\fR |
| \&\fB\-fdiagnostics\-show\-location=\fR[\fBonce\fR|\fBevery-line\fR] |
| \&\fB\-fno\-diagnostics\-show\-option \-fno\-diagnostics\-show\-caret\fR |
| .IP "\fIWarning Options\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "Warning Options" |
| \&\fB\-fsyntax\-only \-fmax\-errors=\fR\fIn\fR \fB\-Wpedantic |
| \&\-pedantic\-errors |
| \&\-w \-Wextra \-Wall \-Waddress \-Waggregate\-return |
| \&\-Waggressive\-loop\-optimizations \-Warray\-bounds |
| \&\-Wno\-attributes \-Wno\-builtin\-macro\-redefined |
| \&\-Wc++\-compat \-Wc++11\-compat \-Wcast\-align \-Wcast\-qual |
| \&\-Wchar\-subscripts \-Wclobbered \-Wcomment |
| \&\-Wconversion \-Wcoverage\-mismatch \-Wno\-cpp \-Wno\-deprecated |
| \&\-Wno\-deprecated\-declarations \-Wdisabled\-optimization |
| \&\-Wno\-div\-by\-zero \-Wdouble\-promotion \-Wempty\-body \-Wenum\-compare |
| \&\-Wno\-endif\-labels \-Werror \-Werror=* |
| \&\-Wfatal\-errors \-Wfloat\-equal \-Wformat \-Wformat=2 |
| \&\-Wno\-format\-contains\-nul \-Wno\-format\-extra\-args \-Wformat\-nonliteral |
| \&\-Wformat\-security \-Wformat\-y2k |
| \&\-Wframe\-larger\-than=\fR\fIlen\fR \fB\-Wno\-free\-nonheap\-object \-Wjump\-misses\-init |
| \&\-Wignored\-qualifiers |
| \&\-Wimplicit \-Wimplicit\-function\-declaration \-Wimplicit\-int |
| \&\-Winit\-self \-Winline \-Wmaybe\-uninitialized |
| \&\-Wno\-int\-to\-pointer\-cast \-Wno\-invalid\-offsetof |
| \&\-Winvalid\-pch \-Wlarger\-than=\fR\fIlen\fR \fB\-Wunsafe\-loop\-optimizations |
| \&\-Wlogical\-op \-Wlong\-long |
| \&\-Wmain \-Wmaybe\-uninitialized \-Wmissing\-braces \-Wmissing\-field\-initializers |
| \&\-Wmissing\-include\-dirs |
| \&\-Wno\-mudflap |
| \&\-Wno\-multichar \-Wnonnull \-Wno\-overflow |
| \&\-Woverlength\-strings \-Wpacked \-Wpacked\-bitfield\-compat \-Wpadded |
| \&\-Wparentheses \-Wpedantic\-ms\-format \-Wno\-pedantic\-ms\-format |
| \&\-Wpointer\-arith \-Wno\-pointer\-to\-int\-cast |
| \&\-Wredundant\-decls \-Wno\-return\-local\-addr |
| \&\-Wreturn\-type \-Wsequence\-point \-Wshadow |
| \&\-Wsign\-compare \-Wsign\-conversion \-Wsizeof\-pointer\-memaccess |
| \&\-Wstack\-protector \-Wstack\-usage=\fR\fIlen\fR \fB\-Wstrict\-aliasing |
| \&\-Wstrict\-aliasing=n \-Wstrict\-overflow \-Wstrict\-overflow=\fR\fIn\fR |
| \&\fB\-Wsuggest\-attribute=\fR[\fBpure\fR|\fBconst\fR|\fBnoreturn\fR|\fBformat\fR] |
| \&\fB\-Wmissing\-format\-attribute |
| \&\-Wswitch \-Wswitch\-default \-Wswitch\-enum \-Wsync\-nand |
| \&\-Wsystem\-headers \-Wtrampolines \-Wtrigraphs \-Wtype\-limits \-Wundef |
| \&\-Wuninitialized \-Wunknown\-pragmas \-Wno\-pragmas |
| \&\-Wunsuffixed\-float\-constants \-Wunused \-Wunused\-function |
| \&\-Wunused\-label \-Wunused\-local\-typedefs \-Wunused\-parameter |
| \&\-Wno\-unused\-result \-Wunused\-value \-Wunused\-variable |
| \&\-Wunused\-but\-set\-parameter \-Wunused\-but\-set\-variable |
| \&\-Wuseless\-cast \-Wvariadic\-macros \-Wvector\-operation\-performance |
| \&\-Wvla \-Wvolatile\-register\-var \-Wwrite\-strings \-Wzero\-as\-null\-pointer\-constant\fR |
| .IP "\fIC and Objective-C-only Warning Options\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "C and Objective-C-only Warning Options" |
| \&\fB\-Wbad\-function\-cast \-Wmissing\-declarations |
| \&\-Wmissing\-parameter\-type \-Wmissing\-prototypes \-Wnested\-externs |
| \&\-Wold\-style\-declaration \-Wold\-style\-definition |
| \&\-Wstrict\-prototypes \-Wtraditional \-Wtraditional\-conversion |
| \&\-Wdeclaration\-after\-statement \-Wpointer\-sign\fR |
| .IP "\fIDebugging Options\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "Debugging Options" |
| \&\fB\-d\fR\fIletters\fR \fB\-dumpspecs \-dumpmachine \-dumpversion |
| \&\-fsanitize=\fR\fIstyle\fR |
| \&\fB\-fdbg\-cnt\-list \-fdbg\-cnt=\fR\fIcounter-value-list\fR |
| \&\fB\-fdisable\-ipa\-\fR\fIpass_name\fR |
| \&\fB\-fdisable\-rtl\-\fR\fIpass_name\fR |
| \&\fB\-fdisable\-rtl\-\fR\fIpass-name\fR\fB=\fR\fIrange-list\fR |
| \&\fB\-fdisable\-tree\-\fR\fIpass_name\fR |
| \&\fB\-fdisable\-tree\-\fR\fIpass-name\fR\fB=\fR\fIrange-list\fR |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-noaddr \-fdump\-unnumbered \-fdump\-unnumbered\-links |
| \&\-fdump\-translation\-unit\fR[\fB\-\fR\fIn\fR] |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-class\-hierarchy\fR[\fB\-\fR\fIn\fR] |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-ipa\-all \-fdump\-ipa\-cgraph \-fdump\-ipa\-inline |
| \&\-fdump\-passes |
| \&\-fdump\-statistics |
| \&\-fdump\-tree\-all |
| \&\-fdump\-tree\-original\fR[\fB\-\fR\fIn\fR] |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-tree\-optimized\fR[\fB\-\fR\fIn\fR] |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-tree\-cfg \-fdump\-tree\-alias |
| \&\-fdump\-tree\-ch |
| \&\-fdump\-tree\-ssa\fR[\fB\-\fR\fIn\fR] \fB\-fdump\-tree\-pre\fR[\fB\-\fR\fIn\fR] |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-tree\-ccp\fR[\fB\-\fR\fIn\fR] \fB\-fdump\-tree\-dce\fR[\fB\-\fR\fIn\fR] |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-tree\-gimple\fR[\fB\-raw\fR] \fB\-fdump\-tree\-mudflap\fR[\fB\-\fR\fIn\fR] |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-tree\-dom\fR[\fB\-\fR\fIn\fR] |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-tree\-dse\fR[\fB\-\fR\fIn\fR] |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-tree\-phiprop\fR[\fB\-\fR\fIn\fR] |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-tree\-phiopt\fR[\fB\-\fR\fIn\fR] |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-tree\-forwprop\fR[\fB\-\fR\fIn\fR] |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-tree\-copyrename\fR[\fB\-\fR\fIn\fR] |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-tree\-nrv \-fdump\-tree\-vect |
| \&\-fdump\-tree\-sink |
| \&\-fdump\-tree\-sra\fR[\fB\-\fR\fIn\fR] |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-tree\-forwprop\fR[\fB\-\fR\fIn\fR] |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-tree\-fre\fR[\fB\-\fR\fIn\fR] |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-tree\-vrp\fR[\fB\-\fR\fIn\fR] |
| \&\fB\-ftree\-vectorizer\-verbose=\fR\fIn\fR |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-tree\-storeccp\fR[\fB\-\fR\fIn\fR] |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-final\-insns=\fR\fIfile\fR |
| \&\fB\-fcompare\-debug\fR[\fB=\fR\fIopts\fR] \fB\-fcompare\-debug\-second |
| \&\-feliminate\-dwarf2\-dups \-fno\-eliminate\-unused\-debug\-types |
| \&\-feliminate\-unused\-debug\-symbols \-femit\-class\-debug\-always |
| \&\-fenable\-\fR\fIkind\fR\fB\-\fR\fIpass\fR |
| \&\fB\-fenable\-\fR\fIkind\fR\fB\-\fR\fIpass\fR\fB=\fR\fIrange-list\fR |
| \&\fB\-fdebug\-types\-section \-fmem\-report\-wpa |
| \&\-fmem\-report \-fpre\-ipa\-mem\-report \-fpost\-ipa\-mem\-report \-fprofile\-arcs |
| \&\-fopt\-info |
| \&\-fopt\-info\-\fR\fIoptions\fR[\fB=\fR\fIfile\fR] |
| \&\fB\-frandom\-seed=\fR\fIstring\fR \fB\-fsched\-verbose=\fR\fIn\fR |
| \&\fB\-fsel\-sched\-verbose \-fsel\-sched\-dump\-cfg \-fsel\-sched\-pipelining\-verbose |
| \&\-fstack\-usage \-ftest\-coverage \-ftime\-report \-fvar\-tracking |
| \&\-fvar\-tracking\-assignments \-fvar\-tracking\-assignments\-toggle |
| \&\-g \-g\fR\fIlevel\fR \fB\-gtoggle \-gcoff \-gdwarf\-\fR\fIversion\fR |
| \&\fB\-ggdb \-grecord\-gcc\-switches \-gno\-record\-gcc\-switches |
| \&\-gstabs \-gstabs+ \-gstrict\-dwarf \-gno\-strict\-dwarf |
| \&\-gvms \-gxcoff \-gxcoff+ |
| \&\-fno\-merge\-debug\-strings \-fno\-dwarf2\-cfi\-asm |
| \&\-fdebug\-prefix\-map=\fR\fIold\fR\fB=\fR\fInew\fR |
| \&\fB\-femit\-struct\-debug\-baseonly \-femit\-struct\-debug\-reduced |
| \&\-femit\-struct\-debug\-detailed\fR[\fB=\fR\fIspec-list\fR] |
| \&\fB\-p \-pg \-print\-file\-name=\fR\fIlibrary\fR \fB\-print\-libgcc\-file\-name |
| \&\-print\-multi\-directory \-print\-multi\-lib \-print\-multi\-os\-directory |
| \&\-print\-prog\-name=\fR\fIprogram\fR \fB\-print\-search\-dirs \-Q |
| \&\-print\-sysroot \-print\-sysroot\-headers\-suffix |
| \&\-save\-temps \-save\-temps=cwd \-save\-temps=obj \-time\fR[\fB=\fR\fIfile\fR] |
| .IP "\fIOptimization Options\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "Optimization Options" |
| \&\fB\-faggressive\-loop\-optimizations \-falign\-functions[=\fR\fIn\fR\fB] |
| \&\-falign\-jumps[=\fR\fIn\fR\fB] |
| \&\-falign\-labels[=\fR\fIn\fR\fB] \-falign\-loops[=\fR\fIn\fR\fB] |
| \&\-fassociative\-math \-fauto\-inc\-dec \-fbranch\-probabilities |
| \&\-fbranch\-target\-load\-optimize \-fbranch\-target\-load\-optimize2 |
| \&\-fbtr\-bb\-exclusive \-fcaller\-saves |
| \&\-fcheck\-data\-deps \-fcombine\-stack\-adjustments \-fconserve\-stack |
| \&\-fcompare\-elim \-fcprop\-registers \-fcrossjumping |
| \&\-fcse\-follow\-jumps \-fcse\-skip\-blocks \-fcx\-fortran\-rules |
| \&\-fcx\-limited\-range |
| \&\-fdata\-sections \-fdce \-fdelayed\-branch |
| \&\-fdelete\-null\-pointer\-checks \-fdevirtualize \-fdse |
| \&\-fearly\-inlining \-fipa\-sra \-fexpensive\-optimizations \-ffat\-lto\-objects |
| \&\-ffast\-math \-ffinite\-math\-only \-ffloat\-store \-fexcess\-precision=\fR\fIstyle\fR |
| \&\fB\-fforward\-propagate \-ffp\-contract=\fR\fIstyle\fR \fB\-ffunction\-sections |
| \&\-fgcse \-fgcse\-after\-reload \-fgcse\-las \-fgcse\-lm \-fgraphite\-identity |
| \&\-fgcse\-sm \-fhoist\-adjacent\-loads \-fif\-conversion |
| \&\-fif\-conversion2 \-findirect\-inlining |
| \&\-finline\-functions \-finline\-functions\-called\-once \-finline\-limit=\fR\fIn\fR |
| \&\fB\-finline\-small\-functions \-fipa\-cp \-fipa\-cp\-clone |
| \&\-fipa\-pta \-fipa\-profile \-fipa\-pure\-const \-fipa\-reference |
| \&\-fira\-algorithm=\fR\fIalgorithm\fR |
| \&\fB\-fira\-region=\fR\fIregion\fR \fB\-fira\-hoist\-pressure |
| \&\-fira\-loop\-pressure \-fno\-ira\-share\-save\-slots |
| \&\-fno\-ira\-share\-spill\-slots \-fira\-verbose=\fR\fIn\fR |
| \&\fB\-fivopts \-fkeep\-inline\-functions \-fkeep\-static\-consts |
| \&\-floop\-block \-floop\-interchange \-floop\-strip\-mine \-floop\-nest\-optimize |
| \&\-floop\-parallelize\-all \-flto \-flto\-compression\-level |
| \&\-flto\-partition=\fR\fIalg\fR \fB\-flto\-report \-fmerge\-all\-constants |
| \&\-fmerge\-constants \-fmodulo\-sched \-fmodulo\-sched\-allow\-regmoves |
| \&\-fmove\-loop\-invariants fmudflap \-fmudflapir \-fmudflapth \-fno\-branch\-count\-reg |
| \&\-fno\-default\-inline |
| \&\-fno\-defer\-pop \-fno\-function\-cse \-fno\-guess\-branch\-probability |
| \&\-fno\-inline \-fno\-math\-errno \-fno\-peephole \-fno\-peephole2 |
| \&\-fno\-sched\-interblock \-fno\-sched\-spec \-fno\-signed\-zeros |
| \&\-fno\-toplevel\-reorder \-fno\-trapping\-math \-fno\-zero\-initialized\-in\-bss |
| \&\-fomit\-frame\-pointer \-foptimize\-register\-move \-foptimize\-sibling\-calls |
| \&\-fpartial\-inlining \-fpeel\-loops \-fpredictive\-commoning |
| \&\-fprefetch\-loop\-arrays \-fprofile\-report |
| \&\-fprofile\-correction \-fprofile\-dir=\fR\fIpath\fR \fB\-fprofile\-generate |
| \&\-fprofile\-generate=\fR\fIpath\fR |
| \&\fB\-fprofile\-use \-fprofile\-use=\fR\fIpath\fR \fB\-fprofile\-values |
| \&\-freciprocal\-math \-free \-fregmove \-frename\-registers \-freorder\-blocks |
| \&\-freorder\-blocks\-and\-partition \-freorder\-functions |
| \&\-frerun\-cse\-after\-loop \-freschedule\-modulo\-scheduled\-loops |
| \&\-frounding\-math \-fsched2\-use\-superblocks \-fsched\-pressure |
| \&\-fsched\-spec\-load \-fsched\-spec\-load\-dangerous |
| \&\-fsched\-stalled\-insns\-dep[=\fR\fIn\fR\fB] \-fsched\-stalled\-insns[=\fR\fIn\fR\fB] |
| \&\-fsched\-group\-heuristic \-fsched\-critical\-path\-heuristic |
| \&\-fsched\-spec\-insn\-heuristic \-fsched\-rank\-heuristic |
| \&\-fsched\-last\-insn\-heuristic \-fsched\-dep\-count\-heuristic |
| \&\-fschedule\-insns \-fschedule\-insns2 \-fsection\-anchors |
| \&\-fselective\-scheduling \-fselective\-scheduling2 |
| \&\-fsel\-sched\-pipelining \-fsel\-sched\-pipelining\-outer\-loops |
| \&\-fshrink\-wrap \-fsignaling\-nans \-fsingle\-precision\-constant |
| \&\-fsplit\-ivs\-in\-unroller \-fsplit\-wide\-types \-fstack\-protector |
| \&\-fstack\-protector\-all \-fstrict\-aliasing \-fstrict\-overflow |
| \&\-fthread\-jumps \-ftracer \-ftree\-bit\-ccp |
| \&\-ftree\-builtin\-call\-dce \-ftree\-ccp \-ftree\-ch |
| \&\-ftree\-coalesce\-inline\-vars \-ftree\-coalesce\-vars \-ftree\-copy\-prop |
| \&\-ftree\-copyrename \-ftree\-dce \-ftree\-dominator\-opts \-ftree\-dse |
| \&\-ftree\-forwprop \-ftree\-fre \-ftree\-loop\-if\-convert |
| \&\-ftree\-loop\-if\-convert\-stores \-ftree\-loop\-im |
| \&\-ftree\-phiprop \-ftree\-loop\-distribution \-ftree\-loop\-distribute\-patterns |
| \&\-ftree\-loop\-ivcanon \-ftree\-loop\-linear \-ftree\-loop\-optimize |
| \&\-ftree\-parallelize\-loops=\fR\fIn\fR \fB\-ftree\-pre \-ftree\-partial\-pre \-ftree\-pta |
| \&\-ftree\-reassoc \-ftree\-sink \-ftree\-slsr \-ftree\-sra |
| \&\-ftree\-switch\-conversion \-ftree\-tail\-merge |
| \&\-ftree\-ter \-ftree\-vectorize \-ftree\-vrp |
| \&\-funit\-at\-a\-time \-funroll\-all\-loops \-funroll\-loops |
| \&\-funsafe\-loop\-optimizations \-funsafe\-math\-optimizations \-funswitch\-loops |
| \&\-fvariable\-expansion\-in\-unroller \-fvect\-cost\-model \-fvpt \-fweb |
| \&\-fwhole\-program \-fwpa \-fuse\-ld=\fR\fIlinker\fR \fB\-fuse\-linker\-plugin |
| \&\-\-param\fR \fIname\fR\fB=\fR\fIvalue\fR |
| \&\fB\-O \-O0 \-O1 \-O2 \-O3 \-Os \-Ofast \-Og\fR |
| .IP "\fIPreprocessor Options\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "Preprocessor Options" |
| \&\fB\-A\fR\fIquestion\fR\fB=\fR\fIanswer\fR |
| \&\fB\-A\-\fR\fIquestion\fR[\fB=\fR\fIanswer\fR] |
| \&\fB\-C \-dD \-dI \-dM \-dN |
| \&\-D\fR\fImacro\fR[\fB=\fR\fIdefn\fR] \fB\-E \-H |
| \&\-idirafter\fR \fIdir\fR |
| \&\fB\-include\fR \fIfile\fR \fB\-imacros\fR \fIfile\fR |
| \&\fB\-iprefix\fR \fIfile\fR \fB\-iwithprefix\fR \fIdir\fR |
| \&\fB\-iwithprefixbefore\fR \fIdir\fR \fB\-isystem\fR \fIdir\fR |
| \&\fB\-imultilib\fR \fIdir\fR \fB\-isysroot\fR \fIdir\fR |
| \&\fB\-M \-MM \-MF \-MG \-MP \-MQ \-MT \-nostdinc |
| \&\-P \-fdebug\-cpp \-ftrack\-macro\-expansion \-fworking\-directory |
| \&\-remap \-trigraphs \-undef \-U\fR\fImacro\fR |
| \&\fB\-Wp,\fR\fIoption\fR \fB\-Xpreprocessor\fR \fIoption\fR \fB\-no\-integrated\-cpp\fR |
| .IP "\fIAssembler Option\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "Assembler Option" |
| \&\fB\-Wa,\fR\fIoption\fR \fB\-Xassembler\fR \fIoption\fR |
| .IP "\fILinker Options\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "Linker Options" |
| \&\fIobject-file-name\fR \fB\-l\fR\fIlibrary\fR |
| \&\fB\-nostartfiles \-nodefaultlibs \-nostdlib \-pie \-rdynamic |
| \&\-s \-static \-static\-libgcc \-static\-libstdc++ |
| \&\-static\-libasan \-static\-libtsan |
| \&\-shared \-shared\-libgcc \-symbolic |
| \&\-T\fR \fIscript\fR \fB\-Wl,\fR\fIoption\fR \fB\-Xlinker\fR \fIoption\fR |
| \&\fB\-u\fR \fIsymbol\fR |
| .IP "\fIDirectory Options\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "Directory Options" |
| \&\fB\-B\fR\fIprefix\fR \fB\-I\fR\fIdir\fR \fB\-iplugindir=\fR\fIdir\fR |
| \&\fB\-iquote\fR\fIdir\fR \fB\-L\fR\fIdir\fR \fB\-specs=\fR\fIfile\fR \fB\-I\- |
| \&\-\-sysroot=\fR\fIdir\fR \fB\-\-no\-sysroot\-suffix\fR |
| .IP "\fIMachine Dependent Options\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "Machine Dependent Options" |
| \&\fIAArch64 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mbig\-endian \-mlittle\-endian |
| \&\-mgeneral\-regs\-only |
| \&\-mcmodel=tiny \-mcmodel=small \-mcmodel=large |
| \&\-mstrict\-align |
| \&\-momit\-leaf\-frame\-pointer \-mno\-omit\-leaf\-frame\-pointer |
| \&\-mtls\-dialect=desc \-mtls\-dialect=traditional |
| \&\-march=\fR\fIname\fR \fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIname\fR \fB\-mtune=\fR\fIname\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIAdapteva Epiphany Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mhalf\-reg\-file \-mprefer\-short\-insn\-regs |
| \&\-mbranch\-cost=\fR\fInum\fR \fB\-mcmove \-mnops=\fR\fInum\fR \fB\-msoft\-cmpsf |
| \&\-msplit\-lohi \-mpost\-inc \-mpost\-modify \-mstack\-offset=\fR\fInum\fR |
| \&\fB\-mround\-nearest \-mlong\-calls \-mshort\-calls \-msmall16 |
| \&\-mfp\-mode=\fR\fImode\fR \fB\-mvect\-double \-max\-vect\-align=\fR\fInum\fR |
| \&\fB\-msplit\-vecmove\-early \-m1reg\-\fR\fIreg\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fI\s-1ARM\s0 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mapcs\-frame \-mno\-apcs\-frame |
| \&\-mabi=\fR\fIname\fR |
| \&\fB\-mapcs\-stack\-check \-mno\-apcs\-stack\-check |
| \&\-mapcs\-float \-mno\-apcs\-float |
| \&\-mapcs\-reentrant \-mno\-apcs\-reentrant |
| \&\-msched\-prolog \-mno\-sched\-prolog |
| \&\-mlittle\-endian \-mbig\-endian \-mwords\-little\-endian |
| \&\-mfloat\-abi=\fR\fIname\fR |
| \&\fB\-mfp16\-format=\fR\fIname\fR |
| \&\fB\-mthumb\-interwork \-mno\-thumb\-interwork |
| \&\-mcpu=\fR\fIname\fR \fB\-march=\fR\fIname\fR \fB\-mfpu=\fR\fIname\fR |
| \&\fB\-mstructure\-size\-boundary=\fR\fIn\fR |
| \&\fB\-mabort\-on\-noreturn |
| \&\-mlong\-calls \-mno\-long\-calls |
| \&\-msingle\-pic\-base \-mno\-single\-pic\-base |
| \&\-mpic\-register=\fR\fIreg\fR |
| \&\fB\-mnop\-fun\-dllimport |
| \&\-mpoke\-function\-name |
| \&\-mthumb \-marm |
| \&\-mtpcs\-frame \-mtpcs\-leaf\-frame |
| \&\-mcaller\-super\-interworking \-mcallee\-super\-interworking |
| \&\-mtp=\fR\fIname\fR \fB\-mtls\-dialect=\fR\fIdialect\fR |
| \&\fB\-mword\-relocations |
| \&\-mfix\-cortex\-m3\-ldrd |
| \&\-munaligned\-access |
| \&\-mneon\-for\-64bits |
| \&\-mrestrict\-it\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fI\s-1AVR\s0 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mmcu=\fR\fImcu\fR \fB\-maccumulate\-args \-mbranch\-cost=\fR\fIcost\fR |
| \&\fB\-mcall\-prologues \-mint8 \-mno\-interrupts \-mrelax |
| \&\-mstrict\-X \-mtiny\-stack \-Waddr\-space\-convert\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIBlackfin Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu\fR[\fB\-\fR\fIsirevision\fR] |
| \&\fB\-msim \-momit\-leaf\-frame\-pointer \-mno\-omit\-leaf\-frame\-pointer |
| \&\-mspecld\-anomaly \-mno\-specld\-anomaly \-mcsync\-anomaly \-mno\-csync\-anomaly |
| \&\-mlow\-64k \-mno\-low64k \-mstack\-check\-l1 \-mid\-shared\-library |
| \&\-mno\-id\-shared\-library \-mshared\-library\-id=\fR\fIn\fR |
| \&\fB\-mleaf\-id\-shared\-library \-mno\-leaf\-id\-shared\-library |
| \&\-msep\-data \-mno\-sep\-data \-mlong\-calls \-mno\-long\-calls |
| \&\-mfast\-fp \-minline\-plt \-mmulticore \-mcorea \-mcoreb \-msdram |
| \&\-micplb\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIC6X Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mbig\-endian \-mlittle\-endian \-march=\fR\fIcpu\fR |
| \&\fB\-msim \-msdata=\fR\fIsdata-type\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fI\s-1CRIS\s0 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu\fR \fB\-march=\fR\fIcpu\fR \fB\-mtune=\fR\fIcpu\fR |
| \&\fB\-mmax\-stack\-frame=\fR\fIn\fR \fB\-melinux\-stacksize=\fR\fIn\fR |
| \&\fB\-metrax4 \-metrax100 \-mpdebug \-mcc\-init \-mno\-side\-effects |
| \&\-mstack\-align \-mdata\-align \-mconst\-align |
| \&\-m32\-bit \-m16\-bit \-m8\-bit \-mno\-prologue\-epilogue \-mno\-gotplt |
| \&\-melf \-maout \-melinux \-mlinux \-sim \-sim2 |
| \&\-mmul\-bug\-workaround \-mno\-mul\-bug\-workaround\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fI\s-1CR16\s0 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mmac |
| \&\-mcr16cplus \-mcr16c |
| \&\-msim \-mint32 \-mbit\-ops |
| \&\-mdata\-model=\fR\fImodel\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIDarwin Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-all_load \-allowable_client \-arch \-arch_errors_fatal |
| \&\-arch_only \-bind_at_load \-bundle \-bundle_loader |
| \&\-client_name \-compatibility_version \-current_version |
| \&\-dead_strip |
| \&\-dependency\-file \-dylib_file \-dylinker_install_name |
| \&\-dynamic \-dynamiclib \-exported_symbols_list |
| \&\-filelist \-flat_namespace \-force_cpusubtype_ALL |
| \&\-force_flat_namespace \-headerpad_max_install_names |
| \&\-iframework |
| \&\-image_base \-init \-install_name \-keep_private_externs |
| \&\-multi_module \-multiply_defined \-multiply_defined_unused |
| \&\-noall_load \-no_dead_strip_inits_and_terms |
| \&\-nofixprebinding \-nomultidefs \-noprebind \-noseglinkedit |
| \&\-pagezero_size \-prebind \-prebind_all_twolevel_modules |
| \&\-private_bundle \-read_only_relocs \-sectalign |
| \&\-sectobjectsymbols \-whyload \-seg1addr |
| \&\-sectcreate \-sectobjectsymbols \-sectorder |
| \&\-segaddr \-segs_read_only_addr \-segs_read_write_addr |
| \&\-seg_addr_table \-seg_addr_table_filename \-seglinkedit |
| \&\-segprot \-segs_read_only_addr \-segs_read_write_addr |
| \&\-single_module \-static \-sub_library \-sub_umbrella |
| \&\-twolevel_namespace \-umbrella \-undefined |
| \&\-unexported_symbols_list \-weak_reference_mismatches |
| \&\-whatsloaded \-F \-gused \-gfull \-mmacosx\-version\-min=\fR\fIversion\fR |
| \&\fB\-mkernel \-mone\-byte\-bool\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fI\s-1DEC\s0 Alpha Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mno\-fp\-regs \-msoft\-float |
| \&\-mieee \-mieee\-with\-inexact \-mieee\-conformant |
| \&\-mfp\-trap\-mode=\fR\fImode\fR \fB\-mfp\-rounding\-mode=\fR\fImode\fR |
| \&\fB\-mtrap\-precision=\fR\fImode\fR \fB\-mbuild\-constants |
| \&\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR \fB\-mtune=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR |
| \&\fB\-mbwx \-mmax \-mfix \-mcix |
| \&\-mfloat\-vax \-mfloat\-ieee |
| \&\-mexplicit\-relocs \-msmall\-data \-mlarge\-data |
| \&\-msmall\-text \-mlarge\-text |
| \&\-mmemory\-latency=\fR\fItime\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fI\s-1FR30\s0 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-msmall\-model \-mno\-lsim\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fI\s-1FRV\s0 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mgpr\-32 \-mgpr\-64 \-mfpr\-32 \-mfpr\-64 |
| \&\-mhard\-float \-msoft\-float |
| \&\-malloc\-cc \-mfixed\-cc \-mdword \-mno\-dword |
| \&\-mdouble \-mno\-double |
| \&\-mmedia \-mno\-media \-mmuladd \-mno\-muladd |
| \&\-mfdpic \-minline\-plt \-mgprel\-ro \-multilib\-library\-pic |
| \&\-mlinked\-fp \-mlong\-calls \-malign\-labels |
| \&\-mlibrary\-pic \-macc\-4 \-macc\-8 |
| \&\-mpack \-mno\-pack \-mno\-eflags \-mcond\-move \-mno\-cond\-move |
| \&\-moptimize\-membar \-mno\-optimize\-membar |
| \&\-mscc \-mno\-scc \-mcond\-exec \-mno\-cond\-exec |
| \&\-mvliw\-branch \-mno\-vliw\-branch |
| \&\-mmulti\-cond\-exec \-mno\-multi\-cond\-exec \-mnested\-cond\-exec |
| \&\-mno\-nested\-cond\-exec \-mtomcat\-stats |
| \&\-mTLS \-mtls |
| \&\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIGNU/Linux Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mglibc \-muclibc \-mbionic \-mandroid |
| \&\-tno\-android\-cc \-tno\-android\-ld\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIH8/300 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mrelax \-mh \-ms \-mn \-mexr \-mno\-exr \-mint32 \-malign\-300\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fI\s-1HPPA\s0 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-march=\fR\fIarchitecture-type\fR |
| \&\fB\-mbig\-switch \-mdisable\-fpregs \-mdisable\-indexing |
| \&\-mfast\-indirect\-calls \-mgas \-mgnu\-ld \-mhp\-ld |
| \&\-mfixed\-range=\fR\fIregister-range\fR |
| \&\fB\-mjump\-in\-delay \-mlinker\-opt \-mlong\-calls |
| \&\-mlong\-load\-store \-mno\-big\-switch \-mno\-disable\-fpregs |
| \&\-mno\-disable\-indexing \-mno\-fast\-indirect\-calls \-mno\-gas |
| \&\-mno\-jump\-in\-delay \-mno\-long\-load\-store |
| \&\-mno\-portable\-runtime \-mno\-soft\-float |
| \&\-mno\-space\-regs \-msoft\-float \-mpa\-risc\-1\-0 |
| \&\-mpa\-risc\-1\-1 \-mpa\-risc\-2\-0 \-mportable\-runtime |
| \&\-mschedule=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR \fB\-mspace\-regs \-msio \-mwsio |
| \&\-munix=\fR\fIunix-std\fR \fB\-nolibdld \-static \-threads\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIi386 and x86\-64 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mtune=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR \fB\-march=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR |
| \&\fB\-mfpmath=\fR\fIunit\fR |
| \&\fB\-masm=\fR\fIdialect\fR \fB\-mno\-fancy\-math\-387 |
| \&\-mno\-fp\-ret\-in\-387 \-msoft\-float |
| \&\-mno\-wide\-multiply \-mrtd \-malign\-double |
| \&\-mpreferred\-stack\-boundary=\fR\fInum\fR |
| \&\fB\-mincoming\-stack\-boundary=\fR\fInum\fR |
| \&\fB\-mcld \-mcx16 \-msahf \-mmovbe \-mcrc32 |
| \&\-mrecip \-mrecip=\fR\fIopt\fR |
| \&\fB\-mvzeroupper \-mprefer\-avx128 |
| \&\-mmmx \-msse \-msse2 \-msse3 \-mssse3 \-msse4.1 \-msse4.2 \-msse4 \-mavx |
| \&\-mavx2 \-maes \-mpclmul \-mfsgsbase \-mrdrnd \-mf16c \-mfma |
| \&\-msse4a \-m3dnow \-mpopcnt \-mabm \-mbmi \-mtbm \-mfma4 \-mxop \-mlzcnt |
| \&\-mbmi2 \-mrtm \-mlwp \-mthreads |
| \&\-mno\-align\-stringops \-minline\-all\-stringops |
| \&\-minline\-stringops\-dynamically \-mstringop\-strategy=\fR\fIalg\fR |
| \&\fB\-mpush\-args \-maccumulate\-outgoing\-args \-m128bit\-long\-double |
| \&\-m96bit\-long\-double \-mlong\-double\-64 \-mlong\-double\-80 |
| \&\-mregparm=\fR\fInum\fR \fB\-msseregparm |
| \&\-mveclibabi=\fR\fItype\fR \fB\-mvect8\-ret\-in\-mem |
| \&\-mpc32 \-mpc64 \-mpc80 \-mstackrealign |
| \&\-momit\-leaf\-frame\-pointer \-mno\-red\-zone \-mno\-tls\-direct\-seg\-refs |
| \&\-mcmodel=\fR\fIcode-model\fR \fB\-mabi=\fR\fIname\fR \fB\-maddress\-mode=\fR\fImode\fR |
| \&\fB\-m32 \-m64 \-mx32 \-mlarge\-data\-threshold=\fR\fInum\fR |
| \&\fB\-msse2avx \-mfentry \-m8bit\-idiv |
| \&\-mavx256\-split\-unaligned\-load \-mavx256\-split\-unaligned\-store\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIi386 and x86\-64 Windows Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mconsole \-mcygwin \-mno\-cygwin \-mdll |
| \&\-mnop\-fun\-dllimport \-mthread |
| \&\-municode \-mwin32 \-mwindows \-fno\-set\-stack\-executable\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fI\s-1IA\-64\s0 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mbig\-endian \-mlittle\-endian \-mgnu\-as \-mgnu\-ld \-mno\-pic |
| \&\-mvolatile\-asm\-stop \-mregister\-names \-msdata \-mno\-sdata |
| \&\-mconstant\-gp \-mauto\-pic \-mfused\-madd |
| \&\-minline\-float\-divide\-min\-latency |
| \&\-minline\-float\-divide\-max\-throughput |
| \&\-mno\-inline\-float\-divide |
| \&\-minline\-int\-divide\-min\-latency |
| \&\-minline\-int\-divide\-max\-throughput |
| \&\-mno\-inline\-int\-divide |
| \&\-minline\-sqrt\-min\-latency \-minline\-sqrt\-max\-throughput |
| \&\-mno\-inline\-sqrt |
| \&\-mdwarf2\-asm \-mearly\-stop\-bits |
| \&\-mfixed\-range=\fR\fIregister-range\fR \fB\-mtls\-size=\fR\fItls-size\fR |
| \&\fB\-mtune=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR \fB\-milp32 \-mlp64 |
| \&\-msched\-br\-data\-spec \-msched\-ar\-data\-spec \-msched\-control\-spec |
| \&\-msched\-br\-in\-data\-spec \-msched\-ar\-in\-data\-spec \-msched\-in\-control\-spec |
| \&\-msched\-spec\-ldc \-msched\-spec\-control\-ldc |
| \&\-msched\-prefer\-non\-data\-spec\-insns \-msched\-prefer\-non\-control\-spec\-insns |
| \&\-msched\-stop\-bits\-after\-every\-cycle \-msched\-count\-spec\-in\-critical\-path |
| \&\-msel\-sched\-dont\-check\-control\-spec \-msched\-fp\-mem\-deps\-zero\-cost |
| \&\-msched\-max\-memory\-insns\-hard\-limit \-msched\-max\-memory\-insns=\fR\fImax-insns\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fI\s-1LM32\s0 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mbarrel\-shift\-enabled \-mdivide\-enabled \-mmultiply\-enabled |
| \&\-msign\-extend\-enabled \-muser\-enabled\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIM32R/D Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-m32r2 \-m32rx \-m32r |
| \&\-mdebug |
| \&\-malign\-loops \-mno\-align\-loops |
| \&\-missue\-rate=\fR\fInumber\fR |
| \&\fB\-mbranch\-cost=\fR\fInumber\fR |
| \&\fB\-mmodel=\fR\fIcode-size-model-type\fR |
| \&\fB\-msdata=\fR\fIsdata-type\fR |
| \&\fB\-mno\-flush\-func \-mflush\-func=\fR\fIname\fR |
| \&\fB\-mno\-flush\-trap \-mflush\-trap=\fR\fInumber\fR |
| \&\fB\-G\fR \fInum\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIM32C Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu\fR \fB\-msim \-memregs=\fR\fInumber\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIM680x0 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-march=\fR\fIarch\fR \fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu\fR \fB\-mtune=\fR\fItune\fR |
| \&\fB\-m68000 \-m68020 \-m68020\-40 \-m68020\-60 \-m68030 \-m68040 |
| \&\-m68060 \-mcpu32 \-m5200 \-m5206e \-m528x \-m5307 \-m5407 |
| \&\-mcfv4e \-mbitfield \-mno\-bitfield \-mc68000 \-mc68020 |
| \&\-mnobitfield \-mrtd \-mno\-rtd \-mdiv \-mno\-div \-mshort |
| \&\-mno\-short \-mhard\-float \-m68881 \-msoft\-float \-mpcrel |
| \&\-malign\-int \-mstrict\-align \-msep\-data \-mno\-sep\-data |
| \&\-mshared\-library\-id=n \-mid\-shared\-library \-mno\-id\-shared\-library |
| \&\-mxgot \-mno\-xgot\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIMCore Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mhardlit \-mno\-hardlit \-mdiv \-mno\-div \-mrelax\-immediates |
| \&\-mno\-relax\-immediates \-mwide\-bitfields \-mno\-wide\-bitfields |
| \&\-m4byte\-functions \-mno\-4byte\-functions \-mcallgraph\-data |
| \&\-mno\-callgraph\-data \-mslow\-bytes \-mno\-slow\-bytes \-mno\-lsim |
| \&\-mlittle\-endian \-mbig\-endian \-m210 \-m340 \-mstack\-increment\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIMeP Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mabsdiff \-mall\-opts \-maverage \-mbased=\fR\fIn\fR \fB\-mbitops |
| \&\-mc=\fR\fIn\fR \fB\-mclip \-mconfig=\fR\fIname\fR \fB\-mcop \-mcop32 \-mcop64 \-mivc2 |
| \&\-mdc \-mdiv \-meb \-mel \-mio\-volatile \-ml \-mleadz \-mm \-mminmax |
| \&\-mmult \-mno\-opts \-mrepeat \-ms \-msatur \-msdram \-msim \-msimnovec \-mtf |
| \&\-mtiny=\fR\fIn\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIMicroBlaze Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-msoft\-float \-mhard\-float \-msmall\-divides \-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu\fR |
| \&\fB\-mmemcpy \-mxl\-soft\-mul \-mxl\-soft\-div \-mxl\-barrel\-shift |
| \&\-mxl\-pattern\-compare \-mxl\-stack\-check \-mxl\-gp\-opt \-mno\-clearbss |
| \&\-mxl\-multiply\-high \-mxl\-float\-convert \-mxl\-float\-sqrt |
| \&\-mbig\-endian \-mlittle\-endian \-mxl\-reorder \-mxl\-mode\-\fR\fIapp-model\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fI\s-1MIPS\s0 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-EL \-EB \-march=\fR\fIarch\fR \fB\-mtune=\fR\fIarch\fR |
| \&\fB\-mips1 \-mips2 \-mips3 \-mips4 \-mips32 \-mips32r2 |
| \&\-mips64 \-mips64r2 |
| \&\-mips16 \-mno\-mips16 \-mflip\-mips16 |
| \&\-minterlink\-mips16 \-mno\-interlink\-mips16 |
| \&\-mabi=\fR\fIabi\fR \fB\-mabicalls \-mno\-abicalls |
| \&\-mshared \-mno\-shared \-mplt \-mno\-plt \-mxgot \-mno\-xgot |
| \&\-mgp32 \-mgp64 \-mfp32 \-mfp64 \-mhard\-float \-msoft\-float |
| \&\-mno\-float \-msingle\-float \-mdouble\-float |
| \&\-mdsp \-mno\-dsp \-mdspr2 \-mno\-dspr2 |
| \&\-mmcu \-mmno\-mcu |
| \&\-mfpu=\fR\fIfpu-type\fR |
| \&\fB\-msmartmips \-mno\-smartmips |
| \&\-mpaired\-single \-mno\-paired\-single \-mdmx \-mno\-mdmx |
| \&\-mips3d \-mno\-mips3d \-mmt \-mno\-mt \-mllsc \-mno\-llsc |
| \&\-mlong64 \-mlong32 \-msym32 \-mno\-sym32 |
| \&\-G\fR\fInum\fR \fB\-mlocal\-sdata \-mno\-local\-sdata |
| \&\-mextern\-sdata \-mno\-extern\-sdata \-mgpopt \-mno\-gopt |
| \&\-membedded\-data \-mno\-embedded\-data |
| \&\-muninit\-const\-in\-rodata \-mno\-uninit\-const\-in\-rodata |
| \&\-mcode\-readable=\fR\fIsetting\fR |
| \&\fB\-msplit\-addresses \-mno\-split\-addresses |
| \&\-mexplicit\-relocs \-mno\-explicit\-relocs |
| \&\-mcheck\-zero\-division \-mno\-check\-zero\-division |
| \&\-mdivide\-traps \-mdivide\-breaks |
| \&\-mmemcpy \-mno\-memcpy \-mlong\-calls \-mno\-long\-calls |
| \&\-mmad \-mno\-mad \-mfused\-madd \-mno\-fused\-madd \-nocpp |
| \&\-mfix\-24k \-mno\-fix\-24k |
| \&\-mfix\-r4000 \-mno\-fix\-r4000 \-mfix\-r4400 \-mno\-fix\-r4400 |
| \&\-mfix\-r10000 \-mno\-fix\-r10000 \-mfix\-vr4120 \-mno\-fix\-vr4120 |
| \&\-mfix\-vr4130 \-mno\-fix\-vr4130 \-mfix\-sb1 \-mno\-fix\-sb1 |
| \&\-mflush\-func=\fR\fIfunc\fR \fB\-mno\-flush\-func |
| \&\-mbranch\-cost=\fR\fInum\fR \fB\-mbranch\-likely \-mno\-branch\-likely |
| \&\-mfp\-exceptions \-mno\-fp\-exceptions |
| \&\-mvr4130\-align \-mno\-vr4130\-align \-msynci \-mno\-synci |
| \&\-mrelax\-pic\-calls \-mno\-relax\-pic\-calls \-mmcount\-ra\-address\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fI\s-1MMIX\s0 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mlibfuncs \-mno\-libfuncs \-mepsilon \-mno\-epsilon \-mabi=gnu |
| \&\-mabi=mmixware \-mzero\-extend \-mknuthdiv \-mtoplevel\-symbols |
| \&\-melf \-mbranch\-predict \-mno\-branch\-predict \-mbase\-addresses |
| \&\-mno\-base\-addresses \-msingle\-exit \-mno\-single\-exit\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fI\s-1MN10300\s0 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mmult\-bug \-mno\-mult\-bug |
| \&\-mno\-am33 \-mam33 \-mam33\-2 \-mam34 |
| \&\-mtune=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR |
| \&\fB\-mreturn\-pointer\-on\-d0 |
| \&\-mno\-crt0 \-mrelax \-mliw \-msetlb\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIMoxie Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-meb \-mel \-mno\-crt0\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fI\s-1PDP\-11\s0 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mfpu \-msoft\-float \-mac0 \-mno\-ac0 \-m40 \-m45 \-m10 |
| \&\-mbcopy \-mbcopy\-builtin \-mint32 \-mno\-int16 |
| \&\-mint16 \-mno\-int32 \-mfloat32 \-mno\-float64 |
| \&\-mfloat64 \-mno\-float32 \-mabshi \-mno\-abshi |
| \&\-mbranch\-expensive \-mbranch\-cheap |
| \&\-munix\-asm \-mdec\-asm\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIpicoChip Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mae=\fR\fIae_type\fR \fB\-mvliw\-lookahead=\fR\fIN\fR |
| \&\fB\-msymbol\-as\-address \-mno\-inefficient\-warnings\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIPowerPC Options\fR |
| See \s-1RS/6000\s0 and PowerPC Options. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fI\s-1RL78\s0 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-msim \-mmul=none \-mmul=g13 \-mmul=rl78\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fI\s-1RS/6000\s0 and PowerPC Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR |
| \&\fB\-mtune=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR |
| \&\fB\-mcmodel=\fR\fIcode-model\fR |
| \&\fB\-mpowerpc64 |
| \&\-maltivec \-mno\-altivec |
| \&\-mpowerpc\-gpopt \-mno\-powerpc\-gpopt |
| \&\-mpowerpc\-gfxopt \-mno\-powerpc\-gfxopt |
| \&\-mmfcrf \-mno\-mfcrf \-mpopcntb \-mno\-popcntb \-mpopcntd \-mno\-popcntd |
| \&\-mfprnd \-mno\-fprnd |
| \&\-mcmpb \-mno\-cmpb \-mmfpgpr \-mno\-mfpgpr \-mhard\-dfp \-mno\-hard\-dfp |
| \&\-mfull\-toc \-mminimal\-toc \-mno\-fp\-in\-toc \-mno\-sum\-in\-toc |
| \&\-m64 \-m32 \-mxl\-compat \-mno\-xl\-compat \-mpe |
| \&\-malign\-power \-malign\-natural |
| \&\-msoft\-float \-mhard\-float \-mmultiple \-mno\-multiple |
| \&\-msingle\-float \-mdouble\-float \-msimple\-fpu |
| \&\-mstring \-mno\-string \-mupdate \-mno\-update |
| \&\-mavoid\-indexed\-addresses \-mno\-avoid\-indexed\-addresses |
| \&\-mfused\-madd \-mno\-fused\-madd \-mbit\-align \-mno\-bit\-align |
| \&\-mstrict\-align \-mno\-strict\-align \-mrelocatable |
| \&\-mno\-relocatable \-mrelocatable\-lib \-mno\-relocatable\-lib |
| \&\-mtoc \-mno\-toc \-mlittle \-mlittle\-endian \-mbig \-mbig\-endian |
| \&\-mdynamic\-no\-pic \-maltivec \-mswdiv \-msingle\-pic\-base |
| \&\-mprioritize\-restricted\-insns=\fR\fIpriority\fR |
| \&\fB\-msched\-costly\-dep=\fR\fIdependence_type\fR |
| \&\fB\-minsert\-sched\-nops=\fR\fIscheme\fR |
| \&\fB\-mcall\-sysv \-mcall\-netbsd |
| \&\-maix\-struct\-return \-msvr4\-struct\-return |
| \&\-mabi=\fR\fIabi-type\fR \fB\-msecure\-plt \-mbss\-plt |
| \&\-mblock\-move\-inline\-limit=\fR\fInum\fR |
| \&\fB\-misel \-mno\-isel |
| \&\-misel=yes \-misel=no |
| \&\-mspe \-mno\-spe |
| \&\-mspe=yes \-mspe=no |
| \&\-mpaired |
| \&\-mgen\-cell\-microcode \-mwarn\-cell\-microcode |
| \&\-mvrsave \-mno\-vrsave |
| \&\-mmulhw \-mno\-mulhw |
| \&\-mdlmzb \-mno\-dlmzb |
| \&\-mfloat\-gprs=yes \-mfloat\-gprs=no \-mfloat\-gprs=single \-mfloat\-gprs=double |
| \&\-mprototype \-mno\-prototype |
| \&\-msim \-mmvme \-mads \-myellowknife \-memb \-msdata |
| \&\-msdata=\fR\fIopt\fR \fB\-mvxworks \-G\fR \fInum\fR \fB\-pthread |
| \&\-mrecip \-mrecip=\fR\fIopt\fR \fB\-mno\-recip \-mrecip\-precision |
| \&\-mno\-recip\-precision |
| \&\-mveclibabi=\fR\fItype\fR \fB\-mfriz \-mno\-friz |
| \&\-mpointers\-to\-nested\-functions \-mno\-pointers\-to\-nested\-functions |
| \&\-msave\-toc\-indirect \-mno\-save\-toc\-indirect |
| \&\-mpower8\-fusion \-mno\-mpower8\-fusion \-mpower8\-vector \-mno\-power8\-vector |
| \&\-mcrypto \-mno\-crypto \-mdirect\-move \-mno\-direct\-move |
| \&\-mquad\-memory \-mno\-quad\-memory |
| \&\-mquad\-memory\-atomic \-mno\-quad\-memory\-atomic |
| \&\-mcompat\-align\-parm \-mno\-compat\-align\-parm\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fI\s-1RX\s0 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-m64bit\-doubles \-m32bit\-doubles \-fpu \-nofpu |
| \&\-mcpu= |
| \&\-mbig\-endian\-data \-mlittle\-endian\-data |
| \&\-msmall\-data |
| \&\-msim \-mno\-sim |
| \&\-mas100\-syntax \-mno\-as100\-syntax |
| \&\-mrelax |
| \&\-mmax\-constant\-size= |
| \&\-mint\-register= |
| \&\-mpid |
| \&\-mno\-warn\-multiple\-fast\-interrupts |
| \&\-msave\-acc\-in\-interrupts\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIS/390 and zSeries Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mtune=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR \fB\-march=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR |
| \&\fB\-mhard\-float \-msoft\-float \-mhard\-dfp \-mno\-hard\-dfp |
| \&\-mlong\-double\-64 \-mlong\-double\-128 |
| \&\-mbackchain \-mno\-backchain \-mpacked\-stack \-mno\-packed\-stack |
| \&\-msmall\-exec \-mno\-small\-exec \-mmvcle \-mno\-mvcle |
| \&\-m64 \-m31 \-mdebug \-mno\-debug \-mesa \-mzarch |
| \&\-mtpf\-trace \-mno\-tpf\-trace \-mfused\-madd \-mno\-fused\-madd |
| \&\-mwarn\-framesize \-mwarn\-dynamicstack \-mstack\-size \-mstack\-guard |
| \&\-mhotpatch[=\fR\fIhalfwords\fR\fB] \-mno\-hotpatch\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIScore Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-meb \-mel |
| \&\-mnhwloop |
| \&\-muls |
| \&\-mmac |
| \&\-mscore5 \-mscore5u \-mscore7 \-mscore7d\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fI\s-1SH\s0 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-m1 \-m2 \-m2e |
| \&\-m2a\-nofpu \-m2a\-single\-only \-m2a\-single \-m2a |
| \&\-m3 \-m3e |
| \&\-m4\-nofpu \-m4\-single\-only \-m4\-single \-m4 |
| \&\-m4a\-nofpu \-m4a\-single\-only \-m4a\-single \-m4a \-m4al |
| \&\-m5\-64media \-m5\-64media\-nofpu |
| \&\-m5\-32media \-m5\-32media\-nofpu |
| \&\-m5\-compact \-m5\-compact\-nofpu |
| \&\-mb \-ml \-mdalign \-mrelax |
| \&\-mbigtable \-mfmovd \-mhitachi \-mrenesas \-mno\-renesas \-mnomacsave |
| \&\-mieee \-mno\-ieee \-mbitops \-misize \-minline\-ic_invalidate \-mpadstruct |
| \&\-mspace \-mprefergot \-musermode \-multcost=\fR\fInumber\fR \fB\-mdiv=\fR\fIstrategy\fR |
| \&\fB\-mdivsi3_libfunc=\fR\fIname\fR \fB\-mfixed\-range=\fR\fIregister-range\fR |
| \&\fB\-mindexed\-addressing \-mgettrcost=\fR\fInumber\fR \fB\-mpt\-fixed |
| \&\-maccumulate\-outgoing\-args \-minvalid\-symbols |
| \&\-matomic\-model=\fR\fIatomic-model\fR |
| \&\fB\-mbranch\-cost=\fR\fInum\fR \fB\-mzdcbranch \-mno\-zdcbranch \-mcbranchdi \-mcmpeqdi |
| \&\-mfused\-madd \-mno\-fused\-madd \-mfsca \-mno\-fsca \-mfsrra \-mno\-fsrra |
| \&\-mpretend\-cmove \-mtas\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fISolaris 2 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mimpure\-text \-mno\-impure\-text |
| \&\-pthreads \-pthread\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fI\s-1SPARC\s0 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR |
| \&\fB\-mtune=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR |
| \&\fB\-mcmodel=\fR\fIcode-model\fR |
| \&\fB\-mmemory\-model=\fR\fImem-model\fR |
| \&\fB\-m32 \-m64 \-mapp\-regs \-mno\-app\-regs |
| \&\-mfaster\-structs \-mno\-faster\-structs \-mflat \-mno\-flat |
| \&\-mfpu \-mno\-fpu \-mhard\-float \-msoft\-float |
| \&\-mhard\-quad\-float \-msoft\-quad\-float |
| \&\-mstack\-bias \-mno\-stack\-bias |
| \&\-munaligned\-doubles \-mno\-unaligned\-doubles |
| \&\-muser\-mode \-mno\-user\-mode |
| \&\-mv8plus \-mno\-v8plus \-mvis \-mno\-vis |
| \&\-mvis2 \-mno\-vis2 \-mvis3 \-mno\-vis3 |
| \&\-mcbcond \-mno\-cbcond |
| \&\-mfmaf \-mno\-fmaf \-mpopc \-mno\-popc |
| \&\-mfix\-at697f \-mfix\-ut699\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fI\s-1SPU\s0 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mwarn\-reloc \-merror\-reloc |
| \&\-msafe\-dma \-munsafe\-dma |
| \&\-mbranch\-hints |
| \&\-msmall\-mem \-mlarge\-mem \-mstdmain |
| \&\-mfixed\-range=\fR\fIregister-range\fR |
| \&\fB\-mea32 \-mea64 |
| \&\-maddress\-space\-conversion \-mno\-address\-space\-conversion |
| \&\-mcache\-size=\fR\fIcache-size\fR |
| \&\fB\-matomic\-updates \-mno\-atomic\-updates\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fISystem V Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-Qy \-Qn \-YP,\fR\fIpaths\fR \fB\-Ym,\fR\fIdir\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fITILE-Gx Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu\fR \fB\-m32 \-m64 \-mcmodel=\fR\fIcode-model\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fITILEPro Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu\fR \fB\-m32\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIV850 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mlong\-calls \-mno\-long\-calls \-mep \-mno\-ep |
| \&\-mprolog\-function \-mno\-prolog\-function \-mspace |
| \&\-mtda=\fR\fIn\fR \fB\-msda=\fR\fIn\fR \fB\-mzda=\fR\fIn\fR |
| \&\fB\-mapp\-regs \-mno\-app\-regs |
| \&\-mdisable\-callt \-mno\-disable\-callt |
| \&\-mv850e2v3 \-mv850e2 \-mv850e1 \-mv850es |
| \&\-mv850e \-mv850 \-mv850e3v5 |
| \&\-mloop |
| \&\-mrelax |
| \&\-mlong\-jumps |
| \&\-msoft\-float |
| \&\-mhard\-float |
| \&\-mgcc\-abi |
| \&\-mrh850\-abi |
| \&\-mbig\-switch\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fI\s-1VAX\s0 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mg \-mgnu \-munix\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fI\s-1VMS\s0 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mvms\-return\-codes \-mdebug\-main=\fR\fIprefix\fR \fB\-mmalloc64 |
| \&\-mpointer\-size=\fR\fIsize\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIVxWorks Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mrtp \-non\-static \-Bstatic \-Bdynamic |
| \&\-Xbind\-lazy \-Xbind\-now\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIx86\-64 Options\fR |
| See i386 and x86\-64 Options. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIXstormy16 Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-msim\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIXtensa Options\fR |
| \&\fB\-mconst16 \-mno\-const16 |
| \&\-mfused\-madd \-mno\-fused\-madd |
| \&\-mforce\-no\-pic |
| \&\-mserialize\-volatile \-mno\-serialize\-volatile |
| \&\-mtext\-section\-literals \-mno\-text\-section\-literals |
| \&\-mtarget\-align \-mno\-target\-align |
| \&\-mlongcalls \-mno\-longcalls\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIzSeries Options\fR |
| See S/390 and zSeries Options. |
| .IP "\fICode Generation Options\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "Code Generation Options" |
| \&\fB\-fcall\-saved\-\fR\fIreg\fR \fB\-fcall\-used\-\fR\fIreg\fR |
| \&\fB\-ffixed\-\fR\fIreg\fR \fB\-fexceptions |
| \&\-fnon\-call\-exceptions \-fdelete\-dead\-exceptions \-funwind\-tables |
| \&\-fasynchronous\-unwind\-tables |
| \&\-fno\-gnu\-unique |
| \&\-finhibit\-size\-directive \-finstrument\-functions |
| \&\-finstrument\-functions\-exclude\-function\-list=\fR\fIsym\fR\fB,\fR\fIsym\fR\fB,... |
| \&\-finstrument\-functions\-exclude\-file\-list=\fR\fIfile\fR\fB,\fR\fIfile\fR\fB,... |
| \&\-fno\-common \-fno\-ident |
| \&\-fpcc\-struct\-return \-fpic \-fPIC \-fpie \-fPIE |
| \&\-fno\-jump\-tables |
| \&\-frecord\-gcc\-switches |
| \&\-freg\-struct\-return \-fshort\-enums |
| \&\-fshort\-double \-fshort\-wchar |
| \&\-fverbose\-asm \-fpack\-struct[=\fR\fIn\fR\fB] \-fstack\-check |
| \&\-fstack\-limit\-register=\fR\fIreg\fR \fB\-fstack\-limit\-symbol=\fR\fIsym\fR |
| \&\fB\-fno\-stack\-limit \-fsplit\-stack |
| \&\-fleading\-underscore \-ftls\-model=\fR\fImodel\fR |
| \&\fB\-fstack\-reuse=\fR\fIreuse_level\fR |
| \&\fB\-ftrapv \-fwrapv \-fbounds\-check |
| \&\-fvisibility \-fstrict\-volatile\-bitfields \-fsync\-libcalls\fR |
| .SS "Options Controlling the Kind of Output" |
| .IX Subsection "Options Controlling the Kind of Output" |
| Compilation can involve up to four stages: preprocessing, compilation |
| proper, assembly and linking, always in that order. \s-1GCC\s0 is capable of |
| preprocessing and compiling several files either into several |
| assembler input files, or into one assembler input file; then each |
| assembler input file produces an object file, and linking combines all |
| the object files (those newly compiled, and those specified as input) |
| into an executable file. |
| .PP |
| For any given input file, the file name suffix determines what kind of |
| compilation is done: |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.c\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.c" |
| C source code that must be preprocessed. |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.i\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.i" |
| C source code that should not be preprocessed. |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.ii\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.ii" |
| \&\*(C+ source code that should not be preprocessed. |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.m\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.m" |
| Objective-C source code. Note that you must link with the \fIlibobjc\fR |
| library to make an Objective-C program work. |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.mi\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.mi" |
| Objective-C source code that should not be preprocessed. |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.mm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.mm" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.M\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.M" |
| .PD |
| Objective\-\*(C+ source code. Note that you must link with the \fIlibobjc\fR |
| library to make an Objective\-\*(C+ program work. Note that \fB.M\fR refers |
| to a literal capital M. |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.mii\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.mii" |
| Objective\-\*(C+ source code that should not be preprocessed. |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.h\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.h" |
| C, \*(C+, Objective-C or Objective\-\*(C+ header file to be turned into a |
| precompiled header (default), or C, \*(C+ header file to be turned into an |
| Ada spec (via the \fB\-fdump\-ada\-spec\fR switch). |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.cc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.cc" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.cp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.cp" |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.cxx\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.cxx" |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.cpp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.cpp" |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.CPP\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.CPP" |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.c++\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.c++" |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.C\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.C" |
| .PD |
| \&\*(C+ source code that must be preprocessed. Note that in \fB.cxx\fR, |
| the last two letters must both be literally \fBx\fR. Likewise, |
| \&\fB.C\fR refers to a literal capital C. |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.mm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.mm" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.M\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.M" |
| .PD |
| Objective\-\*(C+ source code that must be preprocessed. |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.mii\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.mii" |
| Objective\-\*(C+ source code that should not be preprocessed. |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.hh\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.hh" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.H\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.H" |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.hp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.hp" |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.hxx\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.hxx" |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.hpp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.hpp" |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.HPP\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.HPP" |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.h++\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.h++" |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.tcc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.tcc" |
| .PD |
| \&\*(C+ header file to be turned into a precompiled header or Ada spec. |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.f\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.f" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.for\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.for" |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.ftn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.ftn" |
| .PD |
| Fixed form Fortran source code that should not be preprocessed. |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.F\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.F" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.FOR\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.FOR" |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.fpp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.fpp" |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.FPP\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.FPP" |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.FTN\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.FTN" |
| .PD |
| Fixed form Fortran source code that must be preprocessed (with the traditional |
| preprocessor). |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.f90\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.f90" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.f95\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.f95" |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.f03\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.f03" |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.f08\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.f08" |
| .PD |
| Free form Fortran source code that should not be preprocessed. |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.F90\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.F90" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.F95\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.F95" |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.F03\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.F03" |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.F08\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.F08" |
| .PD |
| Free form Fortran source code that must be preprocessed (with the |
| traditional preprocessor). |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.go\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.go" |
| Go source code. |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.ads\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.ads" |
| Ada source code file that contains a library unit declaration (a |
| declaration of a package, subprogram, or generic, or a generic |
| instantiation), or a library unit renaming declaration (a package, |
| generic, or subprogram renaming declaration). Such files are also |
| called \fIspecs\fR. |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.adb\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.adb" |
| Ada source code file containing a library unit body (a subprogram or |
| package body). Such files are also called \fIbodies\fR. |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.s\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.s" |
| Assembler code. |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.S\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.S" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fIfile\fR\fB.sx\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "file.sx" |
| .PD |
| Assembler code that must be preprocessed. |
| .IP "\fIother\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "other" |
| An object file to be fed straight into linking. |
| Any file name with no recognized suffix is treated this way. |
| .PP |
| You can specify the input language explicitly with the \fB\-x\fR option: |
| .IP "\fB\-x\fR \fIlanguage\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-x language" |
| Specify explicitly the \fIlanguage\fR for the following input files |
| (rather than letting the compiler choose a default based on the file |
| name suffix). This option applies to all following input files until |
| the next \fB\-x\fR option. Possible values for \fIlanguage\fR are: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 9 |
| \& c c\-header cpp\-output |
| \& c++ c++\-header c++\-cpp\-output |
| \& objective\-c objective\-c\-header objective\-c\-cpp\-output |
| \& objective\-c++ objective\-c++\-header objective\-c++\-cpp\-output |
| \& assembler assembler\-with\-cpp |
| \& ada |
| \& f77 f77\-cpp\-input f95 f95\-cpp\-input |
| \& go |
| \& java |
| .Ve |
| .IP "\fB\-x none\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-x none" |
| Turn off any specification of a language, so that subsequent files are |
| handled according to their file name suffixes (as they are if \fB\-x\fR |
| has not been used at all). |
| .IP "\fB\-pass\-exit\-codes\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-pass-exit-codes" |
| Normally the \fBgcc\fR program exits with the code of 1 if any |
| phase of the compiler returns a non-success return code. If you specify |
| \&\fB\-pass\-exit\-codes\fR, the \fBgcc\fR program instead returns with |
| the numerically highest error produced by any phase returning an error |
| indication. The C, \*(C+, and Fortran front ends return 4 if an internal |
| compiler error is encountered. |
| .PP |
| If you only want some of the stages of compilation, you can use |
| \&\fB\-x\fR (or filename suffixes) to tell \fBgcc\fR where to start, and |
| one of the options \fB\-c\fR, \fB\-S\fR, or \fB\-E\fR to say where |
| \&\fBgcc\fR is to stop. Note that some combinations (for example, |
| \&\fB\-x cpp-output \-E\fR) instruct \fBgcc\fR to do nothing at all. |
| .IP "\fB\-c\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-c" |
| Compile or assemble the source files, but do not link. The linking |
| stage simply is not done. The ultimate output is in the form of an |
| object file for each source file. |
| .Sp |
| By default, the object file name for a source file is made by replacing |
| the suffix \fB.c\fR, \fB.i\fR, \fB.s\fR, etc., with \fB.o\fR. |
| .Sp |
| Unrecognized input files, not requiring compilation or assembly, are |
| ignored. |
| .IP "\fB\-S\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-S" |
| Stop after the stage of compilation proper; do not assemble. The output |
| is in the form of an assembler code file for each non-assembler input |
| file specified. |
| .Sp |
| By default, the assembler file name for a source file is made by |
| replacing the suffix \fB.c\fR, \fB.i\fR, etc., with \fB.s\fR. |
| .Sp |
| Input files that don't require compilation are ignored. |
| .IP "\fB\-E\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-E" |
| Stop after the preprocessing stage; do not run the compiler proper. The |
| output is in the form of preprocessed source code, which is sent to the |
| standard output. |
| .Sp |
| Input files that don't require preprocessing are ignored. |
| .IP "\fB\-o\fR \fIfile\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-o file" |
| Place output in file \fIfile\fR. This applies to whatever |
| sort of output is being produced, whether it be an executable file, |
| an object file, an assembler file or preprocessed C code. |
| .Sp |
| If \fB\-o\fR is not specified, the default is to put an executable |
| file in \fIa.out\fR, the object file for |
| \&\fI\fIsource\fI.\fIsuffix\fI\fR in \fI\fIsource\fI.o\fR, its |
| assembler file in \fI\fIsource\fI.s\fR, a precompiled header file in |
| \&\fI\fIsource\fI.\fIsuffix\fI.gch\fR, and all preprocessed C source on |
| standard output. |
| .IP "\fB\-v\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-v" |
| Print (on standard error output) the commands executed to run the stages |
| of compilation. Also print the version number of the compiler driver |
| program and of the preprocessor and the compiler proper. |
| .IP "\fB\-###\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-###" |
| Like \fB\-v\fR except the commands are not executed and arguments |
| are quoted unless they contain only alphanumeric characters or \f(CW\*(C`./\-_\*(C'\fR. |
| This is useful for shell scripts to capture the driver-generated command lines. |
| .IP "\fB\-pipe\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-pipe" |
| Use pipes rather than temporary files for communication between the |
| various stages of compilation. This fails to work on some systems where |
| the assembler is unable to read from a pipe; but the \s-1GNU\s0 assembler has |
| no trouble. |
| .IP "\fB\-\-help\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "--help" |
| Print (on the standard output) a description of the command-line options |
| understood by \fBgcc\fR. If the \fB\-v\fR option is also specified |
| then \fB\-\-help\fR is also passed on to the various processes |
| invoked by \fBgcc\fR, so that they can display the command-line options |
| they accept. If the \fB\-Wextra\fR option has also been specified |
| (prior to the \fB\-\-help\fR option), then command-line options that |
| have no documentation associated with them are also displayed. |
| .IP "\fB\-\-target\-help\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "--target-help" |
| Print (on the standard output) a description of target-specific command-line |
| options for each tool. For some targets extra target-specific |
| information may also be printed. |
| .IP "\fB\-\-help={\fR\fIclass\fR|[\fB^\fR]\fIqualifier\fR\fB}\fR[\fB,...\fR]" 4 |
| .IX Item "--help={class|[^]qualifier}[,...]" |
| Print (on the standard output) a description of the command-line |
| options understood by the compiler that fit into all specified classes |
| and qualifiers. These are the supported classes: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBoptimizers\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "optimizers" |
| Display all of the optimization options supported by the |
| compiler. |
| .IP "\fBwarnings\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "warnings" |
| Display all of the options controlling warning messages |
| produced by the compiler. |
| .IP "\fBtarget\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "target" |
| Display target-specific options. Unlike the |
| \&\fB\-\-target\-help\fR option however, target-specific options of the |
| linker and assembler are not displayed. This is because those |
| tools do not currently support the extended \fB\-\-help=\fR syntax. |
| .IP "\fBparams\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "params" |
| Display the values recognized by the \fB\-\-param\fR |
| option. |
| .IP "\fIlanguage\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "language" |
| Display the options supported for \fIlanguage\fR, where |
| \&\fIlanguage\fR is the name of one of the languages supported in this |
| version of \s-1GCC\s0. |
| .IP "\fBcommon\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "common" |
| Display the options that are common to all languages. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| These are the supported qualifiers: |
| .IP "\fBundocumented\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "undocumented" |
| Display only those options that are undocumented. |
| .IP "\fBjoined\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "joined" |
| Display options taking an argument that appears after an equal |
| sign in the same continuous piece of text, such as: |
| \&\fB\-\-help=target\fR. |
| .IP "\fBseparate\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "separate" |
| Display options taking an argument that appears as a separate word |
| following the original option, such as: \fB\-o output-file\fR. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| Thus for example to display all the undocumented target-specific |
| switches supported by the compiler, use: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& \-\-help=target,undocumented |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| The sense of a qualifier can be inverted by prefixing it with the |
| \&\fB^\fR character, so for example to display all binary warning |
| options (i.e., ones that are either on or off and that do not take an |
| argument) that have a description, use: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& \-\-help=warnings,^joined,^undocumented |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| The argument to \fB\-\-help=\fR should not consist solely of inverted |
| qualifiers. |
| .Sp |
| Combining several classes is possible, although this usually |
| restricts the output so much that there is nothing to display. One |
| case where it does work, however, is when one of the classes is |
| \&\fItarget\fR. For example, to display all the target-specific |
| optimization options, use: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& \-\-help=target,optimizers |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| The \fB\-\-help=\fR option can be repeated on the command line. Each |
| successive use displays its requested class of options, skipping |
| those that have already been displayed. |
| .Sp |
| If the \fB\-Q\fR option appears on the command line before the |
| \&\fB\-\-help=\fR option, then the descriptive text displayed by |
| \&\fB\-\-help=\fR is changed. Instead of describing the displayed |
| options, an indication is given as to whether the option is enabled, |
| disabled or set to a specific value (assuming that the compiler |
| knows this at the point where the \fB\-\-help=\fR option is used). |
| .Sp |
| Here is a truncated example from the \s-1ARM\s0 port of \fBgcc\fR: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 5 |
| \& % gcc \-Q \-mabi=2 \-\-help=target \-c |
| \& The following options are target specific: |
| \& \-mabi= 2 |
| \& \-mabort\-on\-noreturn [disabled] |
| \& \-mapcs [disabled] |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| The output is sensitive to the effects of previous command-line |
| options, so for example it is possible to find out which optimizations |
| are enabled at \fB\-O2\fR by using: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& \-Q \-O2 \-\-help=optimizers |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| Alternatively you can discover which binary optimizations are enabled |
| by \fB\-O3\fR by using: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 3 |
| \& gcc \-c \-Q \-O3 \-\-help=optimizers > /tmp/O3\-opts |
| \& gcc \-c \-Q \-O2 \-\-help=optimizers > /tmp/O2\-opts |
| \& diff /tmp/O2\-opts /tmp/O3\-opts | grep enabled |
| .Ve |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-no\-canonical\-prefixes\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-no-canonical-prefixes" |
| Do not expand any symbolic links, resolve references to \fB/../\fR |
| or \fB/./\fR, or make the path absolute when generating a relative |
| prefix. |
| .IP "\fB\-\-version\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "--version" |
| Display the version number and copyrights of the invoked \s-1GCC\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-wrapper\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-wrapper" |
| Invoke all subcommands under a wrapper program. The name of the |
| wrapper program and its parameters are passed as a comma separated |
| list. |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& gcc \-c t.c \-wrapper gdb,\-\-args |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| This invokes all subprograms of \fBgcc\fR under |
| \&\fBgdb \-\-args\fR, thus the invocation of \fBcc1\fR is |
| \&\fBgdb \-\-args cc1 ...\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fplugin=\fR\fIname\fR\fB.so\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fplugin=name.so" |
| Load the plugin code in file \fIname\fR.so, assumed to be a |
| shared object to be dlopen'd by the compiler. The base name of |
| the shared object file is used to identify the plugin for the |
| purposes of argument parsing (See |
| \&\fB\-fplugin\-arg\-\fR\fIname\fR\fB\-\fR\fIkey\fR\fB=\fR\fIvalue\fR below). |
| Each plugin should define the callback functions specified in the |
| Plugins \s-1API\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-fplugin\-arg\-\fR\fIname\fR\fB\-\fR\fIkey\fR\fB=\fR\fIvalue\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fplugin-arg-name-key=value" |
| Define an argument called \fIkey\fR with a value of \fIvalue\fR |
| for the plugin called \fIname\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-ada\-spec\fR[\fB\-slim\fR]" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-ada-spec[-slim]" |
| For C and \*(C+ source and include files, generate corresponding Ada specs. |
| .IP "\fB\-fada\-spec\-parent=\fR\fIunit\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fada-spec-parent=unit" |
| In conjunction with \fB\-fdump\-ada\-spec\fR[\fB\-slim\fR] above, generate |
| Ada specs as child units of parent \fIunit\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-go\-spec=\fR\fIfile\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-go-spec=file" |
| For input files in any language, generate corresponding Go |
| declarations in \fIfile\fR. This generates Go \f(CW\*(C`const\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`type\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`var\*(C'\fR, and \f(CW\*(C`func\*(C'\fR declarations which may be a |
| useful way to start writing a Go interface to code written in some |
| other language. |
| .IP "\fB@\fR\fIfile\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "@file" |
| Read command-line options from \fIfile\fR. The options read are |
| inserted in place of the original @\fIfile\fR option. If \fIfile\fR |
| does not exist, or cannot be read, then the option will be treated |
| literally, and not removed. |
| .Sp |
| Options in \fIfile\fR are separated by whitespace. A whitespace |
| character may be included in an option by surrounding the entire |
| option in either single or double quotes. Any character (including a |
| backslash) may be included by prefixing the character to be included |
| with a backslash. The \fIfile\fR may itself contain additional |
| @\fIfile\fR options; any such options will be processed recursively. |
| .SS "Compiling \*(C+ Programs" |
| .IX Subsection "Compiling Programs" |
| \&\*(C+ source files conventionally use one of the suffixes \fB.C\fR, |
| \&\fB.cc\fR, \fB.cpp\fR, \fB.CPP\fR, \fB.c++\fR, \fB.cp\fR, or |
| \&\fB.cxx\fR; \*(C+ header files often use \fB.hh\fR, \fB.hpp\fR, |
| \&\fB.H\fR, or (for shared template code) \fB.tcc\fR; and |
| preprocessed \*(C+ files use the suffix \fB.ii\fR. \s-1GCC\s0 recognizes |
| files with these names and compiles them as \*(C+ programs even if you |
| call the compiler the same way as for compiling C programs (usually |
| with the name \fBgcc\fR). |
| .PP |
| However, the use of \fBgcc\fR does not add the \*(C+ library. |
| \&\fBg++\fR is a program that calls \s-1GCC\s0 and automatically specifies linking |
| against the \*(C+ library. It treats \fB.c\fR, |
| \&\fB.h\fR and \fB.i\fR files as \*(C+ source files instead of C source |
| files unless \fB\-x\fR is used. This program is also useful when |
| precompiling a C header file with a \fB.h\fR extension for use in \*(C+ |
| compilations. On many systems, \fBg++\fR is also installed with |
| the name \fBc++\fR. |
| .PP |
| When you compile \*(C+ programs, you may specify many of the same |
| command-line options that you use for compiling programs in any |
| language; or command-line options meaningful for C and related |
| languages; or options that are meaningful only for \*(C+ programs. |
| .SS "Options Controlling C Dialect" |
| .IX Subsection "Options Controlling C Dialect" |
| The following options control the dialect of C (or languages derived |
| from C, such as \*(C+, Objective-C and Objective\-\*(C+) that the compiler |
| accepts: |
| .IP "\fB\-ansi\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ansi" |
| In C mode, this is equivalent to \fB\-std=c90\fR. In \*(C+ mode, it is |
| equivalent to \fB\-std=c++98\fR. |
| .Sp |
| This turns off certain features of \s-1GCC\s0 that are incompatible with \s-1ISO\s0 |
| C90 (when compiling C code), or of standard \*(C+ (when compiling \*(C+ code), |
| such as the \f(CW\*(C`asm\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`typeof\*(C'\fR keywords, and |
| predefined macros such as \f(CW\*(C`unix\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`vax\*(C'\fR that identify the |
| type of system you are using. It also enables the undesirable and |
| rarely used \s-1ISO\s0 trigraph feature. For the C compiler, |
| it disables recognition of \*(C+ style \fB//\fR comments as well as |
| the \f(CW\*(C`inline\*(C'\fR keyword. |
| .Sp |
| The alternate keywords \f(CW\*(C`_\|_asm_\|_\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`_\|_extension_\|_\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_inline_\|_\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`_\|_typeof_\|_\*(C'\fR continue to work despite |
| \&\fB\-ansi\fR. You would not want to use them in an \s-1ISO\s0 C program, of |
| course, but it is useful to put them in header files that might be included |
| in compilations done with \fB\-ansi\fR. Alternate predefined macros |
| such as \f(CW\*(C`_\|_unix_\|_\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`_\|_vax_\|_\*(C'\fR are also available, with or |
| without \fB\-ansi\fR. |
| .Sp |
| The \fB\-ansi\fR option does not cause non-ISO programs to be |
| rejected gratuitously. For that, \fB\-Wpedantic\fR is required in |
| addition to \fB\-ansi\fR. |
| .Sp |
| The macro \f(CW\*(C`_\|_STRICT_ANSI_\|_\*(C'\fR is predefined when the \fB\-ansi\fR |
| option is used. Some header files may notice this macro and refrain |
| from declaring certain functions or defining certain macros that the |
| \&\s-1ISO\s0 standard doesn't call for; this is to avoid interfering with any |
| programs that might use these names for other things. |
| .Sp |
| Functions that are normally built in but do not have semantics |
| defined by \s-1ISO\s0 C (such as \f(CW\*(C`alloca\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`ffs\*(C'\fR) are not built-in |
| functions when \fB\-ansi\fR is used. |
| .IP "\fB\-std=\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-std=" |
| Determine the language standard. This option |
| is currently only supported when compiling C or \*(C+. |
| .Sp |
| The compiler can accept several base standards, such as \fBc90\fR or |
| \&\fBc++98\fR, and \s-1GNU\s0 dialects of those standards, such as |
| \&\fBgnu90\fR or \fBgnu++98\fR. When a base standard is specified, the |
| compiler accepts all programs following that standard plus those |
| using \s-1GNU\s0 extensions that do not contradict it. For example, |
| \&\fB\-std=c90\fR turns off certain features of \s-1GCC\s0 that are |
| incompatible with \s-1ISO\s0 C90, such as the \f(CW\*(C`asm\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`typeof\*(C'\fR |
| keywords, but not other \s-1GNU\s0 extensions that do not have a meaning in |
| \&\s-1ISO\s0 C90, such as omitting the middle term of a \f(CW\*(C`?:\*(C'\fR |
| expression. On the other hand, when a \s-1GNU\s0 dialect of a standard is |
| specified, all features supported by the compiler are enabled, even when |
| those features change the meaning of the base standard. As a result, some |
| strict-conforming programs may be rejected. The particular standard |
| is used by \fB\-Wpedantic\fR to identify which features are \s-1GNU\s0 |
| extensions given that version of the standard. For example |
| \&\fB\-std=gnu90 \-Wpedantic\fR warns about \*(C+ style \fB//\fR |
| comments, while \fB\-std=gnu99 \-Wpedantic\fR does not. |
| .Sp |
| A value for this option must be provided; possible values are |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBc90\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "c90" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBc89\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "c89" |
| .IP "\fBiso9899:1990\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "iso9899:1990" |
| .PD |
| Support all \s-1ISO\s0 C90 programs (certain \s-1GNU\s0 extensions that conflict |
| with \s-1ISO\s0 C90 are disabled). Same as \fB\-ansi\fR for C code. |
| .IP "\fBiso9899:199409\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "iso9899:199409" |
| \&\s-1ISO\s0 C90 as modified in amendment 1. |
| .IP "\fBc99\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "c99" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBc9x\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "c9x" |
| .IP "\fBiso9899:1999\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "iso9899:1999" |
| .IP "\fBiso9899:199x\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "iso9899:199x" |
| .PD |
| \&\s-1ISO\s0 C99. Note that this standard is not yet fully supported; see |
| <\fBhttp://gcc.gnu.org/c99status.html\fR> for more information. The |
| names \fBc9x\fR and \fBiso9899:199x\fR are deprecated. |
| .IP "\fBc11\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "c11" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBc1x\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "c1x" |
| .IP "\fBiso9899:2011\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "iso9899:2011" |
| .PD |
| \&\s-1ISO\s0 C11, the 2011 revision of the \s-1ISO\s0 C standard. |
| Support is incomplete and experimental. The name \fBc1x\fR is |
| deprecated. |
| .IP "\fBgnu90\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "gnu90" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBgnu89\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "gnu89" |
| .PD |
| \&\s-1GNU\s0 dialect of \s-1ISO\s0 C90 (including some C99 features). This |
| is the default for C code. |
| .IP "\fBgnu99\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "gnu99" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBgnu9x\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "gnu9x" |
| .PD |
| \&\s-1GNU\s0 dialect of \s-1ISO\s0 C99. When \s-1ISO\s0 C99 is fully implemented in \s-1GCC\s0, |
| this will become the default. The name \fBgnu9x\fR is deprecated. |
| .IP "\fBgnu11\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "gnu11" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBgnu1x\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "gnu1x" |
| .PD |
| \&\s-1GNU\s0 dialect of \s-1ISO\s0 C11. Support is incomplete and experimental. The |
| name \fBgnu1x\fR is deprecated. |
| .IP "\fBc++98\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "c++98" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBc++03\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "c++03" |
| .PD |
| The 1998 \s-1ISO\s0 \*(C+ standard plus the 2003 technical corrigendum and some |
| additional defect reports. Same as \fB\-ansi\fR for \*(C+ code. |
| .IP "\fBgnu++98\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "gnu++98" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBgnu++03\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "gnu++03" |
| .PD |
| \&\s-1GNU\s0 dialect of \fB\-std=c++98\fR. This is the default for |
| \&\*(C+ code. |
| .IP "\fBc++11\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "c++11" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBc++0x\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "c++0x" |
| .PD |
| The 2011 \s-1ISO\s0 \*(C+ standard plus amendments. Support for \*(C+11 is still |
| experimental, and may change in incompatible ways in future releases. |
| The name \fBc++0x\fR is deprecated. |
| .IP "\fBgnu++11\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "gnu++11" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBgnu++0x\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "gnu++0x" |
| .PD |
| \&\s-1GNU\s0 dialect of \fB\-std=c++11\fR. Support for \*(C+11 is still |
| experimental, and may change in incompatible ways in future releases. |
| The name \fBgnu++0x\fR is deprecated. |
| .IP "\fBc++1y\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "c++1y" |
| The next revision of the \s-1ISO\s0 \*(C+ standard, tentatively planned for |
| 2017. Support is highly experimental, and will almost certainly |
| change in incompatible ways in future releases. |
| .IP "\fBgnu++1y\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "gnu++1y" |
| \&\s-1GNU\s0 dialect of \fB\-std=c++1y\fR. Support is highly experimental, |
| and will almost certainly change in incompatible ways in future |
| releases. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-fgnu89\-inline\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fgnu89-inline" |
| The option \fB\-fgnu89\-inline\fR tells \s-1GCC\s0 to use the traditional |
| \&\s-1GNU\s0 semantics for \f(CW\*(C`inline\*(C'\fR functions when in C99 mode. |
| This option |
| is accepted and ignored by \s-1GCC\s0 versions 4.1.3 up to but not including |
| 4.3. In \s-1GCC\s0 versions 4.3 and later it changes the behavior of \s-1GCC\s0 in |
| C99 mode. Using this option is roughly equivalent to adding the |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`gnu_inline\*(C'\fR function attribute to all inline functions. |
| .Sp |
| The option \fB\-fno\-gnu89\-inline\fR explicitly tells \s-1GCC\s0 to use the |
| C99 semantics for \f(CW\*(C`inline\*(C'\fR when in C99 or gnu99 mode (i.e., it |
| specifies the default behavior). This option was first supported in |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 4.3. This option is not supported in \fB\-std=c90\fR or |
| \&\fB\-std=gnu90\fR mode. |
| .Sp |
| The preprocessor macros \f(CW\*(C`_\|_GNUC_GNU_INLINE_\|_\*(C'\fR and |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_GNUC_STDC_INLINE_\|_\*(C'\fR may be used to check which semantics are |
| in effect for \f(CW\*(C`inline\*(C'\fR functions. |
| .IP "\fB\-aux\-info\fR \fIfilename\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-aux-info filename" |
| Output to the given filename prototyped declarations for all functions |
| declared and/or defined in a translation unit, including those in header |
| files. This option is silently ignored in any language other than C. |
| .Sp |
| Besides declarations, the file indicates, in comments, the origin of |
| each declaration (source file and line), whether the declaration was |
| implicit, prototyped or unprototyped (\fBI\fR, \fBN\fR for new or |
| \&\fBO\fR for old, respectively, in the first character after the line |
| number and the colon), and whether it came from a declaration or a |
| definition (\fBC\fR or \fBF\fR, respectively, in the following |
| character). In the case of function definitions, a K&R\-style list of |
| arguments followed by their declarations is also provided, inside |
| comments, after the declaration. |
| .IP "\fB\-fallow\-parameterless\-variadic\-functions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fallow-parameterless-variadic-functions" |
| Accept variadic functions without named parameters. |
| .Sp |
| Although it is possible to define such a function, this is not very |
| useful as it is not possible to read the arguments. This is only |
| supported for C as this construct is allowed by \*(C+. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-asm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-asm" |
| Do not recognize \f(CW\*(C`asm\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`inline\*(C'\fR or \f(CW\*(C`typeof\*(C'\fR as a |
| keyword, so that code can use these words as identifiers. You can use |
| the keywords \f(CW\*(C`_\|_asm_\|_\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`_\|_inline_\|_\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`_\|_typeof_\|_\*(C'\fR |
| instead. \fB\-ansi\fR implies \fB\-fno\-asm\fR. |
| .Sp |
| In \*(C+, this switch only affects the \f(CW\*(C`typeof\*(C'\fR keyword, since |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`asm\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`inline\*(C'\fR are standard keywords. You may want to |
| use the \fB\-fno\-gnu\-keywords\fR flag instead, which has the same |
| effect. In C99 mode (\fB\-std=c99\fR or \fB\-std=gnu99\fR), this |
| switch only affects the \f(CW\*(C`asm\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`typeof\*(C'\fR keywords, since |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`inline\*(C'\fR is a standard keyword in \s-1ISO\s0 C99. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-builtin\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-builtin" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-builtin\-\fR\fIfunction\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-builtin-function" |
| .PD |
| Don't recognize built-in functions that do not begin with |
| \&\fB_\|_builtin_\fR as prefix. |
| .Sp |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 normally generates special code to handle certain built-in functions |
| more efficiently; for instance, calls to \f(CW\*(C`alloca\*(C'\fR may become single |
| instructions which adjust the stack directly, and calls to \f(CW\*(C`memcpy\*(C'\fR |
| may become inline copy loops. The resulting code is often both smaller |
| and faster, but since the function calls no longer appear as such, you |
| cannot set a breakpoint on those calls, nor can you change the behavior |
| of the functions by linking with a different library. In addition, |
| when a function is recognized as a built-in function, \s-1GCC\s0 may use |
| information about that function to warn about problems with calls to |
| that function, or to generate more efficient code, even if the |
| resulting code still contains calls to that function. For example, |
| warnings are given with \fB\-Wformat\fR for bad calls to |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`printf\*(C'\fR when \f(CW\*(C`printf\*(C'\fR is built in and \f(CW\*(C`strlen\*(C'\fR is |
| known not to modify global memory. |
| .Sp |
| With the \fB\-fno\-builtin\-\fR\fIfunction\fR option |
| only the built-in function \fIfunction\fR is |
| disabled. \fIfunction\fR must not begin with \fB_\|_builtin_\fR. If a |
| function is named that is not built-in in this version of \s-1GCC\s0, this |
| option is ignored. There is no corresponding |
| \&\fB\-fbuiltin\-\fR\fIfunction\fR option; if you wish to enable |
| built-in functions selectively when using \fB\-fno\-builtin\fR or |
| \&\fB\-ffreestanding\fR, you may define macros such as: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 2 |
| \& #define abs(n) _\|_builtin_abs ((n)) |
| \& #define strcpy(d, s) _\|_builtin_strcpy ((d), (s)) |
| .Ve |
| .IP "\fB\-fhosted\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fhosted" |
| Assert that compilation targets a hosted environment. This implies |
| \&\fB\-fbuiltin\fR. A hosted environment is one in which the |
| entire standard library is available, and in which \f(CW\*(C`main\*(C'\fR has a return |
| type of \f(CW\*(C`int\*(C'\fR. Examples are nearly everything except a kernel. |
| This is equivalent to \fB\-fno\-freestanding\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-ffreestanding\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ffreestanding" |
| Assert that compilation targets a freestanding environment. This |
| implies \fB\-fno\-builtin\fR. A freestanding environment |
| is one in which the standard library may not exist, and program startup may |
| not necessarily be at \f(CW\*(C`main\*(C'\fR. The most obvious example is an \s-1OS\s0 kernel. |
| This is equivalent to \fB\-fno\-hosted\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fopenmp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fopenmp" |
| Enable handling of OpenMP directives \f(CW\*(C`#pragma omp\*(C'\fR in C/\*(C+ and |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`!$omp\*(C'\fR in Fortran. When \fB\-fopenmp\fR is specified, the |
| compiler generates parallel code according to the OpenMP Application |
| Program Interface v3.0 <\fBhttp://www.openmp.org/\fR>. This option |
| implies \fB\-pthread\fR, and thus is only supported on targets that |
| have support for \fB\-pthread\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fgnu\-tm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fgnu-tm" |
| When the option \fB\-fgnu\-tm\fR is specified, the compiler |
| generates code for the Linux variant of Intel's current Transactional |
| Memory \s-1ABI\s0 specification document (Revision 1.1, May 6 2009). This is |
| an experimental feature whose interface may change in future versions |
| of \s-1GCC\s0, as the official specification changes. Please note that not |
| all architectures are supported for this feature. |
| .Sp |
| For more information on \s-1GCC\s0's support for transactional memory, |
| .Sp |
| Note that the transactional memory feature is not supported with |
| non-call exceptions (\fB\-fnon\-call\-exceptions\fR). |
| .IP "\fB\-fms\-extensions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fms-extensions" |
| Accept some non-standard constructs used in Microsoft header files. |
| .Sp |
| In \*(C+ code, this allows member names in structures to be similar |
| to previous types declarations. |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 4 |
| \& typedef int UOW; |
| \& struct ABC { |
| \& UOW UOW; |
| \& }; |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| Some cases of unnamed fields in structures and unions are only |
| accepted with this option. |
| .IP "\fB\-fplan9\-extensions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fplan9-extensions" |
| Accept some non-standard constructs used in Plan 9 code. |
| .Sp |
| This enables \fB\-fms\-extensions\fR, permits passing pointers to |
| structures with anonymous fields to functions that expect pointers to |
| elements of the type of the field, and permits referring to anonymous |
| fields declared using a typedef. This is only |
| supported for C, not \*(C+. |
| .IP "\fB\-trigraphs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-trigraphs" |
| Support \s-1ISO\s0 C trigraphs. The \fB\-ansi\fR option (and \fB\-std\fR |
| options for strict \s-1ISO\s0 C conformance) implies \fB\-trigraphs\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-traditional\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-traditional" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-traditional\-cpp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-traditional-cpp" |
| .PD |
| Formerly, these options caused \s-1GCC\s0 to attempt to emulate a pre-standard |
| C compiler. They are now only supported with the \fB\-E\fR switch. |
| The preprocessor continues to support a pre-standard mode. See the \s-1GNU\s0 |
| \&\s-1CPP\s0 manual for details. |
| .IP "\fB\-fcond\-mismatch\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fcond-mismatch" |
| Allow conditional expressions with mismatched types in the second and |
| third arguments. The value of such an expression is void. This option |
| is not supported for \*(C+. |
| .IP "\fB\-flax\-vector\-conversions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-flax-vector-conversions" |
| Allow implicit conversions between vectors with differing numbers of |
| elements and/or incompatible element types. This option should not be |
| used for new code. |
| .IP "\fB\-funsigned\-char\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-funsigned-char" |
| Let the type \f(CW\*(C`char\*(C'\fR be unsigned, like \f(CW\*(C`unsigned char\*(C'\fR. |
| .Sp |
| Each kind of machine has a default for what \f(CW\*(C`char\*(C'\fR should |
| be. It is either like \f(CW\*(C`unsigned char\*(C'\fR by default or like |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`signed char\*(C'\fR by default. |
| .Sp |
| Ideally, a portable program should always use \f(CW\*(C`signed char\*(C'\fR or |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`unsigned char\*(C'\fR when it depends on the signedness of an object. |
| But many programs have been written to use plain \f(CW\*(C`char\*(C'\fR and |
| expect it to be signed, or expect it to be unsigned, depending on the |
| machines they were written for. This option, and its inverse, let you |
| make such a program work with the opposite default. |
| .Sp |
| The type \f(CW\*(C`char\*(C'\fR is always a distinct type from each of |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`signed char\*(C'\fR or \f(CW\*(C`unsigned char\*(C'\fR, even though its behavior |
| is always just like one of those two. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsigned\-char\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsigned-char" |
| Let the type \f(CW\*(C`char\*(C'\fR be signed, like \f(CW\*(C`signed char\*(C'\fR. |
| .Sp |
| Note that this is equivalent to \fB\-fno\-unsigned\-char\fR, which is |
| the negative form of \fB\-funsigned\-char\fR. Likewise, the option |
| \&\fB\-fno\-signed\-char\fR is equivalent to \fB\-funsigned\-char\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsigned\-bitfields\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsigned-bitfields" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-funsigned\-bitfields\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-funsigned-bitfields" |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-signed\-bitfields\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-signed-bitfields" |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-unsigned\-bitfields\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-unsigned-bitfields" |
| .PD |
| These options control whether a bit-field is signed or unsigned, when the |
| declaration does not use either \f(CW\*(C`signed\*(C'\fR or \f(CW\*(C`unsigned\*(C'\fR. By |
| default, such a bit-field is signed, because this is consistent: the |
| basic integer types such as \f(CW\*(C`int\*(C'\fR are signed types. |
| .SS "Options Controlling \*(C+ Dialect" |
| .IX Subsection "Options Controlling Dialect" |
| This section describes the command-line options that are only meaningful |
| for \*(C+ programs. You can also use most of the \s-1GNU\s0 compiler options |
| regardless of what language your program is in. For example, you |
| might compile a file \f(CW\*(C`firstClass.C\*(C'\fR like this: |
| .PP |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& g++ \-g \-frepo \-O \-c firstClass.C |
| .Ve |
| .PP |
| In this example, only \fB\-frepo\fR is an option meant |
| only for \*(C+ programs; you can use the other options with any |
| language supported by \s-1GCC\s0. |
| .PP |
| Here is a list of options that are \fIonly\fR for compiling \*(C+ programs: |
| .IP "\fB\-fabi\-version=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fabi-version=n" |
| Use version \fIn\fR of the \*(C+ \s-1ABI\s0. The default is version 2. |
| .Sp |
| Version 0 refers to the version conforming most closely to |
| the \*(C+ \s-1ABI\s0 specification. Therefore, the \s-1ABI\s0 obtained using version 0 |
| will change in different versions of G++ as \s-1ABI\s0 bugs are fixed. |
| .Sp |
| Version 1 is the version of the \*(C+ \s-1ABI\s0 that first appeared in G++ 3.2. |
| .Sp |
| Version 2 is the version of the \*(C+ \s-1ABI\s0 that first appeared in G++ 3.4. |
| .Sp |
| Version 3 corrects an error in mangling a constant address as a |
| template argument. |
| .Sp |
| Version 4, which first appeared in G++ 4.5, implements a standard |
| mangling for vector types. |
| .Sp |
| Version 5, which first appeared in G++ 4.6, corrects the mangling of |
| attribute const/volatile on function pointer types, decltype of a |
| plain decl, and use of a function parameter in the declaration of |
| another parameter. |
| .Sp |
| Version 6, which first appeared in G++ 4.7, corrects the promotion |
| behavior of \*(C+11 scoped enums and the mangling of template argument |
| packs, const/static_cast, prefix ++ and \-\-, and a class scope function |
| used as a template argument. |
| .Sp |
| See also \fB\-Wabi\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-access\-control\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-access-control" |
| Turn off all access checking. This switch is mainly useful for working |
| around bugs in the access control code. |
| .IP "\fB\-fcheck\-new\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fcheck-new" |
| Check that the pointer returned by \f(CW\*(C`operator new\*(C'\fR is non-null |
| before attempting to modify the storage allocated. This check is |
| normally unnecessary because the \*(C+ standard specifies that |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`operator new\*(C'\fR only returns \f(CW0\fR if it is declared |
| \&\fB\f(BIthrow()\fB\fR, in which case the compiler always checks the |
| return value even without this option. In all other cases, when |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`operator new\*(C'\fR has a non-empty exception specification, memory |
| exhaustion is signalled by throwing \f(CW\*(C`std::bad_alloc\*(C'\fR. See also |
| \&\fBnew (nothrow)\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fconstexpr\-depth=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fconstexpr-depth=n" |
| Set the maximum nested evaluation depth for \*(C+11 constexpr functions |
| to \fIn\fR. A limit is needed to detect endless recursion during |
| constant expression evaluation. The minimum specified by the standard |
| is 512. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdeduce\-init\-list\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdeduce-init-list" |
| Enable deduction of a template type parameter as |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`std::initializer_list\*(C'\fR from a brace-enclosed initializer list, i.e. |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 4 |
| \& template <class T> auto forward(T t) \-> decltype (realfn (t)) |
| \& { |
| \& return realfn (t); |
| \& } |
| \& |
| \& void f() |
| \& { |
| \& forward({1,2}); // call forward<std::initializer_list<int>> |
| \& } |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| This deduction was implemented as a possible extension to the |
| originally proposed semantics for the \*(C+11 standard, but was not part |
| of the final standard, so it is disabled by default. This option is |
| deprecated, and may be removed in a future version of G++. |
| .IP "\fB\-ffriend\-injection\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ffriend-injection" |
| Inject friend functions into the enclosing namespace, so that they are |
| visible outside the scope of the class in which they are declared. |
| Friend functions were documented to work this way in the old Annotated |
| \&\*(C+ Reference Manual, and versions of G++ before 4.1 always worked |
| that way. However, in \s-1ISO\s0 \*(C+ a friend function that is not declared |
| in an enclosing scope can only be found using argument dependent |
| lookup. This option causes friends to be injected as they were in |
| earlier releases. |
| .Sp |
| This option is for compatibility, and may be removed in a future |
| release of G++. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-elide\-constructors\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-elide-constructors" |
| The \*(C+ standard allows an implementation to omit creating a temporary |
| that is only used to initialize another object of the same type. |
| Specifying this option disables that optimization, and forces G++ to |
| call the copy constructor in all cases. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-enforce\-eh\-specs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-enforce-eh-specs" |
| Don't generate code to check for violation of exception specifications |
| at run time. This option violates the \*(C+ standard, but may be useful |
| for reducing code size in production builds, much like defining |
| \&\fB\s-1NDEBUG\s0\fR. This does not give user code permission to throw |
| exceptions in violation of the exception specifications; the compiler |
| still optimizes based on the specifications, so throwing an |
| unexpected exception results in undefined behavior at run time. |
| .IP "\fB\-fextern\-tls\-init\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fextern-tls-init" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-extern\-tls\-init\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-extern-tls-init" |
| .PD |
| The \*(C+11 and OpenMP standards allow \fBthread_local\fR and |
| \&\fBthreadprivate\fR variables to have dynamic (runtime) |
| initialization. To support this, any use of such a variable goes |
| through a wrapper function that performs any necessary initialization. |
| When the use and definition of the variable are in the same |
| translation unit, this overhead can be optimized away, but when the |
| use is in a different translation unit there is significant overhead |
| even if the variable doesn't actually need dynamic initialization. If |
| the programmer can be sure that no use of the variable in a |
| non-defining \s-1TU\s0 needs to trigger dynamic initialization (either |
| because the variable is statically initialized, or a use of the |
| variable in the defining \s-1TU\s0 will be executed before any uses in |
| another \s-1TU\s0), they can avoid this overhead with the |
| \&\fB\-fno\-extern\-tls\-init\fR option. |
| .Sp |
| On targets that support symbol aliases, the default is |
| \&\fB\-fextern\-tls\-init\fR. On targets that do not support symbol |
| aliases, the default is \fB\-fno\-extern\-tls\-init\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-ffor\-scope\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ffor-scope" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-for\-scope\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-for-scope" |
| .PD |
| If \fB\-ffor\-scope\fR is specified, the scope of variables declared in |
| a \fIfor-init-statement\fR is limited to the \fBfor\fR loop itself, |
| as specified by the \*(C+ standard. |
| If \fB\-fno\-for\-scope\fR is specified, the scope of variables declared in |
| a \fIfor-init-statement\fR extends to the end of the enclosing scope, |
| as was the case in old versions of G++, and other (traditional) |
| implementations of \*(C+. |
| .Sp |
| If neither flag is given, the default is to follow the standard, |
| but to allow and give a warning for old-style code that would |
| otherwise be invalid, or have different behavior. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-gnu\-keywords\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-gnu-keywords" |
| Do not recognize \f(CW\*(C`typeof\*(C'\fR as a keyword, so that code can use this |
| word as an identifier. You can use the keyword \f(CW\*(C`_\|_typeof_\|_\*(C'\fR instead. |
| \&\fB\-ansi\fR implies \fB\-fno\-gnu\-keywords\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-implicit\-templates\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-implicit-templates" |
| Never emit code for non-inline templates that are instantiated |
| implicitly (i.e. by use); only emit code for explicit instantiations. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-implicit\-inline\-templates\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-implicit-inline-templates" |
| Don't emit code for implicit instantiations of inline templates, either. |
| The default is to handle inlines differently so that compiles with and |
| without optimization need the same set of explicit instantiations. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-implement\-inlines\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-implement-inlines" |
| To save space, do not emit out-of-line copies of inline functions |
| controlled by \fB#pragma implementation\fR. This causes linker |
| errors if these functions are not inlined everywhere they are called. |
| .IP "\fB\-fms\-extensions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fms-extensions" |
| Disable Wpedantic warnings about constructs used in \s-1MFC\s0, such as implicit |
| int and getting a pointer to member function via non-standard syntax. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-nonansi\-builtins\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-nonansi-builtins" |
| Disable built-in declarations of functions that are not mandated by |
| \&\s-1ANSI/ISO\s0 C. These include \f(CW\*(C`ffs\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`alloca\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`_exit\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`index\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`bzero\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`conjf\*(C'\fR, and other related functions. |
| .IP "\fB\-fnothrow\-opt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fnothrow-opt" |
| Treat a \f(CW\*(C`throw()\*(C'\fR exception specification as if it were a |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`noexcept\*(C'\fR specification to reduce or eliminate the text size |
| overhead relative to a function with no exception specification. If |
| the function has local variables of types with non-trivial |
| destructors, the exception specification actually makes the |
| function smaller because the \s-1EH\s0 cleanups for those variables can be |
| optimized away. The semantic effect is that an exception thrown out of |
| a function with such an exception specification results in a call |
| to \f(CW\*(C`terminate\*(C'\fR rather than \f(CW\*(C`unexpected\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-operator\-names\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-operator-names" |
| Do not treat the operator name keywords \f(CW\*(C`and\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`bitand\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`bitor\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`compl\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`not\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`or\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`xor\*(C'\fR as |
| synonyms as keywords. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-optional\-diags\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-optional-diags" |
| Disable diagnostics that the standard says a compiler does not need to |
| issue. Currently, the only such diagnostic issued by G++ is the one for |
| a name having multiple meanings within a class. |
| .IP "\fB\-fpermissive\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fpermissive" |
| Downgrade some diagnostics about nonconformant code from errors to |
| warnings. Thus, using \fB\-fpermissive\fR allows some |
| nonconforming code to compile. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-pretty\-templates\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-pretty-templates" |
| When an error message refers to a specialization of a function |
| template, the compiler normally prints the signature of the |
| template followed by the template arguments and any typedefs or |
| typenames in the signature (e.g. \f(CW\*(C`void f(T) [with T = int]\*(C'\fR |
| rather than \f(CW\*(C`void f(int)\*(C'\fR) so that it's clear which template is |
| involved. When an error message refers to a specialization of a class |
| template, the compiler omits any template arguments that match |
| the default template arguments for that template. If either of these |
| behaviors make it harder to understand the error message rather than |
| easier, you can use \fB\-fno\-pretty\-templates\fR to disable them. |
| .IP "\fB\-frepo\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-frepo" |
| Enable automatic template instantiation at link time. This option also |
| implies \fB\-fno\-implicit\-templates\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-rtti\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-rtti" |
| Disable generation of information about every class with virtual |
| functions for use by the \*(C+ run-time type identification features |
| (\fBdynamic_cast\fR and \fBtypeid\fR). If you don't use those parts |
| of the language, you can save some space by using this flag. Note that |
| exception handling uses the same information, but G++ generates it as |
| needed. The \fBdynamic_cast\fR operator can still be used for casts that |
| do not require run-time type information, i.e. casts to \f(CW\*(C`void *\*(C'\fR or to |
| unambiguous base classes. |
| .IP "\fB\-fstats\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fstats" |
| Emit statistics about front-end processing at the end of the compilation. |
| This information is generally only useful to the G++ development team. |
| .IP "\fB\-fstrict\-enums\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fstrict-enums" |
| Allow the compiler to optimize using the assumption that a value of |
| enumerated type can only be one of the values of the enumeration (as |
| defined in the \*(C+ standard; basically, a value that can be |
| represented in the minimum number of bits needed to represent all the |
| enumerators). This assumption may not be valid if the program uses a |
| cast to convert an arbitrary integer value to the enumerated type. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftemplate\-backtrace\-limit=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftemplate-backtrace-limit=n" |
| Set the maximum number of template instantiation notes for a single |
| warning or error to \fIn\fR. The default value is 10. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftemplate\-depth=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftemplate-depth=n" |
| Set the maximum instantiation depth for template classes to \fIn\fR. |
| A limit on the template instantiation depth is needed to detect |
| endless recursions during template class instantiation. \s-1ANSI/ISO\s0 \*(C+ |
| conforming programs must not rely on a maximum depth greater than 17 |
| (changed to 1024 in \*(C+11). The default value is 900, as the compiler |
| can run out of stack space before hitting 1024 in some situations. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-threadsafe\-statics\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-threadsafe-statics" |
| Do not emit the extra code to use the routines specified in the \*(C+ |
| \&\s-1ABI\s0 for thread-safe initialization of local statics. You can use this |
| option to reduce code size slightly in code that doesn't need to be |
| thread-safe. |
| .IP "\fB\-fuse\-cxa\-atexit\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fuse-cxa-atexit" |
| Register destructors for objects with static storage duration with the |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_cxa_atexit\*(C'\fR function rather than the \f(CW\*(C`atexit\*(C'\fR function. |
| This option is required for fully standards-compliant handling of static |
| destructors, but only works if your C library supports |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_cxa_atexit\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-use\-cxa\-get\-exception\-ptr\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-use-cxa-get-exception-ptr" |
| Don't use the \f(CW\*(C`_\|_cxa_get_exception_ptr\*(C'\fR runtime routine. This |
| causes \f(CW\*(C`std::uncaught_exception\*(C'\fR to be incorrect, but is necessary |
| if the runtime routine is not available. |
| .IP "\fB\-fvisibility\-inlines\-hidden\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fvisibility-inlines-hidden" |
| This switch declares that the user does not attempt to compare |
| pointers to inline functions or methods where the addresses of the two functions |
| are taken in different shared objects. |
| .Sp |
| The effect of this is that \s-1GCC\s0 may, effectively, mark inline methods with |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_attribute_\|_ ((visibility ("hidden")))\*(C'\fR so that they do not |
| appear in the export table of a \s-1DSO\s0 and do not require a \s-1PLT\s0 indirection |
| when used within the \s-1DSO\s0. Enabling this option can have a dramatic effect |
| on load and link times of a \s-1DSO\s0 as it massively reduces the size of the |
| dynamic export table when the library makes heavy use of templates. |
| .Sp |
| The behavior of this switch is not quite the same as marking the |
| methods as hidden directly, because it does not affect static variables |
| local to the function or cause the compiler to deduce that |
| the function is defined in only one shared object. |
| .Sp |
| You may mark a method as having a visibility explicitly to negate the |
| effect of the switch for that method. For example, if you do want to |
| compare pointers to a particular inline method, you might mark it as |
| having default visibility. Marking the enclosing class with explicit |
| visibility has no effect. |
| .Sp |
| Explicitly instantiated inline methods are unaffected by this option |
| as their linkage might otherwise cross a shared library boundary. |
| .IP "\fB\-fvisibility\-ms\-compat\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fvisibility-ms-compat" |
| This flag attempts to use visibility settings to make \s-1GCC\s0's \*(C+ |
| linkage model compatible with that of Microsoft Visual Studio. |
| .Sp |
| The flag makes these changes to \s-1GCC\s0's linkage model: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "1." 4 |
| It sets the default visibility to \f(CW\*(C`hidden\*(C'\fR, like |
| \&\fB\-fvisibility=hidden\fR. |
| .IP "2." 4 |
| Types, but not their members, are not hidden by default. |
| .IP "3." 4 |
| The One Definition Rule is relaxed for types without explicit |
| visibility specifications that are defined in more than one |
| shared object: those declarations are permitted if they are |
| permitted when this option is not used. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| In new code it is better to use \fB\-fvisibility=hidden\fR and |
| export those classes that are intended to be externally visible. |
| Unfortunately it is possible for code to rely, perhaps accidentally, |
| on the Visual Studio behavior. |
| .Sp |
| Among the consequences of these changes are that static data members |
| of the same type with the same name but defined in different shared |
| objects are different, so changing one does not change the other; |
| and that pointers to function members defined in different shared |
| objects may not compare equal. When this flag is given, it is a |
| violation of the \s-1ODR\s0 to define types with the same name differently. |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-weak\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-weak" |
| Do not use weak symbol support, even if it is provided by the linker. |
| By default, G++ uses weak symbols if they are available. This |
| option exists only for testing, and should not be used by end-users; |
| it results in inferior code and has no benefits. This option may |
| be removed in a future release of G++. |
| .IP "\fB\-nostdinc++\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-nostdinc++" |
| Do not search for header files in the standard directories specific to |
| \&\*(C+, but do still search the other standard directories. (This option |
| is used when building the \*(C+ library.) |
| .PP |
| In addition, these optimization, warning, and code generation options |
| have meanings only for \*(C+ programs: |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-default\-inline\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-default-inline" |
| Do not assume \fBinline\fR for functions defined inside a class scope. |
| Note that these |
| functions have linkage like inline functions; they just aren't |
| inlined by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wabi\fR (C, Objective-C, \*(C+ and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wabi (C, Objective-C, and Objective- only)" |
| Warn when G++ generates code that is probably not compatible with the |
| vendor-neutral \*(C+ \s-1ABI\s0. Although an effort has been made to warn about |
| all such cases, there are probably some cases that are not warned about, |
| even though G++ is generating incompatible code. There may also be |
| cases where warnings are emitted even though the code that is generated |
| is compatible. |
| .Sp |
| You should rewrite your code to avoid these warnings if you are |
| concerned about the fact that code generated by G++ may not be binary |
| compatible with code generated by other compilers. |
| .Sp |
| The known incompatibilities in \fB\-fabi\-version=2\fR (the default) include: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| A template with a non-type template parameter of reference type is |
| mangled incorrectly: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 3 |
| \& extern int N; |
| \& template <int &> struct S {}; |
| \& void n (S<N>) {2} |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| This is fixed in \fB\-fabi\-version=3\fR. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| \&\s-1SIMD\s0 vector types declared using \f(CW\*(C`_\|_attribute ((vector_size))\*(C'\fR are |
| mangled in a non-standard way that does not allow for overloading of |
| functions taking vectors of different sizes. |
| .Sp |
| The mangling is changed in \fB\-fabi\-version=4\fR. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| The known incompatibilities in \fB\-fabi\-version=1\fR include: |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Incorrect handling of tail-padding for bit-fields. G++ may attempt to |
| pack data into the same byte as a base class. For example: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 2 |
| \& struct A { virtual void f(); int f1 : 1; }; |
| \& struct B : public A { int f2 : 1; }; |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| In this case, G++ places \f(CW\*(C`B::f2\*(C'\fR into the same byte |
| as \f(CW\*(C`A::f1\*(C'\fR; other compilers do not. You can avoid this problem |
| by explicitly padding \f(CW\*(C`A\*(C'\fR so that its size is a multiple of the |
| byte size on your platform; that causes G++ and other compilers to |
| lay out \f(CW\*(C`B\*(C'\fR identically. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Incorrect handling of tail-padding for virtual bases. G++ does not use |
| tail padding when laying out virtual bases. For example: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 3 |
| \& struct A { virtual void f(); char c1; }; |
| \& struct B { B(); char c2; }; |
| \& struct C : public A, public virtual B {}; |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| In this case, G++ does not place \f(CW\*(C`B\*(C'\fR into the tail-padding for |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`A\*(C'\fR; other compilers do. You can avoid this problem by |
| explicitly padding \f(CW\*(C`A\*(C'\fR so that its size is a multiple of its |
| alignment (ignoring virtual base classes); that causes G++ and other |
| compilers to lay out \f(CW\*(C`C\*(C'\fR identically. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Incorrect handling of bit-fields with declared widths greater than that |
| of their underlying types, when the bit-fields appear in a union. For |
| example: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& union U { int i : 4096; }; |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| Assuming that an \f(CW\*(C`int\*(C'\fR does not have 4096 bits, G++ makes the |
| union too small by the number of bits in an \f(CW\*(C`int\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Empty classes can be placed at incorrect offsets. For example: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& struct A {}; |
| \& |
| \& struct B { |
| \& A a; |
| \& virtual void f (); |
| \& }; |
| \& |
| \& struct C : public B, public A {}; |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| G++ places the \f(CW\*(C`A\*(C'\fR base class of \f(CW\*(C`C\*(C'\fR at a nonzero offset; |
| it should be placed at offset zero. G++ mistakenly believes that the |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`A\*(C'\fR data member of \f(CW\*(C`B\*(C'\fR is already at offset zero. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Names of template functions whose types involve \f(CW\*(C`typename\*(C'\fR or |
| template template parameters can be mangled incorrectly. |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 2 |
| \& template <typename Q> |
| \& void f(typename Q::X) {} |
| \& |
| \& template <template <typename> class Q> |
| \& void f(typename Q<int>::X) {} |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| Instantiations of these templates may be mangled incorrectly. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| It also warns about psABI-related changes. The known psABI changes at this |
| point include: |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| For SysV/x86\-64, unions with \f(CW\*(C`long double\*(C'\fR members are |
| passed in memory as specified in psABI. For example: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 4 |
| \& union U { |
| \& long double ld; |
| \& int i; |
| \& }; |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`union U\*(C'\fR is always passed in memory. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-Wctor\-dtor\-privacy\fR (\*(C+ and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wctor-dtor-privacy ( and Objective- only)" |
| Warn when a class seems unusable because all the constructors or |
| destructors in that class are private, and it has neither friends nor |
| public static member functions. Also warn if there are no non-private |
| methods, and there's at least one private member function that isn't |
| a constructor or destructor. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wdelete\-non\-virtual\-dtor\fR (\*(C+ and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wdelete-non-virtual-dtor ( and Objective- only)" |
| Warn when \fBdelete\fR is used to destroy an instance of a class that |
| has virtual functions and non-virtual destructor. It is unsafe to delete |
| an instance of a derived class through a pointer to a base class if the |
| base class does not have a virtual destructor. This warning is enabled |
| by \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wliteral\-suffix\fR (\*(C+ and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wliteral-suffix ( and Objective- only)" |
| Warn when a string or character literal is followed by a ud-suffix which does |
| not begin with an underscore. As a conforming extension, \s-1GCC\s0 treats such |
| suffixes as separate preprocessing tokens in order to maintain backwards |
| compatibility with code that uses formatting macros from \f(CW\*(C`<inttypes.h>\*(C'\fR. |
| For example: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 3 |
| \& #define _\|_STDC_FORMAT_MACROS |
| \& #include <inttypes.h> |
| \& #include <stdio.h> |
| \& |
| \& int main() { |
| \& int64_t i64 = 123; |
| \& printf("My int64: %"PRId64"\en", i64); |
| \& } |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| In this case, \f(CW\*(C`PRId64\*(C'\fR is treated as a separate preprocessing token. |
| .Sp |
| This warning is enabled by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wnarrowing\fR (\*(C+ and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wnarrowing ( and Objective- only)" |
| Warn when a narrowing conversion prohibited by \*(C+11 occurs within |
| \&\fB{ }\fR, e.g. |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& int i = { 2.2 }; // error: narrowing from double to int |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| This flag is included in \fB\-Wall\fR and \fB\-Wc++11\-compat\fR. |
| .Sp |
| With \fB\-std=c++11\fR, \fB\-Wno\-narrowing\fR suppresses the diagnostic |
| required by the standard. Note that this does not affect the meaning |
| of well-formed code; narrowing conversions are still considered |
| ill-formed in \s-1SFINAE\s0 context. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wnoexcept\fR (\*(C+ and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wnoexcept ( and Objective- only)" |
| Warn when a noexcept-expression evaluates to false because of a call |
| to a function that does not have a non-throwing exception |
| specification (i.e. \fB\f(BIthrow()\fB\fR or \fBnoexcept\fR) but is known by |
| the compiler to never throw an exception. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wnon\-virtual\-dtor\fR (\*(C+ and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wnon-virtual-dtor ( and Objective- only)" |
| Warn when a class has virtual functions and an accessible non-virtual |
| destructor, in which case it is possible but unsafe to delete |
| an instance of a derived class through a pointer to the base class. |
| This warning is also enabled if \fB\-Weffc++\fR is specified. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wreorder\fR (\*(C+ and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wreorder ( and Objective- only)" |
| Warn when the order of member initializers given in the code does not |
| match the order in which they must be executed. For instance: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 5 |
| \& struct A { |
| \& int i; |
| \& int j; |
| \& A(): j (0), i (1) { } |
| \& }; |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| The compiler rearranges the member initializers for \fBi\fR |
| and \fBj\fR to match the declaration order of the members, emitting |
| a warning to that effect. This warning is enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fext\-numeric\-literals\fR (\*(C+ and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fext-numeric-literals ( and Objective- only)" |
| Accept imaginary, fixed-point, or machine-defined |
| literal number suffixes as \s-1GNU\s0 extensions. |
| When this option is turned off these suffixes are treated |
| as \*(C+11 user-defined literal numeric suffixes. |
| This is on by default for all pre\-\*(C+11 dialects and all \s-1GNU\s0 dialects: |
| \&\fB\-std=c++98\fR, \fB\-std=gnu++98\fR, \fB\-std=gnu++11\fR, |
| \&\fB\-std=gnu++1y\fR. |
| This option is off by default |
| for \s-1ISO\s0 \*(C+11 onwards (\fB\-std=c++11\fR, ...). |
| .PP |
| The following \fB\-W...\fR options are not affected by \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Weffc++\fR (\*(C+ and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Weffc++ ( and Objective- only)" |
| Warn about violations of the following style guidelines from Scott Meyers' |
| \&\fIEffective \*(C+, Second Edition\fR book: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Item 11: Define a copy constructor and an assignment operator for classes |
| with dynamically-allocated memory. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Item 12: Prefer initialization to assignment in constructors. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Item 14: Make destructors virtual in base classes. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Item 15: Have \f(CW\*(C`operator=\*(C'\fR return a reference to \f(CW*this\fR. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Item 23: Don't try to return a reference when you must return an object. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| Also warn about violations of the following style guidelines from |
| Scott Meyers' \fIMore Effective \*(C+\fR book: |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Item 6: Distinguish between prefix and postfix forms of increment and |
| decrement operators. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Item 7: Never overload \f(CW\*(C`&&\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`||\*(C'\fR, or \f(CW\*(C`,\*(C'\fR. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| When selecting this option, be aware that the standard library |
| headers do not obey all of these guidelines; use \fBgrep \-v\fR |
| to filter out those warnings. |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-Wstrict\-null\-sentinel\fR (\*(C+ and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wstrict-null-sentinel ( and Objective- only)" |
| Warn about the use of an uncasted \f(CW\*(C`NULL\*(C'\fR as sentinel. When |
| compiling only with \s-1GCC\s0 this is a valid sentinel, as \f(CW\*(C`NULL\*(C'\fR is defined |
| to \f(CW\*(C`_\|_null\*(C'\fR. Although it is a null pointer constant rather than a |
| null pointer, it is guaranteed to be of the same size as a pointer. |
| But this use is not portable across different compilers. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-non\-template\-friend\fR (\*(C+ and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-non-template-friend ( and Objective- only)" |
| Disable warnings when non-templatized friend functions are declared |
| within a template. Since the advent of explicit template specification |
| support in G++, if the name of the friend is an unqualified-id (i.e., |
| \&\fBfriend foo(int)\fR), the \*(C+ language specification demands that the |
| friend declare or define an ordinary, nontemplate function. (Section |
| 14.5.3). Before G++ implemented explicit specification, unqualified-ids |
| could be interpreted as a particular specialization of a templatized |
| function. Because this non-conforming behavior is no longer the default |
| behavior for G++, \fB\-Wnon\-template\-friend\fR allows the compiler to |
| check existing code for potential trouble spots and is on by default. |
| This new compiler behavior can be turned off with |
| \&\fB\-Wno\-non\-template\-friend\fR, which keeps the conformant compiler code |
| but disables the helpful warning. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wold\-style\-cast\fR (\*(C+ and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wold-style-cast ( and Objective- only)" |
| Warn if an old-style (C\-style) cast to a non-void type is used within |
| a \*(C+ program. The new-style casts (\fBdynamic_cast\fR, |
| \&\fBstatic_cast\fR, \fBreinterpret_cast\fR, and \fBconst_cast\fR) are |
| less vulnerable to unintended effects and much easier to search for. |
| .IP "\fB\-Woverloaded\-virtual\fR (\*(C+ and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Woverloaded-virtual ( and Objective- only)" |
| Warn when a function declaration hides virtual functions from a |
| base class. For example, in: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 3 |
| \& struct A { |
| \& virtual void f(); |
| \& }; |
| \& |
| \& struct B: public A { |
| \& void f(int); |
| \& }; |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| the \f(CW\*(C`A\*(C'\fR class version of \f(CW\*(C`f\*(C'\fR is hidden in \f(CW\*(C`B\*(C'\fR, and code |
| like: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 2 |
| \& B* b; |
| \& b\->f(); |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| fails to compile. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-pmf\-conversions\fR (\*(C+ and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-pmf-conversions ( and Objective- only)" |
| Disable the diagnostic for converting a bound pointer to member function |
| to a plain pointer. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wsign\-promo\fR (\*(C+ and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wsign-promo ( and Objective- only)" |
| Warn when overload resolution chooses a promotion from unsigned or |
| enumerated type to a signed type, over a conversion to an unsigned type of |
| the same size. Previous versions of G++ tried to preserve |
| unsignedness, but the standard mandates the current behavior. |
| .SS "Options Controlling Objective-C and Objective\-\*(C+ Dialects" |
| .IX Subsection "Options Controlling Objective-C and Objective- Dialects" |
| (\s-1NOTE:\s0 This manual does not describe the Objective-C and Objective\-\*(C+ |
| languages themselves. |
| .PP |
| This section describes the command-line options that are only meaningful |
| for Objective-C and Objective\-\*(C+ programs. You can also use most of |
| the language-independent \s-1GNU\s0 compiler options. |
| For example, you might compile a file \f(CW\*(C`some_class.m\*(C'\fR like this: |
| .PP |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& gcc \-g \-fgnu\-runtime \-O \-c some_class.m |
| .Ve |
| .PP |
| In this example, \fB\-fgnu\-runtime\fR is an option meant only for |
| Objective-C and Objective\-\*(C+ programs; you can use the other options with |
| any language supported by \s-1GCC\s0. |
| .PP |
| Note that since Objective-C is an extension of the C language, Objective-C |
| compilations may also use options specific to the C front-end (e.g., |
| \&\fB\-Wtraditional\fR). Similarly, Objective\-\*(C+ compilations may use |
| \&\*(C+\-specific options (e.g., \fB\-Wabi\fR). |
| .PP |
| Here is a list of options that are \fIonly\fR for compiling Objective-C |
| and Objective\-\*(C+ programs: |
| .IP "\fB\-fconstant\-string\-class=\fR\fIclass-name\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fconstant-string-class=class-name" |
| Use \fIclass-name\fR as the name of the class to instantiate for each |
| literal string specified with the syntax \f(CW\*(C`@"..."\*(C'\fR. The default |
| class name is \f(CW\*(C`NXConstantString\*(C'\fR if the \s-1GNU\s0 runtime is being used, and |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`NSConstantString\*(C'\fR if the NeXT runtime is being used (see below). The |
| \&\fB\-fconstant\-cfstrings\fR option, if also present, overrides the |
| \&\fB\-fconstant\-string\-class\fR setting and cause \f(CW\*(C`@"..."\*(C'\fR literals |
| to be laid out as constant CoreFoundation strings. |
| .IP "\fB\-fgnu\-runtime\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fgnu-runtime" |
| Generate object code compatible with the standard \s-1GNU\s0 Objective-C |
| runtime. This is the default for most types of systems. |
| .IP "\fB\-fnext\-runtime\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fnext-runtime" |
| Generate output compatible with the NeXT runtime. This is the default |
| for NeXT-based systems, including Darwin and Mac \s-1OS\s0 X. The macro |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_NEXT_RUNTIME_\|_\*(C'\fR is predefined if (and only if) this option is |
| used. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-nil\-receivers\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-nil-receivers" |
| Assume that all Objective-C message dispatches (\f(CW\*(C`[receiver |
| message:arg]\*(C'\fR) in this translation unit ensure that the receiver is |
| not \f(CW\*(C`nil\*(C'\fR. This allows for more efficient entry points in the |
| runtime to be used. This option is only available in conjunction with |
| the NeXT runtime and \s-1ABI\s0 version 0 or 1. |
| .IP "\fB\-fobjc\-abi\-version=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fobjc-abi-version=n" |
| Use version \fIn\fR of the Objective-C \s-1ABI\s0 for the selected runtime. |
| This option is currently supported only for the NeXT runtime. In that |
| case, Version 0 is the traditional (32\-bit) \s-1ABI\s0 without support for |
| properties and other Objective-C 2.0 additions. Version 1 is the |
| traditional (32\-bit) \s-1ABI\s0 with support for properties and other |
| Objective-C 2.0 additions. Version 2 is the modern (64\-bit) \s-1ABI\s0. If |
| nothing is specified, the default is Version 0 on 32\-bit target |
| machines, and Version 2 on 64\-bit target machines. |
| .IP "\fB\-fobjc\-call\-cxx\-cdtors\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fobjc-call-cxx-cdtors" |
| For each Objective-C class, check if any of its instance variables is a |
| \&\*(C+ object with a non-trivial default constructor. If so, synthesize a |
| special \f(CW\*(C`\- (id) .cxx_construct\*(C'\fR instance method which runs |
| non-trivial default constructors on any such instance variables, in order, |
| and then return \f(CW\*(C`self\*(C'\fR. Similarly, check if any instance variable |
| is a \*(C+ object with a non-trivial destructor, and if so, synthesize a |
| special \f(CW\*(C`\- (void) .cxx_destruct\*(C'\fR method which runs |
| all such default destructors, in reverse order. |
| .Sp |
| The \f(CW\*(C`\- (id) .cxx_construct\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`\- (void) .cxx_destruct\*(C'\fR |
| methods thusly generated only operate on instance variables |
| declared in the current Objective-C class, and not those inherited |
| from superclasses. It is the responsibility of the Objective-C |
| runtime to invoke all such methods in an object's inheritance |
| hierarchy. The \f(CW\*(C`\- (id) .cxx_construct\*(C'\fR methods are invoked |
| by the runtime immediately after a new object instance is allocated; |
| the \f(CW\*(C`\- (void) .cxx_destruct\*(C'\fR methods are invoked immediately |
| before the runtime deallocates an object instance. |
| .Sp |
| As of this writing, only the NeXT runtime on Mac \s-1OS\s0 X 10.4 and later has |
| support for invoking the \f(CW\*(C`\- (id) .cxx_construct\*(C'\fR and |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`\- (void) .cxx_destruct\*(C'\fR methods. |
| .IP "\fB\-fobjc\-direct\-dispatch\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fobjc-direct-dispatch" |
| Allow fast jumps to the message dispatcher. On Darwin this is |
| accomplished via the comm page. |
| .IP "\fB\-fobjc\-exceptions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fobjc-exceptions" |
| Enable syntactic support for structured exception handling in |
| Objective-C, similar to what is offered by \*(C+ and Java. This option |
| is required to use the Objective-C keywords \f(CW@try\fR, |
| \&\f(CW@throw\fR, \f(CW@catch\fR, \f(CW@finally\fR and |
| \&\f(CW@synchronized\fR. This option is available with both the \s-1GNU\s0 |
| runtime and the NeXT runtime (but not available in conjunction with |
| the NeXT runtime on Mac \s-1OS\s0 X 10.2 and earlier). |
| .IP "\fB\-fobjc\-gc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fobjc-gc" |
| Enable garbage collection (\s-1GC\s0) in Objective-C and Objective\-\*(C+ |
| programs. This option is only available with the NeXT runtime; the |
| \&\s-1GNU\s0 runtime has a different garbage collection implementation that |
| does not require special compiler flags. |
| .IP "\fB\-fobjc\-nilcheck\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fobjc-nilcheck" |
| For the NeXT runtime with version 2 of the \s-1ABI\s0, check for a nil |
| receiver in method invocations before doing the actual method call. |
| This is the default and can be disabled using |
| \&\fB\-fno\-objc\-nilcheck\fR. Class methods and super calls are never |
| checked for nil in this way no matter what this flag is set to. |
| Currently this flag does nothing when the \s-1GNU\s0 runtime, or an older |
| version of the NeXT runtime \s-1ABI\s0, is used. |
| .IP "\fB\-fobjc\-std=objc1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fobjc-std=objc1" |
| Conform to the language syntax of Objective-C 1.0, the language |
| recognized by \s-1GCC\s0 4.0. This only affects the Objective-C additions to |
| the C/\*(C+ language; it does not affect conformance to C/\*(C+ standards, |
| which is controlled by the separate C/\*(C+ dialect option flags. When |
| this option is used with the Objective-C or Objective\-\*(C+ compiler, |
| any Objective-C syntax that is not recognized by \s-1GCC\s0 4.0 is rejected. |
| This is useful if you need to make sure that your Objective-C code can |
| be compiled with older versions of \s-1GCC\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-freplace\-objc\-classes\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-freplace-objc-classes" |
| Emit a special marker instructing \fB\f(BIld\fB\|(1)\fR not to statically link in |
| the resulting object file, and allow \fB\f(BIdyld\fB\|(1)\fR to load it in at |
| run time instead. This is used in conjunction with the Fix-and-Continue |
| debugging mode, where the object file in question may be recompiled and |
| dynamically reloaded in the course of program execution, without the need |
| to restart the program itself. Currently, Fix-and-Continue functionality |
| is only available in conjunction with the NeXT runtime on Mac \s-1OS\s0 X 10.3 |
| and later. |
| .IP "\fB\-fzero\-link\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fzero-link" |
| When compiling for the NeXT runtime, the compiler ordinarily replaces calls |
| to \f(CW\*(C`objc_getClass("...")\*(C'\fR (when the name of the class is known at |
| compile time) with static class references that get initialized at load time, |
| which improves run-time performance. Specifying the \fB\-fzero\-link\fR flag |
| suppresses this behavior and causes calls to \f(CW\*(C`objc_getClass("...")\*(C'\fR |
| to be retained. This is useful in Zero-Link debugging mode, since it allows |
| for individual class implementations to be modified during program execution. |
| The \s-1GNU\s0 runtime currently always retains calls to \f(CW\*(C`objc_get_class("...")\*(C'\fR |
| regardless of command-line options. |
| .IP "\fB\-gen\-decls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-gen-decls" |
| Dump interface declarations for all classes seen in the source file to a |
| file named \fI\fIsourcename\fI.decl\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wassign\-intercept\fR (Objective-C and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wassign-intercept (Objective-C and Objective- only)" |
| Warn whenever an Objective-C assignment is being intercepted by the |
| garbage collector. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-protocol\fR (Objective-C and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-protocol (Objective-C and Objective- only)" |
| If a class is declared to implement a protocol, a warning is issued for |
| every method in the protocol that is not implemented by the class. The |
| default behavior is to issue a warning for every method not explicitly |
| implemented in the class, even if a method implementation is inherited |
| from the superclass. If you use the \fB\-Wno\-protocol\fR option, then |
| methods inherited from the superclass are considered to be implemented, |
| and no warning is issued for them. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wselector\fR (Objective-C and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wselector (Objective-C and Objective- only)" |
| Warn if multiple methods of different types for the same selector are |
| found during compilation. The check is performed on the list of methods |
| in the final stage of compilation. Additionally, a check is performed |
| for each selector appearing in a \f(CW\*(C`@selector(...)\*(C'\fR |
| expression, and a corresponding method for that selector has been found |
| during compilation. Because these checks scan the method table only at |
| the end of compilation, these warnings are not produced if the final |
| stage of compilation is not reached, for example because an error is |
| found during compilation, or because the \fB\-fsyntax\-only\fR option is |
| being used. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wstrict\-selector\-match\fR (Objective-C and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wstrict-selector-match (Objective-C and Objective- only)" |
| Warn if multiple methods with differing argument and/or return types are |
| found for a given selector when attempting to send a message using this |
| selector to a receiver of type \f(CW\*(C`id\*(C'\fR or \f(CW\*(C`Class\*(C'\fR. When this flag |
| is off (which is the default behavior), the compiler omits such warnings |
| if any differences found are confined to types that share the same size |
| and alignment. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wundeclared\-selector\fR (Objective-C and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wundeclared-selector (Objective-C and Objective- only)" |
| Warn if a \f(CW\*(C`@selector(...)\*(C'\fR expression referring to an |
| undeclared selector is found. A selector is considered undeclared if no |
| method with that name has been declared before the |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`@selector(...)\*(C'\fR expression, either explicitly in an |
| \&\f(CW@interface\fR or \f(CW@protocol\fR declaration, or implicitly in |
| an \f(CW@implementation\fR section. This option always performs its |
| checks as soon as a \f(CW\*(C`@selector(...)\*(C'\fR expression is found, |
| while \fB\-Wselector\fR only performs its checks in the final stage of |
| compilation. This also enforces the coding style convention |
| that methods and selectors must be declared before being used. |
| .IP "\fB\-print\-objc\-runtime\-info\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-print-objc-runtime-info" |
| Generate C header describing the largest structure that is passed by |
| value, if any. |
| .SS "Options to Control Diagnostic Messages Formatting" |
| .IX Subsection "Options to Control Diagnostic Messages Formatting" |
| Traditionally, diagnostic messages have been formatted irrespective of |
| the output device's aspect (e.g. its width, ...). You can use the |
| options described below |
| to control the formatting algorithm for diagnostic messages, |
| e.g. how many characters per line, how often source location |
| information should be reported. Note that some language front ends may not |
| honor these options. |
| .IP "\fB\-fmessage\-length=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fmessage-length=n" |
| Try to format error messages so that they fit on lines of about \fIn\fR |
| characters. The default is 72 characters for \fBg++\fR and 0 for the rest of |
| the front ends supported by \s-1GCC\s0. If \fIn\fR is zero, then no |
| line-wrapping is done; each error message appears on a single |
| line. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdiagnostics\-show\-location=once\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdiagnostics-show-location=once" |
| Only meaningful in line-wrapping mode. Instructs the diagnostic messages |
| reporter to emit source location information \fIonce\fR; that is, in |
| case the message is too long to fit on a single physical line and has to |
| be wrapped, the source location won't be emitted (as prefix) again, |
| over and over, in subsequent continuation lines. This is the default |
| behavior. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdiagnostics\-show\-location=every\-line\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdiagnostics-show-location=every-line" |
| Only meaningful in line-wrapping mode. Instructs the diagnostic |
| messages reporter to emit the same source location information (as |
| prefix) for physical lines that result from the process of breaking |
| a message which is too long to fit on a single line. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-diagnostics\-show\-option\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-diagnostics-show-option" |
| By default, each diagnostic emitted includes text indicating the |
| command-line option that directly controls the diagnostic (if such an |
| option is known to the diagnostic machinery). Specifying the |
| \&\fB\-fno\-diagnostics\-show\-option\fR flag suppresses that behavior. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-diagnostics\-show\-caret\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-diagnostics-show-caret" |
| By default, each diagnostic emitted includes the original source line |
| and a caret '^' indicating the column. This option suppresses this |
| information. |
| .SS "Options to Request or Suppress Warnings" |
| .IX Subsection "Options to Request or Suppress Warnings" |
| Warnings are diagnostic messages that report constructions that |
| are not inherently erroneous but that are risky or suggest there |
| may have been an error. |
| .PP |
| The following language-independent options do not enable specific |
| warnings but control the kinds of diagnostics produced by \s-1GCC\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsyntax\-only\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsyntax-only" |
| Check the code for syntax errors, but don't do anything beyond that. |
| .IP "\fB\-fmax\-errors=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fmax-errors=n" |
| Limits the maximum number of error messages to \fIn\fR, at which point |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 bails out rather than attempting to continue processing the source |
| code. If \fIn\fR is 0 (the default), there is no limit on the number |
| of error messages produced. If \fB\-Wfatal\-errors\fR is also |
| specified, then \fB\-Wfatal\-errors\fR takes precedence over this |
| option. |
| .IP "\fB\-w\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-w" |
| Inhibit all warning messages. |
| .IP "\fB\-Werror\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Werror" |
| Make all warnings into errors. |
| .IP "\fB\-Werror=\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Werror=" |
| Make the specified warning into an error. The specifier for a warning |
| is appended; for example \fB\-Werror=switch\fR turns the warnings |
| controlled by \fB\-Wswitch\fR into errors. This switch takes a |
| negative form, to be used to negate \fB\-Werror\fR for specific |
| warnings; for example \fB\-Wno\-error=switch\fR makes |
| \&\fB\-Wswitch\fR warnings not be errors, even when \fB\-Werror\fR |
| is in effect. |
| .Sp |
| The warning message for each controllable warning includes the |
| option that controls the warning. That option can then be used with |
| \&\fB\-Werror=\fR and \fB\-Wno\-error=\fR as described above. |
| (Printing of the option in the warning message can be disabled using the |
| \&\fB\-fno\-diagnostics\-show\-option\fR flag.) |
| .Sp |
| Note that specifying \fB\-Werror=\fR\fIfoo\fR automatically implies |
| \&\fB\-W\fR\fIfoo\fR. However, \fB\-Wno\-error=\fR\fIfoo\fR does not |
| imply anything. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wfatal\-errors\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wfatal-errors" |
| This option causes the compiler to abort compilation on the first error |
| occurred rather than trying to keep going and printing further error |
| messages. |
| .PP |
| You can request many specific warnings with options beginning with |
| \&\fB\-W\fR, for example \fB\-Wimplicit\fR to request warnings on |
| implicit declarations. Each of these specific warning options also |
| has a negative form beginning \fB\-Wno\-\fR to turn off warnings; for |
| example, \fB\-Wno\-implicit\fR. This manual lists only one of the |
| two forms, whichever is not the default. For further |
| language-specific options also refer to \fB\*(C+ Dialect Options\fR and |
| \&\fBObjective-C and Objective\-\*(C+ Dialect Options\fR. |
| .PP |
| When an unrecognized warning option is requested (e.g., |
| \&\fB\-Wunknown\-warning\fR), \s-1GCC\s0 emits a diagnostic stating |
| that the option is not recognized. However, if the \fB\-Wno\-\fR form |
| is used, the behavior is slightly different: no diagnostic is |
| produced for \fB\-Wno\-unknown\-warning\fR unless other diagnostics |
| are being produced. This allows the use of new \fB\-Wno\-\fR options |
| with old compilers, but if something goes wrong, the compiler |
| warns that an unrecognized option is present. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wpedantic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wpedantic" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-pedantic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-pedantic" |
| .PD |
| Issue all the warnings demanded by strict \s-1ISO\s0 C and \s-1ISO\s0 \*(C+; |
| reject all programs that use forbidden extensions, and some other |
| programs that do not follow \s-1ISO\s0 C and \s-1ISO\s0 \*(C+. For \s-1ISO\s0 C, follows the |
| version of the \s-1ISO\s0 C standard specified by any \fB\-std\fR option used. |
| .Sp |
| Valid \s-1ISO\s0 C and \s-1ISO\s0 \*(C+ programs should compile properly with or without |
| this option (though a rare few require \fB\-ansi\fR or a |
| \&\fB\-std\fR option specifying the required version of \s-1ISO\s0 C). However, |
| without this option, certain \s-1GNU\s0 extensions and traditional C and \*(C+ |
| features are supported as well. With this option, they are rejected. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-Wpedantic\fR does not cause warning messages for use of the |
| alternate keywords whose names begin and end with \fB_\|_\fR. Pedantic |
| warnings are also disabled in the expression that follows |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_extension_\|_\*(C'\fR. However, only system header files should use |
| these escape routes; application programs should avoid them. |
| .Sp |
| Some users try to use \fB\-Wpedantic\fR to check programs for strict \s-1ISO\s0 |
| C conformance. They soon find that it does not do quite what they want: |
| it finds some non-ISO practices, but not all\-\-\-only those for which |
| \&\s-1ISO\s0 C \fIrequires\fR a diagnostic, and some others for which |
| diagnostics have been added. |
| .Sp |
| A feature to report any failure to conform to \s-1ISO\s0 C might be useful in |
| some instances, but would require considerable additional work and would |
| be quite different from \fB\-Wpedantic\fR. We don't have plans to |
| support such a feature in the near future. |
| .Sp |
| Where the standard specified with \fB\-std\fR represents a \s-1GNU\s0 |
| extended dialect of C, such as \fBgnu90\fR or \fBgnu99\fR, there is a |
| corresponding \fIbase standard\fR, the version of \s-1ISO\s0 C on which the \s-1GNU\s0 |
| extended dialect is based. Warnings from \fB\-Wpedantic\fR are given |
| where they are required by the base standard. (It does not make sense |
| for such warnings to be given only for features not in the specified \s-1GNU\s0 |
| C dialect, since by definition the \s-1GNU\s0 dialects of C include all |
| features the compiler supports with the given option, and there would be |
| nothing to warn about.) |
| .IP "\fB\-pedantic\-errors\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-pedantic-errors" |
| Like \fB\-Wpedantic\fR, except that errors are produced rather than |
| warnings. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wall\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wall" |
| This enables all the warnings about constructions that some users |
| consider questionable, and that are easy to avoid (or modify to |
| prevent the warning), even in conjunction with macros. This also |
| enables some language-specific warnings described in \fB\*(C+ Dialect |
| Options\fR and \fBObjective-C and Objective\-\*(C+ Dialect Options\fR. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-Wall\fR turns on the following warning flags: |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-Waddress |
| \&\-Warray\-bounds\fR (only with\fB \fR\fB\-O2\fR) |
| \&\fB\-Wc++11\-compat |
| \&\-Wchar\-subscripts |
| \&\-Wenum\-compare\fR (in C/ObjC; this is on by default in \*(C+) |
| \&\fB\-Wimplicit\-int\fR (C and Objective-C only) |
| \&\fB\-Wimplicit\-function\-declaration\fR (C and Objective-C only) |
| \&\fB\-Wcomment |
| \&\-Wformat |
| \&\-Wmain\fR (only for C/ObjC and unless\fB \fR\fB\-ffreestanding\fR) |
| \&\fB\-Wmaybe\-uninitialized |
| \&\-Wmissing\-braces\fR (only for C/ObjC) |
| \&\fB\-Wnonnull |
| \&\-Wparentheses |
| \&\-Wpointer\-sign |
| \&\-Wreorder |
| \&\-Wreturn\-type |
| \&\-Wsequence\-point |
| \&\-Wsign\-compare\fR (only in \*(C+) |
| \&\fB\-Wstrict\-aliasing |
| \&\-Wstrict\-overflow=1 |
| \&\-Wswitch |
| \&\-Wtrigraphs |
| \&\-Wuninitialized |
| \&\-Wunknown\-pragmas |
| \&\-Wunused\-function |
| \&\-Wunused\-label |
| \&\-Wunused\-value |
| \&\-Wunused\-variable |
| \&\-Wvolatile\-register\-var\fR |
| .Sp |
| Note that some warning flags are not implied by \fB\-Wall\fR. Some of |
| them warn about constructions that users generally do not consider |
| questionable, but which occasionally you might wish to check for; |
| others warn about constructions that are necessary or hard to avoid in |
| some cases, and there is no simple way to modify the code to suppress |
| the warning. Some of them are enabled by \fB\-Wextra\fR but many of |
| them must be enabled individually. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wextra\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wextra" |
| This enables some extra warning flags that are not enabled by |
| \&\fB\-Wall\fR. (This option used to be called \fB\-W\fR. The older |
| name is still supported, but the newer name is more descriptive.) |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-Wclobbered |
| \&\-Wempty\-body |
| \&\-Wignored\-qualifiers |
| \&\-Wmissing\-field\-initializers |
| \&\-Wmissing\-parameter\-type\fR (C only) |
| \&\fB\-Wold\-style\-declaration\fR (C only) |
| \&\fB\-Woverride\-init |
| \&\-Wsign\-compare |
| \&\-Wtype\-limits |
| \&\-Wuninitialized |
| \&\-Wunused\-parameter\fR (only with\fB \fR\fB\-Wunused\fR\fB \fRor\fB \fR\fB\-Wall\fR) |
| \&\fB\-Wunused\-but\-set\-parameter\fR (only with\fB \fR\fB\-Wunused\fR\fB \fRor\fB \fR\fB\-Wall\fR) \fB \fR |
| .Sp |
| The option \fB\-Wextra\fR also prints warning messages for the |
| following cases: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| A pointer is compared against integer zero with \fB<\fR, \fB<=\fR, |
| \&\fB>\fR, or \fB>=\fR. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| (\*(C+ only) An enumerator and a non-enumerator both appear in a |
| conditional expression. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| (\*(C+ only) Ambiguous virtual bases. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| (\*(C+ only) Subscripting an array that has been declared \fBregister\fR. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| (\*(C+ only) Taking the address of a variable that has been declared |
| \&\fBregister\fR. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| (\*(C+ only) A base class is not initialized in a derived class's copy |
| constructor. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-Wchar\-subscripts\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wchar-subscripts" |
| Warn if an array subscript has type \f(CW\*(C`char\*(C'\fR. This is a common cause |
| of error, as programmers often forget that this type is signed on some |
| machines. |
| This warning is enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wcomment\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wcomment" |
| Warn whenever a comment-start sequence \fB/*\fR appears in a \fB/*\fR |
| comment, or whenever a Backslash-Newline appears in a \fB//\fR comment. |
| This warning is enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-coverage\-mismatch\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-coverage-mismatch" |
| Warn if feedback profiles do not match when using the |
| \&\fB\-fprofile\-use\fR option. |
| If a source file is changed between compiling with \fB\-fprofile\-gen\fR and |
| with \fB\-fprofile\-use\fR, the files with the profile feedback can fail |
| to match the source file and \s-1GCC\s0 cannot use the profile feedback |
| information. By default, this warning is enabled and is treated as an |
| error. \fB\-Wno\-coverage\-mismatch\fR can be used to disable the |
| warning or \fB\-Wno\-error=coverage\-mismatch\fR can be used to |
| disable the error. Disabling the error for this warning can result in |
| poorly optimized code and is useful only in the |
| case of very minor changes such as bug fixes to an existing code-base. |
| Completely disabling the warning is not recommended. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-cpp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-cpp" |
| (C, Objective-C, \*(C+, Objective\-\*(C+ and Fortran only) |
| .Sp |
| Suppress warning messages emitted by \f(CW\*(C`#warning\*(C'\fR directives. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wdouble\-promotion\fR (C, \*(C+, Objective-C and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wdouble-promotion (C, , Objective-C and Objective- only)" |
| Give a warning when a value of type \f(CW\*(C`float\*(C'\fR is implicitly |
| promoted to \f(CW\*(C`double\*(C'\fR. CPUs with a 32\-bit \*(L"single-precision\*(R" |
| floating-point unit implement \f(CW\*(C`float\*(C'\fR in hardware, but emulate |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`double\*(C'\fR in software. On such a machine, doing computations |
| using \f(CW\*(C`double\*(C'\fR values is much more expensive because of the |
| overhead required for software emulation. |
| .Sp |
| It is easy to accidentally do computations with \f(CW\*(C`double\*(C'\fR because |
| floating-point literals are implicitly of type \f(CW\*(C`double\*(C'\fR. For |
| example, in: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 4 |
| \& float area(float radius) |
| \& { |
| \& return 3.14159 * radius * radius; |
| \& } |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| the compiler performs the entire computation with \f(CW\*(C`double\*(C'\fR |
| because the floating-point literal is a \f(CW\*(C`double\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wformat\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wformat" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-Wformat=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wformat=n" |
| .PD |
| Check calls to \f(CW\*(C`printf\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`scanf\*(C'\fR, etc., to make sure that |
| the arguments supplied have types appropriate to the format string |
| specified, and that the conversions specified in the format string make |
| sense. This includes standard functions, and others specified by format |
| attributes, in the \f(CW\*(C`printf\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`scanf\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`strftime\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`strfmon\*(C'\fR (an X/Open extension, |
| not in the C standard) families (or other target-specific families). |
| Which functions are checked without format attributes having been |
| specified depends on the standard version selected, and such checks of |
| functions without the attribute specified are disabled by |
| \&\fB\-ffreestanding\fR or \fB\-fno\-builtin\fR. |
| .Sp |
| The formats are checked against the format features supported by \s-1GNU\s0 |
| libc version 2.2. These include all \s-1ISO\s0 C90 and C99 features, as well |
| as features from the Single Unix Specification and some \s-1BSD\s0 and \s-1GNU\s0 |
| extensions. Other library implementations may not support all these |
| features; \s-1GCC\s0 does not support warning about features that go beyond a |
| particular library's limitations. However, if \fB\-Wpedantic\fR is used |
| with \fB\-Wformat\fR, warnings are given about format features not |
| in the selected standard version (but not for \f(CW\*(C`strfmon\*(C'\fR formats, |
| since those are not in any version of the C standard). |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fB\-Wformat=1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wformat=1" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-Wformat\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wformat" |
| .PD |
| Option \fB\-Wformat\fR is equivalent to \fB\-Wformat=1\fR, and |
| \&\fB\-Wno\-format\fR is equivalent to \fB\-Wformat=0\fR. Since |
| \&\fB\-Wformat\fR also checks for null format arguments for several |
| functions, \fB\-Wformat\fR also implies \fB\-Wnonnull\fR. Some |
| aspects of this level of format checking can be disabled by the |
| options: \fB\-Wno\-format\-contains\-nul\fR, |
| \&\fB\-Wno\-format\-extra\-args\fR, and \fB\-Wno\-format\-zero\-length\fR. |
| \&\fB\-Wformat\fR is enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-format\-contains\-nul\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-format-contains-nul" |
| If \fB\-Wformat\fR is specified, do not warn about format strings that |
| contain \s-1NUL\s0 bytes. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-format\-extra\-args\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-format-extra-args" |
| If \fB\-Wformat\fR is specified, do not warn about excess arguments to a |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`printf\*(C'\fR or \f(CW\*(C`scanf\*(C'\fR format function. The C standard specifies |
| that such arguments are ignored. |
| .Sp |
| Where the unused arguments lie between used arguments that are |
| specified with \fB$\fR operand number specifications, normally |
| warnings are still given, since the implementation could not know what |
| type to pass to \f(CW\*(C`va_arg\*(C'\fR to skip the unused arguments. However, |
| in the case of \f(CW\*(C`scanf\*(C'\fR formats, this option suppresses the |
| warning if the unused arguments are all pointers, since the Single |
| Unix Specification says that such unused arguments are allowed. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-format\-zero\-length\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-format-zero-length" |
| If \fB\-Wformat\fR is specified, do not warn about zero-length formats. |
| The C standard specifies that zero-length formats are allowed. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wformat=2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wformat=2" |
| Enable \fB\-Wformat\fR plus additional format checks. Currently |
| equivalent to \fB\-Wformat \-Wformat\-nonliteral \-Wformat\-security |
| \&\-Wformat\-y2k\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wformat\-nonliteral\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wformat-nonliteral" |
| If \fB\-Wformat\fR is specified, also warn if the format string is not a |
| string literal and so cannot be checked, unless the format function |
| takes its format arguments as a \f(CW\*(C`va_list\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wformat\-security\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wformat-security" |
| If \fB\-Wformat\fR is specified, also warn about uses of format |
| functions that represent possible security problems. At present, this |
| warns about calls to \f(CW\*(C`printf\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`scanf\*(C'\fR functions where the |
| format string is not a string literal and there are no format arguments, |
| as in \f(CW\*(C`printf (foo);\*(C'\fR. This may be a security hole if the format |
| string came from untrusted input and contains \fB\f(CB%n\fB\fR. (This is |
| currently a subset of what \fB\-Wformat\-nonliteral\fR warns about, but |
| in future warnings may be added to \fB\-Wformat\-security\fR that are not |
| included in \fB\-Wformat\-nonliteral\fR.) |
| .IP "\fB\-Wformat\-y2k\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wformat-y2k" |
| If \fB\-Wformat\fR is specified, also warn about \f(CW\*(C`strftime\*(C'\fR |
| formats that may yield only a two-digit year. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-Wnonnull\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wnonnull" |
| Warn about passing a null pointer for arguments marked as |
| requiring a non-null value by the \f(CW\*(C`nonnull\*(C'\fR function attribute. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-Wnonnull\fR is included in \fB\-Wall\fR and \fB\-Wformat\fR. It |
| can be disabled with the \fB\-Wno\-nonnull\fR option. |
| .IP "\fB\-Winit\-self\fR (C, \*(C+, Objective-C and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Winit-self (C, , Objective-C and Objective- only)" |
| Warn about uninitialized variables that are initialized with themselves. |
| Note this option can only be used with the \fB\-Wuninitialized\fR option. |
| .Sp |
| For example, \s-1GCC\s0 warns about \f(CW\*(C`i\*(C'\fR being uninitialized in the |
| following snippet only when \fB\-Winit\-self\fR has been specified: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 5 |
| \& int f() |
| \& { |
| \& int i = i; |
| \& return i; |
| \& } |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| This warning is enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR in \*(C+. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wimplicit\-int\fR (C and Objective-C only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wimplicit-int (C and Objective-C only)" |
| Warn when a declaration does not specify a type. |
| This warning is enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wimplicit\-function\-declaration\fR (C and Objective-C only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wimplicit-function-declaration (C and Objective-C only)" |
| Give a warning whenever a function is used before being declared. In |
| C99 mode (\fB\-std=c99\fR or \fB\-std=gnu99\fR), this warning is |
| enabled by default and it is made into an error by |
| \&\fB\-pedantic\-errors\fR. This warning is also enabled by |
| \&\fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wimplicit\fR (C and Objective-C only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wimplicit (C and Objective-C only)" |
| Same as \fB\-Wimplicit\-int\fR and \fB\-Wimplicit\-function\-declaration\fR. |
| This warning is enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wignored\-qualifiers\fR (C and \*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wignored-qualifiers (C and only)" |
| Warn if the return type of a function has a type qualifier |
| such as \f(CW\*(C`const\*(C'\fR. For \s-1ISO\s0 C such a type qualifier has no effect, |
| since the value returned by a function is not an lvalue. |
| For \*(C+, the warning is only emitted for scalar types or \f(CW\*(C`void\*(C'\fR. |
| \&\s-1ISO\s0 C prohibits qualified \f(CW\*(C`void\*(C'\fR return types on function |
| definitions, so such return types always receive a warning |
| even without this option. |
| .Sp |
| This warning is also enabled by \fB\-Wextra\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wmain\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wmain" |
| Warn if the type of \fBmain\fR is suspicious. \fBmain\fR should be |
| a function with external linkage, returning int, taking either zero |
| arguments, two, or three arguments of appropriate types. This warning |
| is enabled by default in \*(C+ and is enabled by either \fB\-Wall\fR |
| or \fB\-Wpedantic\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wmissing\-braces\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wmissing-braces" |
| Warn if an aggregate or union initializer is not fully bracketed. In |
| the following example, the initializer for \fBa\fR is not fully |
| bracketed, but that for \fBb\fR is fully bracketed. This warning is |
| enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR in C. |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 2 |
| \& int a[2][2] = { 0, 1, 2, 3 }; |
| \& int b[2][2] = { { 0, 1 }, { 2, 3 } }; |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| This warning is enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wmissing\-include\-dirs\fR (C, \*(C+, Objective-C and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wmissing-include-dirs (C, , Objective-C and Objective- only)" |
| Warn if a user-supplied include directory does not exist. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wparentheses\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wparentheses" |
| Warn if parentheses are omitted in certain contexts, such |
| as when there is an assignment in a context where a truth value |
| is expected, or when operators are nested whose precedence people |
| often get confused about. |
| .Sp |
| Also warn if a comparison like \fBx<=y<=z\fR appears; this is |
| equivalent to \fB(x<=y ? 1 : 0) <= z\fR, which is a different |
| interpretation from that of ordinary mathematical notation. |
| .Sp |
| Also warn about constructions where there may be confusion to which |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`if\*(C'\fR statement an \f(CW\*(C`else\*(C'\fR branch belongs. Here is an example of |
| such a case: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 7 |
| \& { |
| \& if (a) |
| \& if (b) |
| \& foo (); |
| \& else |
| \& bar (); |
| \& } |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| In C/\*(C+, every \f(CW\*(C`else\*(C'\fR branch belongs to the innermost possible |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`if\*(C'\fR statement, which in this example is \f(CW\*(C`if (b)\*(C'\fR. This is |
| often not what the programmer expected, as illustrated in the above |
| example by indentation the programmer chose. When there is the |
| potential for this confusion, \s-1GCC\s0 issues a warning when this flag |
| is specified. To eliminate the warning, add explicit braces around |
| the innermost \f(CW\*(C`if\*(C'\fR statement so there is no way the \f(CW\*(C`else\*(C'\fR |
| can belong to the enclosing \f(CW\*(C`if\*(C'\fR. The resulting code |
| looks like this: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 9 |
| \& { |
| \& if (a) |
| \& { |
| \& if (b) |
| \& foo (); |
| \& else |
| \& bar (); |
| \& } |
| \& } |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| Also warn for dangerous uses of the \s-1GNU\s0 extension to |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`?:\*(C'\fR with omitted middle operand. When the condition |
| in the \f(CW\*(C`?\*(C'\fR: operator is a boolean expression, the omitted value is |
| always 1. Often programmers expect it to be a value computed |
| inside the conditional expression instead. |
| .Sp |
| This warning is enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wsequence\-point\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wsequence-point" |
| Warn about code that may have undefined semantics because of violations |
| of sequence point rules in the C and \*(C+ standards. |
| .Sp |
| The C and \*(C+ standards define the order in which expressions in a C/\*(C+ |
| program are evaluated in terms of \fIsequence points\fR, which represent |
| a partial ordering between the execution of parts of the program: those |
| executed before the sequence point, and those executed after it. These |
| occur after the evaluation of a full expression (one which is not part |
| of a larger expression), after the evaluation of the first operand of a |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`&&\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`||\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`? :\*(C'\fR or \f(CW\*(C`,\*(C'\fR (comma) operator, before a |
| function is called (but after the evaluation of its arguments and the |
| expression denoting the called function), and in certain other places. |
| Other than as expressed by the sequence point rules, the order of |
| evaluation of subexpressions of an expression is not specified. All |
| these rules describe only a partial order rather than a total order, |
| since, for example, if two functions are called within one expression |
| with no sequence point between them, the order in which the functions |
| are called is not specified. However, the standards committee have |
| ruled that function calls do not overlap. |
| .Sp |
| It is not specified when between sequence points modifications to the |
| values of objects take effect. Programs whose behavior depends on this |
| have undefined behavior; the C and \*(C+ standards specify that \*(L"Between |
| the previous and next sequence point an object shall have its stored |
| value modified at most once by the evaluation of an expression. |
| Furthermore, the prior value shall be read only to determine the value |
| to be stored.\*(R". If a program breaks these rules, the results on any |
| particular implementation are entirely unpredictable. |
| .Sp |
| Examples of code with undefined behavior are \f(CW\*(C`a = a++;\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`a[n] |
| = b[n++]\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`a[i++] = i;\*(C'\fR. Some more complicated cases are not |
| diagnosed by this option, and it may give an occasional false positive |
| result, but in general it has been found fairly effective at detecting |
| this sort of problem in programs. |
| .Sp |
| The standard is worded confusingly, therefore there is some debate |
| over the precise meaning of the sequence point rules in subtle cases. |
| Links to discussions of the problem, including proposed formal |
| definitions, may be found on the \s-1GCC\s0 readings page, at |
| <\fBhttp://gcc.gnu.org/readings.html\fR>. |
| .Sp |
| This warning is enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR for C and \*(C+. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-return\-local\-addr\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-return-local-addr" |
| Do not warn about returning a pointer (or in \*(C+, a reference) to a |
| variable that goes out of scope after the function returns. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wreturn\-type\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wreturn-type" |
| Warn whenever a function is defined with a return type that defaults |
| to \f(CW\*(C`int\*(C'\fR. Also warn about any \f(CW\*(C`return\*(C'\fR statement with no |
| return value in a function whose return type is not \f(CW\*(C`void\*(C'\fR |
| (falling off the end of the function body is considered returning |
| without a value), and about a \f(CW\*(C`return\*(C'\fR statement with an |
| expression in a function whose return type is \f(CW\*(C`void\*(C'\fR. |
| .Sp |
| For \*(C+, a function without return type always produces a diagnostic |
| message, even when \fB\-Wno\-return\-type\fR is specified. The only |
| exceptions are \fBmain\fR and functions defined in system headers. |
| .Sp |
| This warning is enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wswitch\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wswitch" |
| Warn whenever a \f(CW\*(C`switch\*(C'\fR statement has an index of enumerated type |
| and lacks a \f(CW\*(C`case\*(C'\fR for one or more of the named codes of that |
| enumeration. (The presence of a \f(CW\*(C`default\*(C'\fR label prevents this |
| warning.) \f(CW\*(C`case\*(C'\fR labels outside the enumeration range also |
| provoke warnings when this option is used (even if there is a |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`default\*(C'\fR label). |
| This warning is enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wswitch\-default\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wswitch-default" |
| Warn whenever a \f(CW\*(C`switch\*(C'\fR statement does not have a \f(CW\*(C`default\*(C'\fR |
| case. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wswitch\-enum\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wswitch-enum" |
| Warn whenever a \f(CW\*(C`switch\*(C'\fR statement has an index of enumerated type |
| and lacks a \f(CW\*(C`case\*(C'\fR for one or more of the named codes of that |
| enumeration. \f(CW\*(C`case\*(C'\fR labels outside the enumeration range also |
| provoke warnings when this option is used. The only difference |
| between \fB\-Wswitch\fR and this option is that this option gives a |
| warning about an omitted enumeration code even if there is a |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`default\*(C'\fR label. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wsync\-nand\fR (C and \*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wsync-nand (C and only)" |
| Warn when \f(CW\*(C`_\|_sync_fetch_and_nand\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`_\|_sync_nand_and_fetch\*(C'\fR |
| built-in functions are used. These functions changed semantics in \s-1GCC\s0 4.4. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wtrigraphs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wtrigraphs" |
| Warn if any trigraphs are encountered that might change the meaning of |
| the program (trigraphs within comments are not warned about). |
| This warning is enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wunused\-but\-set\-parameter\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wunused-but-set-parameter" |
| Warn whenever a function parameter is assigned to, but otherwise unused |
| (aside from its declaration). |
| .Sp |
| To suppress this warning use the \fBunused\fR attribute. |
| .Sp |
| This warning is also enabled by \fB\-Wunused\fR together with |
| \&\fB\-Wextra\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wunused\-but\-set\-variable\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wunused-but-set-variable" |
| Warn whenever a local variable is assigned to, but otherwise unused |
| (aside from its declaration). |
| This warning is enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .Sp |
| To suppress this warning use the \fBunused\fR attribute. |
| .Sp |
| This warning is also enabled by \fB\-Wunused\fR, which is enabled |
| by \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wunused\-function\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wunused-function" |
| Warn whenever a static function is declared but not defined or a |
| non-inline static function is unused. |
| This warning is enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wunused\-label\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wunused-label" |
| Warn whenever a label is declared but not used. |
| This warning is enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .Sp |
| To suppress this warning use the \fBunused\fR attribute. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wunused\-local\-typedefs\fR (C, Objective-C, \*(C+ and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wunused-local-typedefs (C, Objective-C, and Objective- only)" |
| Warn when a typedef locally defined in a function is not used. |
| This warning is enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wunused\-parameter\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wunused-parameter" |
| Warn whenever a function parameter is unused aside from its declaration. |
| .Sp |
| To suppress this warning use the \fBunused\fR attribute. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-unused\-result\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-unused-result" |
| Do not warn if a caller of a function marked with attribute |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`warn_unused_result\*(C'\fR does not use |
| its return value. The default is \fB\-Wunused\-result\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wunused\-variable\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wunused-variable" |
| Warn whenever a local variable or non-constant static variable is unused |
| aside from its declaration. |
| This warning is enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .Sp |
| To suppress this warning use the \fBunused\fR attribute. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wunused\-value\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wunused-value" |
| Warn whenever a statement computes a result that is explicitly not |
| used. To suppress this warning cast the unused expression to |
| \&\fBvoid\fR. This includes an expression-statement or the left-hand |
| side of a comma expression that contains no side effects. For example, |
| an expression such as \fBx[i,j]\fR causes a warning, while |
| \&\fBx[(void)i,j]\fR does not. |
| .Sp |
| This warning is enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wunused\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wunused" |
| All the above \fB\-Wunused\fR options combined. |
| .Sp |
| In order to get a warning about an unused function parameter, you must |
| either specify \fB\-Wextra \-Wunused\fR (note that \fB\-Wall\fR implies |
| \&\fB\-Wunused\fR), or separately specify \fB\-Wunused\-parameter\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wuninitialized\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wuninitialized" |
| Warn if an automatic variable is used without first being initialized |
| or if a variable may be clobbered by a \f(CW\*(C`setjmp\*(C'\fR call. In \*(C+, |
| warn if a non-static reference or non-static \fBconst\fR member |
| appears in a class without constructors. |
| .Sp |
| If you want to warn about code that uses the uninitialized value of the |
| variable in its own initializer, use the \fB\-Winit\-self\fR option. |
| .Sp |
| These warnings occur for individual uninitialized or clobbered |
| elements of structure, union or array variables as well as for |
| variables that are uninitialized or clobbered as a whole. They do |
| not occur for variables or elements declared \f(CW\*(C`volatile\*(C'\fR. Because |
| these warnings depend on optimization, the exact variables or elements |
| for which there are warnings depends on the precise optimization |
| options and version of \s-1GCC\s0 used. |
| .Sp |
| Note that there may be no warning about a variable that is used only |
| to compute a value that itself is never used, because such |
| computations may be deleted by data flow analysis before the warnings |
| are printed. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wmaybe\-uninitialized\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wmaybe-uninitialized" |
| For an automatic variable, if there exists a path from the function |
| entry to a use of the variable that is initialized, but there exist |
| some other paths for which the variable is not initialized, the compiler |
| emits a warning if it cannot prove the uninitialized paths are not |
| executed at run time. These warnings are made optional because \s-1GCC\s0 is |
| not smart enough to see all the reasons why the code might be correct |
| in spite of appearing to have an error. Here is one example of how |
| this can happen: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 12 |
| \& { |
| \& int x; |
| \& switch (y) |
| \& { |
| \& case 1: x = 1; |
| \& break; |
| \& case 2: x = 4; |
| \& break; |
| \& case 3: x = 5; |
| \& } |
| \& foo (x); |
| \& } |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| If the value of \f(CW\*(C`y\*(C'\fR is always 1, 2 or 3, then \f(CW\*(C`x\*(C'\fR is |
| always initialized, but \s-1GCC\s0 doesn't know this. To suppress the |
| warning, you need to provide a default case with \fIassert\fR\|(0) or |
| similar code. |
| .Sp |
| This option also warns when a non-volatile automatic variable might be |
| changed by a call to \f(CW\*(C`longjmp\*(C'\fR. These warnings as well are possible |
| only in optimizing compilation. |
| .Sp |
| The compiler sees only the calls to \f(CW\*(C`setjmp\*(C'\fR. It cannot know |
| where \f(CW\*(C`longjmp\*(C'\fR will be called; in fact, a signal handler could |
| call it at any point in the code. As a result, you may get a warning |
| even when there is in fact no problem because \f(CW\*(C`longjmp\*(C'\fR cannot |
| in fact be called at the place that would cause a problem. |
| .Sp |
| Some spurious warnings can be avoided if you declare all the functions |
| you use that never return as \f(CW\*(C`noreturn\*(C'\fR. |
| .Sp |
| This warning is enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR or \fB\-Wextra\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wunknown\-pragmas\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wunknown-pragmas" |
| Warn when a \f(CW\*(C`#pragma\*(C'\fR directive is encountered that is not understood by |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0. If this command-line option is used, warnings are even issued |
| for unknown pragmas in system header files. This is not the case if |
| the warnings are only enabled by the \fB\-Wall\fR command-line option. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-pragmas\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-pragmas" |
| Do not warn about misuses of pragmas, such as incorrect parameters, |
| invalid syntax, or conflicts between pragmas. See also |
| \&\fB\-Wunknown\-pragmas\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wstrict\-aliasing\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wstrict-aliasing" |
| This option is only active when \fB\-fstrict\-aliasing\fR is active. |
| It warns about code that might break the strict aliasing rules that the |
| compiler is using for optimization. The warning does not catch all |
| cases, but does attempt to catch the more common pitfalls. It is |
| included in \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| It is equivalent to \fB\-Wstrict\-aliasing=3\fR |
| .IP "\fB\-Wstrict\-aliasing=n\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wstrict-aliasing=n" |
| This option is only active when \fB\-fstrict\-aliasing\fR is active. |
| It warns about code that might break the strict aliasing rules that the |
| compiler is using for optimization. |
| Higher levels correspond to higher accuracy (fewer false positives). |
| Higher levels also correspond to more effort, similar to the way \fB\-O\fR |
| works. |
| \&\fB\-Wstrict\-aliasing\fR is equivalent to \fB\-Wstrict\-aliasing=3\fR. |
| .Sp |
| Level 1: Most aggressive, quick, least accurate. |
| Possibly useful when higher levels |
| do not warn but \fB\-fstrict\-aliasing\fR still breaks the code, as it has very few |
| false negatives. However, it has many false positives. |
| Warns for all pointer conversions between possibly incompatible types, |
| even if never dereferenced. Runs in the front end only. |
| .Sp |
| Level 2: Aggressive, quick, not too precise. |
| May still have many false positives (not as many as level 1 though), |
| and few false negatives (but possibly more than level 1). |
| Unlike level 1, it only warns when an address is taken. Warns about |
| incomplete types. Runs in the front end only. |
| .Sp |
| Level 3 (default for \fB\-Wstrict\-aliasing\fR): |
| Should have very few false positives and few false |
| negatives. Slightly slower than levels 1 or 2 when optimization is enabled. |
| Takes care of the common pun+dereference pattern in the front end: |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`*(int*)&some_float\*(C'\fR. |
| If optimization is enabled, it also runs in the back end, where it deals |
| with multiple statement cases using flow-sensitive points-to information. |
| Only warns when the converted pointer is dereferenced. |
| Does not warn about incomplete types. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wstrict\-overflow\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wstrict-overflow" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-Wstrict\-overflow=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wstrict-overflow=n" |
| .PD |
| This option is only active when \fB\-fstrict\-overflow\fR is active. |
| It warns about cases where the compiler optimizes based on the |
| assumption that signed overflow does not occur. Note that it does not |
| warn about all cases where the code might overflow: it only warns |
| about cases where the compiler implements some optimization. Thus |
| this warning depends on the optimization level. |
| .Sp |
| An optimization that assumes that signed overflow does not occur is |
| perfectly safe if the values of the variables involved are such that |
| overflow never does, in fact, occur. Therefore this warning can |
| easily give a false positive: a warning about code that is not |
| actually a problem. To help focus on important issues, several |
| warning levels are defined. No warnings are issued for the use of |
| undefined signed overflow when estimating how many iterations a loop |
| requires, in particular when determining whether a loop will be |
| executed at all. |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fB\-Wstrict\-overflow=1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wstrict-overflow=1" |
| Warn about cases that are both questionable and easy to avoid. For |
| example, with \fB\-fstrict\-overflow\fR, the compiler simplifies |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`x + 1 > x\*(C'\fR to \f(CW1\fR. This level of |
| \&\fB\-Wstrict\-overflow\fR is enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR; higher levels |
| are not, and must be explicitly requested. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wstrict\-overflow=2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wstrict-overflow=2" |
| Also warn about other cases where a comparison is simplified to a |
| constant. For example: \f(CW\*(C`abs (x) >= 0\*(C'\fR. This can only be |
| simplified when \fB\-fstrict\-overflow\fR is in effect, because |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`abs (INT_MIN)\*(C'\fR overflows to \f(CW\*(C`INT_MIN\*(C'\fR, which is less than |
| zero. \fB\-Wstrict\-overflow\fR (with no level) is the same as |
| \&\fB\-Wstrict\-overflow=2\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wstrict\-overflow=3\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wstrict-overflow=3" |
| Also warn about other cases where a comparison is simplified. For |
| example: \f(CW\*(C`x + 1 > 1\*(C'\fR is simplified to \f(CW\*(C`x > 0\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wstrict\-overflow=4\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wstrict-overflow=4" |
| Also warn about other simplifications not covered by the above cases. |
| For example: \f(CW\*(C`(x * 10) / 5\*(C'\fR is simplified to \f(CW\*(C`x * 2\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wstrict\-overflow=5\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wstrict-overflow=5" |
| Also warn about cases where the compiler reduces the magnitude of a |
| constant involved in a comparison. For example: \f(CW\*(C`x + 2 > y\*(C'\fR is |
| simplified to \f(CW\*(C`x + 1 >= y\*(C'\fR. This is reported only at the |
| highest warning level because this simplification applies to many |
| comparisons, so this warning level gives a very large number of |
| false positives. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-Wsuggest\-attribute=\fR[\fBpure\fR|\fBconst\fR|\fBnoreturn\fR|\fBformat\fR]" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wsuggest-attribute=[pure|const|noreturn|format]" |
| Warn for cases where adding an attribute may be beneficial. The |
| attributes currently supported are listed below. |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fB\-Wsuggest\-attribute=pure\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wsuggest-attribute=pure" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-Wsuggest\-attribute=const\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wsuggest-attribute=const" |
| .IP "\fB\-Wsuggest\-attribute=noreturn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wsuggest-attribute=noreturn" |
| .PD |
| Warn about functions that might be candidates for attributes |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`pure\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`const\*(C'\fR or \f(CW\*(C`noreturn\*(C'\fR. The compiler only warns for |
| functions visible in other compilation units or (in the case of \f(CW\*(C`pure\*(C'\fR and |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`const\*(C'\fR) if it cannot prove that the function returns normally. A function |
| returns normally if it doesn't contain an infinite loop or return abnormally |
| by throwing, calling \f(CW\*(C`abort()\*(C'\fR or trapping. This analysis requires option |
| \&\fB\-fipa\-pure\-const\fR, which is enabled by default at \fB\-O\fR and |
| higher. Higher optimization levels improve the accuracy of the analysis. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wsuggest\-attribute=format\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wsuggest-attribute=format" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-Wmissing\-format\-attribute\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wmissing-format-attribute" |
| .PD |
| Warn about function pointers that might be candidates for \f(CW\*(C`format\*(C'\fR |
| attributes. Note these are only possible candidates, not absolute ones. |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 guesses that function pointers with \f(CW\*(C`format\*(C'\fR attributes that |
| are used in assignment, initialization, parameter passing or return |
| statements should have a corresponding \f(CW\*(C`format\*(C'\fR attribute in the |
| resulting type. I.e. the left-hand side of the assignment or |
| initialization, the type of the parameter variable, or the return type |
| of the containing function respectively should also have a \f(CW\*(C`format\*(C'\fR |
| attribute to avoid the warning. |
| .Sp |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 also warns about function definitions that might be |
| candidates for \f(CW\*(C`format\*(C'\fR attributes. Again, these are only |
| possible candidates. \s-1GCC\s0 guesses that \f(CW\*(C`format\*(C'\fR attributes |
| might be appropriate for any function that calls a function like |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`vprintf\*(C'\fR or \f(CW\*(C`vscanf\*(C'\fR, but this might not always be the |
| case, and some functions for which \f(CW\*(C`format\*(C'\fR attributes are |
| appropriate may not be detected. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-Warray\-bounds\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Warray-bounds" |
| This option is only active when \fB\-ftree\-vrp\fR is active |
| (default for \fB\-O2\fR and above). It warns about subscripts to arrays |
| that are always out of bounds. This warning is enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-div\-by\-zero\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-div-by-zero" |
| Do not warn about compile-time integer division by zero. Floating-point |
| division by zero is not warned about, as it can be a legitimate way of |
| obtaining infinities and NaNs. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wsystem\-headers\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wsystem-headers" |
| Print warning messages for constructs found in system header files. |
| Warnings from system headers are normally suppressed, on the assumption |
| that they usually do not indicate real problems and would only make the |
| compiler output harder to read. Using this command-line option tells |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 to emit warnings from system headers as if they occurred in user |
| code. However, note that using \fB\-Wall\fR in conjunction with this |
| option does \fInot\fR warn about unknown pragmas in system |
| headers\-\-\-for that, \fB\-Wunknown\-pragmas\fR must also be used. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wtrampolines\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wtrampolines" |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& Warn about trampolines generated for pointers to nested functions. |
| \& |
| \& A trampoline is a small piece of data or code that is created at run |
| \& time on the stack when the address of a nested function is taken, and |
| \& is used to call the nested function indirectly. For some targets, it |
| \& is made up of data only and thus requires no special treatment. But, |
| \& for most targets, it is made up of code and thus requires the stack |
| \& to be made executable in order for the program to work properly. |
| .Ve |
| .IP "\fB\-Wfloat\-equal\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wfloat-equal" |
| Warn if floating-point values are used in equality comparisons. |
| .Sp |
| The idea behind this is that sometimes it is convenient (for the |
| programmer) to consider floating-point values as approximations to |
| infinitely precise real numbers. If you are doing this, then you need |
| to compute (by analyzing the code, or in some other way) the maximum or |
| likely maximum error that the computation introduces, and allow for it |
| when performing comparisons (and when producing output, but that's a |
| different problem). In particular, instead of testing for equality, you |
| should check to see whether the two values have ranges that overlap; and |
| this is done with the relational operators, so equality comparisons are |
| probably mistaken. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wtraditional\fR (C and Objective-C only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wtraditional (C and Objective-C only)" |
| Warn about certain constructs that behave differently in traditional and |
| \&\s-1ISO\s0 C. Also warn about \s-1ISO\s0 C constructs that have no traditional C |
| equivalent, and/or problematic constructs that should be avoided. |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Macro parameters that appear within string literals in the macro body. |
| In traditional C macro replacement takes place within string literals, |
| but in \s-1ISO\s0 C it does not. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| In traditional C, some preprocessor directives did not exist. |
| Traditional preprocessors only considered a line to be a directive |
| if the \fB#\fR appeared in column 1 on the line. Therefore |
| \&\fB\-Wtraditional\fR warns about directives that traditional C |
| understands but ignores because the \fB#\fR does not appear as the |
| first character on the line. It also suggests you hide directives like |
| \&\fB#pragma\fR not understood by traditional C by indenting them. Some |
| traditional implementations do not recognize \fB#elif\fR, so this option |
| suggests avoiding it altogether. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| A function-like macro that appears without arguments. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| The unary plus operator. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| The \fBU\fR integer constant suffix, or the \fBF\fR or \fBL\fR floating-point |
| constant suffixes. (Traditional C does support the \fBL\fR suffix on integer |
| constants.) Note, these suffixes appear in macros defined in the system |
| headers of most modern systems, e.g. the \fB_MIN\fR/\fB_MAX\fR macros in \f(CW\*(C`<limits.h>\*(C'\fR. |
| Use of these macros in user code might normally lead to spurious |
| warnings, however \s-1GCC\s0's integrated preprocessor has enough context to |
| avoid warning in these cases. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| A function declared external in one block and then used after the end of |
| the block. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| A \f(CW\*(C`switch\*(C'\fR statement has an operand of type \f(CW\*(C`long\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| A non\-\f(CW\*(C`static\*(C'\fR function declaration follows a \f(CW\*(C`static\*(C'\fR one. |
| This construct is not accepted by some traditional C compilers. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| The \s-1ISO\s0 type of an integer constant has a different width or |
| signedness from its traditional type. This warning is only issued if |
| the base of the constant is ten. I.e. hexadecimal or octal values, which |
| typically represent bit patterns, are not warned about. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Usage of \s-1ISO\s0 string concatenation is detected. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Initialization of automatic aggregates. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Identifier conflicts with labels. Traditional C lacks a separate |
| namespace for labels. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Initialization of unions. If the initializer is zero, the warning is |
| omitted. This is done under the assumption that the zero initializer in |
| user code appears conditioned on e.g. \f(CW\*(C`_\|_STDC_\|_\*(C'\fR to avoid missing |
| initializer warnings and relies on default initialization to zero in the |
| traditional C case. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Conversions by prototypes between fixed/floating\-point values and vice |
| versa. The absence of these prototypes when compiling with traditional |
| C causes serious problems. This is a subset of the possible |
| conversion warnings; for the full set use \fB\-Wtraditional\-conversion\fR. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Use of \s-1ISO\s0 C style function definitions. This warning intentionally is |
| \&\fInot\fR issued for prototype declarations or variadic functions |
| because these \s-1ISO\s0 C features appear in your code when using |
| libiberty's traditional C compatibility macros, \f(CW\*(C`PARAMS\*(C'\fR and |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`VPARAMS\*(C'\fR. This warning is also bypassed for nested functions |
| because that feature is already a \s-1GCC\s0 extension and thus not relevant to |
| traditional C compatibility. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-Wtraditional\-conversion\fR (C and Objective-C only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wtraditional-conversion (C and Objective-C only)" |
| Warn if a prototype causes a type conversion that is different from what |
| would happen to the same argument in the absence of a prototype. This |
| includes conversions of fixed point to floating and vice versa, and |
| conversions changing the width or signedness of a fixed-point argument |
| except when the same as the default promotion. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wdeclaration\-after\-statement\fR (C and Objective-C only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wdeclaration-after-statement (C and Objective-C only)" |
| Warn when a declaration is found after a statement in a block. This |
| construct, known from \*(C+, was introduced with \s-1ISO\s0 C99 and is by default |
| allowed in \s-1GCC\s0. It is not supported by \s-1ISO\s0 C90 and was not supported by |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 versions before \s-1GCC\s0 3.0. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wundef\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wundef" |
| Warn if an undefined identifier is evaluated in an \fB#if\fR directive. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-endif\-labels\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-endif-labels" |
| Do not warn whenever an \fB#else\fR or an \fB#endif\fR are followed by text. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wshadow\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wshadow" |
| Warn whenever a local variable or type declaration shadows another variable, |
| parameter, type, or class member (in \*(C+), or whenever a built-in function |
| is shadowed. Note that in \*(C+, the compiler warns if a local variable |
| shadows an explicit typedef, but not if it shadows a struct/class/enum. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wlarger\-than=\fR\fIlen\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wlarger-than=len" |
| Warn whenever an object of larger than \fIlen\fR bytes is defined. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wframe\-larger\-than=\fR\fIlen\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wframe-larger-than=len" |
| Warn if the size of a function frame is larger than \fIlen\fR bytes. |
| The computation done to determine the stack frame size is approximate |
| and not conservative. |
| The actual requirements may be somewhat greater than \fIlen\fR |
| even if you do not get a warning. In addition, any space allocated |
| via \f(CW\*(C`alloca\*(C'\fR, variable-length arrays, or related constructs |
| is not included by the compiler when determining |
| whether or not to issue a warning. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-free\-nonheap\-object\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-free-nonheap-object" |
| Do not warn when attempting to free an object that was not allocated |
| on the heap. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wstack\-usage=\fR\fIlen\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wstack-usage=len" |
| Warn if the stack usage of a function might be larger than \fIlen\fR bytes. |
| The computation done to determine the stack usage is conservative. |
| Any space allocated via \f(CW\*(C`alloca\*(C'\fR, variable-length arrays, or related |
| constructs is included by the compiler when determining whether or not to |
| issue a warning. |
| .Sp |
| The message is in keeping with the output of \fB\-fstack\-usage\fR. |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| If the stack usage is fully static but exceeds the specified amount, it's: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& warning: stack usage is 1120 bytes |
| .Ve |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| If the stack usage is (partly) dynamic but bounded, it's: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& warning: stack usage might be 1648 bytes |
| .Ve |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| If the stack usage is (partly) dynamic and not bounded, it's: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& warning: stack usage might be unbounded |
| .Ve |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-Wunsafe\-loop\-optimizations\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wunsafe-loop-optimizations" |
| Warn if the loop cannot be optimized because the compiler cannot |
| assume anything on the bounds of the loop indices. With |
| \&\fB\-funsafe\-loop\-optimizations\fR warn if the compiler makes |
| such assumptions. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-pedantic\-ms\-format\fR (MinGW targets only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-pedantic-ms-format (MinGW targets only)" |
| When used in combination with \fB\-Wformat\fR |
| and \fB\-pedantic\fR without \s-1GNU\s0 extensions, this option |
| disables the warnings about non-ISO \f(CW\*(C`printf\*(C'\fR / \f(CW\*(C`scanf\*(C'\fR format |
| width specifiers \f(CW\*(C`I32\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`I64\*(C'\fR, and \f(CW\*(C`I\*(C'\fR used on Windows targets, |
| which depend on the \s-1MS\s0 runtime. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wpointer\-arith\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wpointer-arith" |
| Warn about anything that depends on the \*(L"size of\*(R" a function type or |
| of \f(CW\*(C`void\*(C'\fR. \s-1GNU\s0 C assigns these types a size of 1, for |
| convenience in calculations with \f(CW\*(C`void *\*(C'\fR pointers and pointers |
| to functions. In \*(C+, warn also when an arithmetic operation involves |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`NULL\*(C'\fR. This warning is also enabled by \fB\-Wpedantic\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wtype\-limits\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wtype-limits" |
| Warn if a comparison is always true or always false due to the limited |
| range of the data type, but do not warn for constant expressions. For |
| example, warn if an unsigned variable is compared against zero with |
| \&\fB<\fR or \fB>=\fR. This warning is also enabled by |
| \&\fB\-Wextra\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wbad\-function\-cast\fR (C and Objective-C only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wbad-function-cast (C and Objective-C only)" |
| Warn whenever a function call is cast to a non-matching type. |
| For example, warn if \f(CW\*(C`int malloc()\*(C'\fR is cast to \f(CW\*(C`anything *\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wc++\-compat\fR (C and Objective-C only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wc++-compat (C and Objective-C only)" |
| Warn about \s-1ISO\s0 C constructs that are outside of the common subset of |
| \&\s-1ISO\s0 C and \s-1ISO\s0 \*(C+, e.g. request for implicit conversion from |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`void *\*(C'\fR to a pointer to non\-\f(CW\*(C`void\*(C'\fR type. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wc++11\-compat\fR (\*(C+ and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wc++11-compat ( and Objective- only)" |
| Warn about \*(C+ constructs whose meaning differs between \s-1ISO\s0 \*(C+ 1998 |
| and \s-1ISO\s0 \*(C+ 2011, e.g., identifiers in \s-1ISO\s0 \*(C+ 1998 that are keywords |
| in \s-1ISO\s0 \*(C+ 2011. This warning turns on \fB\-Wnarrowing\fR and is |
| enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wcast\-qual\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wcast-qual" |
| Warn whenever a pointer is cast so as to remove a type qualifier from |
| the target type. For example, warn if a \f(CW\*(C`const char *\*(C'\fR is cast |
| to an ordinary \f(CW\*(C`char *\*(C'\fR. |
| .Sp |
| Also warn when making a cast that introduces a type qualifier in an |
| unsafe way. For example, casting \f(CW\*(C`char **\*(C'\fR to \f(CW\*(C`const char **\*(C'\fR |
| is unsafe, as in this example: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 6 |
| \& /* p is char ** value. */ |
| \& const char **q = (const char **) p; |
| \& /* Assignment of readonly string to const char * is OK. */ |
| \& *q = "string"; |
| \& /* Now char** pointer points to read\-only memory. */ |
| \& **p = \*(Aqb\*(Aq; |
| .Ve |
| .IP "\fB\-Wcast\-align\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wcast-align" |
| Warn whenever a pointer is cast such that the required alignment of the |
| target is increased. For example, warn if a \f(CW\*(C`char *\*(C'\fR is cast to |
| an \f(CW\*(C`int *\*(C'\fR on machines where integers can only be accessed at |
| two\- or four-byte boundaries. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wwrite\-strings\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wwrite-strings" |
| When compiling C, give string constants the type \f(CW\*(C`const |
| char[\f(CIlength\f(CW]\*(C'\fR so that copying the address of one into a |
| non\-\f(CW\*(C`const\*(C'\fR \f(CW\*(C`char *\*(C'\fR pointer produces a warning. These |
| warnings help you find at compile time code that can try to write |
| into a string constant, but only if you have been very careful about |
| using \f(CW\*(C`const\*(C'\fR in declarations and prototypes. Otherwise, it is |
| just a nuisance. This is why we did not make \fB\-Wall\fR request |
| these warnings. |
| .Sp |
| When compiling \*(C+, warn about the deprecated conversion from string |
| literals to \f(CW\*(C`char *\*(C'\fR. This warning is enabled by default for \*(C+ |
| programs. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wclobbered\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wclobbered" |
| Warn for variables that might be changed by \fBlongjmp\fR or |
| \&\fBvfork\fR. This warning is also enabled by \fB\-Wextra\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wconversion\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wconversion" |
| Warn for implicit conversions that may alter a value. This includes |
| conversions between real and integer, like \f(CW\*(C`abs (x)\*(C'\fR when |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`x\*(C'\fR is \f(CW\*(C`double\*(C'\fR; conversions between signed and unsigned, |
| like \f(CW\*(C`unsigned ui = \-1\*(C'\fR; and conversions to smaller types, like |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`sqrtf (M_PI)\*(C'\fR. Do not warn for explicit casts like \f(CW\*(C`abs |
| ((int) x)\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`ui = (unsigned) \-1\*(C'\fR, or if the value is not |
| changed by the conversion like in \f(CW\*(C`abs (2.0)\*(C'\fR. Warnings about |
| conversions between signed and unsigned integers can be disabled by |
| using \fB\-Wno\-sign\-conversion\fR. |
| .Sp |
| For \*(C+, also warn for confusing overload resolution for user-defined |
| conversions; and conversions that never use a type conversion |
| operator: conversions to \f(CW\*(C`void\*(C'\fR, the same type, a base class or a |
| reference to them. Warnings about conversions between signed and |
| unsigned integers are disabled by default in \*(C+ unless |
| \&\fB\-Wsign\-conversion\fR is explicitly enabled. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-conversion\-null\fR (\*(C+ and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-conversion-null ( and Objective- only)" |
| Do not warn for conversions between \f(CW\*(C`NULL\*(C'\fR and non-pointer |
| types. \fB\-Wconversion\-null\fR is enabled by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wzero\-as\-null\-pointer\-constant\fR (\*(C+ and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wzero-as-null-pointer-constant ( and Objective- only)" |
| Warn when a literal '0' is used as null pointer constant. This can |
| be useful to facilitate the conversion to \f(CW\*(C`nullptr\*(C'\fR in \*(C+11. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wuseless\-cast\fR (\*(C+ and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wuseless-cast ( and Objective- only)" |
| Warn when an expression is casted to its own type. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wempty\-body\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wempty-body" |
| Warn if an empty body occurs in an \fBif\fR, \fBelse\fR or \fBdo |
| while\fR statement. This warning is also enabled by \fB\-Wextra\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wenum\-compare\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wenum-compare" |
| Warn about a comparison between values of different enumerated types. |
| In \*(C+ enumeral mismatches in conditional expressions are also |
| diagnosed and the warning is enabled by default. In C this warning is |
| enabled by \fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wjump\-misses\-init\fR (C, Objective-C only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wjump-misses-init (C, Objective-C only)" |
| Warn if a \f(CW\*(C`goto\*(C'\fR statement or a \f(CW\*(C`switch\*(C'\fR statement jumps |
| forward across the initialization of a variable, or jumps backward to a |
| label after the variable has been initialized. This only warns about |
| variables that are initialized when they are declared. This warning is |
| only supported for C and Objective-C; in \*(C+ this sort of branch is an |
| error in any case. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-Wjump\-misses\-init\fR is included in \fB\-Wc++\-compat\fR. It |
| can be disabled with the \fB\-Wno\-jump\-misses\-init\fR option. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wsign\-compare\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wsign-compare" |
| Warn when a comparison between signed and unsigned values could produce |
| an incorrect result when the signed value is converted to unsigned. |
| This warning is also enabled by \fB\-Wextra\fR; to get the other warnings |
| of \fB\-Wextra\fR without this warning, use \fB\-Wextra \-Wno\-sign\-compare\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wsign\-conversion\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wsign-conversion" |
| Warn for implicit conversions that may change the sign of an integer |
| value, like assigning a signed integer expression to an unsigned |
| integer variable. An explicit cast silences the warning. In C, this |
| option is enabled also by \fB\-Wconversion\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wsizeof\-pointer\-memaccess\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wsizeof-pointer-memaccess" |
| Warn for suspicious length parameters to certain string and memory built-in |
| functions if the argument uses \f(CW\*(C`sizeof\*(C'\fR. This warning warns e.g. |
| about \f(CW\*(C`memset (ptr, 0, sizeof (ptr));\*(C'\fR if \f(CW\*(C`ptr\*(C'\fR is not an array, |
| but a pointer, and suggests a possible fix, or about |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`memcpy (&foo, ptr, sizeof (&foo));\*(C'\fR. This warning is enabled by |
| \&\fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Waddress\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Waddress" |
| Warn about suspicious uses of memory addresses. These include using |
| the address of a function in a conditional expression, such as |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`void func(void); if (func)\*(C'\fR, and comparisons against the memory |
| address of a string literal, such as \f(CW\*(C`if (x == "abc")\*(C'\fR. Such |
| uses typically indicate a programmer error: the address of a function |
| always evaluates to true, so their use in a conditional usually |
| indicate that the programmer forgot the parentheses in a function |
| call; and comparisons against string literals result in unspecified |
| behavior and are not portable in C, so they usually indicate that the |
| programmer intended to use \f(CW\*(C`strcmp\*(C'\fR. This warning is enabled by |
| \&\fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wlogical\-op\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wlogical-op" |
| Warn about suspicious uses of logical operators in expressions. |
| This includes using logical operators in contexts where a |
| bit-wise operator is likely to be expected. |
| .IP "\fB\-Waggregate\-return\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Waggregate-return" |
| Warn if any functions that return structures or unions are defined or |
| called. (In languages where you can return an array, this also elicits |
| a warning.) |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-aggressive\-loop\-optimizations\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-aggressive-loop-optimizations" |
| Warn if in a loop with constant number of iterations the compiler detects |
| undefined behavior in some statement during one or more of the iterations. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-attributes\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-attributes" |
| Do not warn if an unexpected \f(CW\*(C`_\|_attribute_\|_\*(C'\fR is used, such as |
| unrecognized attributes, function attributes applied to variables, |
| etc. This does not stop errors for incorrect use of supported |
| attributes. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-builtin\-macro\-redefined\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-builtin-macro-redefined" |
| Do not warn if certain built-in macros are redefined. This suppresses |
| warnings for redefinition of \f(CW\*(C`_\|_TIMESTAMP_\|_\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`_\|_TIME_\|_\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_DATE_\|_\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`_\|_FILE_\|_\*(C'\fR, and \f(CW\*(C`_\|_BASE_FILE_\|_\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wstrict\-prototypes\fR (C and Objective-C only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wstrict-prototypes (C and Objective-C only)" |
| Warn if a function is declared or defined without specifying the |
| argument types. (An old-style function definition is permitted without |
| a warning if preceded by a declaration that specifies the argument |
| types.) |
| .IP "\fB\-Wold\-style\-declaration\fR (C and Objective-C only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wold-style-declaration (C and Objective-C only)" |
| Warn for obsolescent usages, according to the C Standard, in a |
| declaration. For example, warn if storage-class specifiers like |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`static\*(C'\fR are not the first things in a declaration. This warning |
| is also enabled by \fB\-Wextra\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wold\-style\-definition\fR (C and Objective-C only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wold-style-definition (C and Objective-C only)" |
| Warn if an old-style function definition is used. A warning is given |
| even if there is a previous prototype. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wmissing\-parameter\-type\fR (C and Objective-C only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wmissing-parameter-type (C and Objective-C only)" |
| A function parameter is declared without a type specifier in K&R\-style |
| functions: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& void foo(bar) { } |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| This warning is also enabled by \fB\-Wextra\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wmissing\-prototypes\fR (C and Objective-C only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wmissing-prototypes (C and Objective-C only)" |
| Warn if a global function is defined without a previous prototype |
| declaration. This warning is issued even if the definition itself |
| provides a prototype. Use this option to detect global functions |
| that do not have a matching prototype declaration in a header file. |
| This option is not valid for \*(C+ because all function declarations |
| provide prototypes and a non-matching declaration will declare an |
| overload rather than conflict with an earlier declaration. |
| Use \fB\-Wmissing\-declarations\fR to detect missing declarations in \*(C+. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wmissing\-declarations\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wmissing-declarations" |
| Warn if a global function is defined without a previous declaration. |
| Do so even if the definition itself provides a prototype. |
| Use this option to detect global functions that are not declared in |
| header files. In C, no warnings are issued for functions with previous |
| non-prototype declarations; use \fB\-Wmissing\-prototype\fR to detect |
| missing prototypes. In \*(C+, no warnings are issued for function templates, |
| or for inline functions, or for functions in anonymous namespaces. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wmissing\-field\-initializers\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wmissing-field-initializers" |
| Warn if a structure's initializer has some fields missing. For |
| example, the following code causes such a warning, because |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`x.h\*(C'\fR is implicitly zero: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 2 |
| \& struct s { int f, g, h; }; |
| \& struct s x = { 3, 4 }; |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| This option does not warn about designated initializers, so the following |
| modification does not trigger a warning: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 2 |
| \& struct s { int f, g, h; }; |
| \& struct s x = { .f = 3, .g = 4 }; |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| This warning is included in \fB\-Wextra\fR. To get other \fB\-Wextra\fR |
| warnings without this one, use \fB\-Wextra \-Wno\-missing\-field\-initializers\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-multichar\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-multichar" |
| Do not warn if a multicharacter constant (\fB'\s-1FOOF\s0'\fR) is used. |
| Usually they indicate a typo in the user's code, as they have |
| implementation-defined values, and should not be used in portable code. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wnormalized=<none|id|nfc|nfkc>\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wnormalized=<none|id|nfc|nfkc>" |
| In \s-1ISO\s0 C and \s-1ISO\s0 \*(C+, two identifiers are different if they are |
| different sequences of characters. However, sometimes when characters |
| outside the basic \s-1ASCII\s0 character set are used, you can have two |
| different character sequences that look the same. To avoid confusion, |
| the \s-1ISO\s0 10646 standard sets out some \fInormalization rules\fR which |
| when applied ensure that two sequences that look the same are turned into |
| the same sequence. \s-1GCC\s0 can warn you if you are using identifiers that |
| have not been normalized; this option controls that warning. |
| .Sp |
| There are four levels of warning supported by \s-1GCC\s0. The default is |
| \&\fB\-Wnormalized=nfc\fR, which warns about any identifier that is |
| not in the \s-1ISO\s0 10646 \*(L"C\*(R" normalized form, \fI\s-1NFC\s0\fR. \s-1NFC\s0 is the |
| recommended form for most uses. |
| .Sp |
| Unfortunately, there are some characters allowed in identifiers by |
| \&\s-1ISO\s0 C and \s-1ISO\s0 \*(C+ that, when turned into \s-1NFC\s0, are not allowed in |
| identifiers. That is, there's no way to use these symbols in portable |
| \&\s-1ISO\s0 C or \*(C+ and have all your identifiers in \s-1NFC\s0. |
| \&\fB\-Wnormalized=id\fR suppresses the warning for these characters. |
| It is hoped that future versions of the standards involved will correct |
| this, which is why this option is not the default. |
| .Sp |
| You can switch the warning off for all characters by writing |
| \&\fB\-Wnormalized=none\fR. You should only do this if you |
| are using some other normalization scheme (like \*(L"D\*(R"), because |
| otherwise you can easily create bugs that are literally impossible to see. |
| .Sp |
| Some characters in \s-1ISO\s0 10646 have distinct meanings but look identical |
| in some fonts or display methodologies, especially once formatting has |
| been applied. For instance \f(CW\*(C`\eu207F\*(C'\fR, \*(L"\s-1SUPERSCRIPT\s0 \s-1LATIN\s0 \s-1SMALL\s0 |
| \&\s-1LETTER\s0 N\*(R", displays just like a regular \f(CW\*(C`n\*(C'\fR that has been |
| placed in a superscript. \s-1ISO\s0 10646 defines the \fI\s-1NFKC\s0\fR |
| normalization scheme to convert all these into a standard form as |
| well, and \s-1GCC\s0 warns if your code is not in \s-1NFKC\s0 if you use |
| \&\fB\-Wnormalized=nfkc\fR. This warning is comparable to warning |
| about every identifier that contains the letter O because it might be |
| confused with the digit 0, and so is not the default, but may be |
| useful as a local coding convention if the programming environment |
| cannot be fixed to display these characters distinctly. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-deprecated\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-deprecated" |
| Do not warn about usage of deprecated features. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-deprecated\-declarations\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-deprecated-declarations" |
| Do not warn about uses of functions, |
| variables, and types marked as deprecated by using the \f(CW\*(C`deprecated\*(C'\fR |
| attribute. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-overflow\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-overflow" |
| Do not warn about compile-time overflow in constant expressions. |
| .IP "\fB\-Woverride\-init\fR (C and Objective-C only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Woverride-init (C and Objective-C only)" |
| Warn if an initialized field without side effects is overridden when |
| using designated initializers. |
| .Sp |
| This warning is included in \fB\-Wextra\fR. To get other |
| \&\fB\-Wextra\fR warnings without this one, use \fB\-Wextra |
| \&\-Wno\-override\-init\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wpacked\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wpacked" |
| Warn if a structure is given the packed attribute, but the packed |
| attribute has no effect on the layout or size of the structure. |
| Such structures may be mis-aligned for little benefit. For |
| instance, in this code, the variable \f(CW\*(C`f.x\*(C'\fR in \f(CW\*(C`struct bar\*(C'\fR |
| is misaligned even though \f(CW\*(C`struct bar\*(C'\fR does not itself |
| have the packed attribute: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 8 |
| \& struct foo { |
| \& int x; |
| \& char a, b, c, d; |
| \& } _\|_attribute_\|_((packed)); |
| \& struct bar { |
| \& char z; |
| \& struct foo f; |
| \& }; |
| .Ve |
| .IP "\fB\-Wpacked\-bitfield\-compat\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wpacked-bitfield-compat" |
| The 4.1, 4.2 and 4.3 series of \s-1GCC\s0 ignore the \f(CW\*(C`packed\*(C'\fR attribute |
| on bit-fields of type \f(CW\*(C`char\*(C'\fR. This has been fixed in \s-1GCC\s0 4.4 but |
| the change can lead to differences in the structure layout. \s-1GCC\s0 |
| informs you when the offset of such a field has changed in \s-1GCC\s0 4.4. |
| For example there is no longer a 4\-bit padding between field \f(CW\*(C`a\*(C'\fR |
| and \f(CW\*(C`b\*(C'\fR in this structure: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 5 |
| \& struct foo |
| \& { |
| \& char a:4; |
| \& char b:8; |
| \& } _\|_attribute_\|_ ((packed)); |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| This warning is enabled by default. Use |
| \&\fB\-Wno\-packed\-bitfield\-compat\fR to disable this warning. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wpadded\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wpadded" |
| Warn if padding is included in a structure, either to align an element |
| of the structure or to align the whole structure. Sometimes when this |
| happens it is possible to rearrange the fields of the structure to |
| reduce the padding and so make the structure smaller. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wredundant\-decls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wredundant-decls" |
| Warn if anything is declared more than once in the same scope, even in |
| cases where multiple declaration is valid and changes nothing. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wnested\-externs\fR (C and Objective-C only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wnested-externs (C and Objective-C only)" |
| Warn if an \f(CW\*(C`extern\*(C'\fR declaration is encountered within a function. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-inherited\-variadic\-ctor\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-inherited-variadic-ctor" |
| Suppress warnings about use of \*(C+11 inheriting constructors when the |
| base class inherited from has a C variadic constructor; the warning is |
| on by default because the ellipsis is not inherited. |
| .IP "\fB\-Winline\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Winline" |
| Warn if a function that is declared as inline cannot be inlined. |
| Even with this option, the compiler does not warn about failures to |
| inline functions declared in system headers. |
| .Sp |
| The compiler uses a variety of heuristics to determine whether or not |
| to inline a function. For example, the compiler takes into account |
| the size of the function being inlined and the amount of inlining |
| that has already been done in the current function. Therefore, |
| seemingly insignificant changes in the source program can cause the |
| warnings produced by \fB\-Winline\fR to appear or disappear. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-invalid\-offsetof\fR (\*(C+ and Objective\-\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-invalid-offsetof ( and Objective- only)" |
| Suppress warnings from applying the \fBoffsetof\fR macro to a non-POD |
| type. According to the 1998 \s-1ISO\s0 \*(C+ standard, applying \fBoffsetof\fR |
| to a non-POD type is undefined. In existing \*(C+ implementations, |
| however, \fBoffsetof\fR typically gives meaningful results even when |
| applied to certain kinds of non-POD types (such as a simple |
| \&\fBstruct\fR that fails to be a \s-1POD\s0 type only by virtue of having a |
| constructor). This flag is for users who are aware that they are |
| writing nonportable code and who have deliberately chosen to ignore the |
| warning about it. |
| .Sp |
| The restrictions on \fBoffsetof\fR may be relaxed in a future version |
| of the \*(C+ standard. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-int\-to\-pointer\-cast\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-int-to-pointer-cast" |
| Suppress warnings from casts to pointer type of an integer of a |
| different size. In \*(C+, casting to a pointer type of smaller size is |
| an error. \fBWint-to-pointer-cast\fR is enabled by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-pointer\-to\-int\-cast\fR (C and Objective-C only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-pointer-to-int-cast (C and Objective-C only)" |
| Suppress warnings from casts from a pointer to an integer type of a |
| different size. |
| .IP "\fB\-Winvalid\-pch\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Winvalid-pch" |
| Warn if a precompiled header is found in |
| the search path but can't be used. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wlong\-long\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wlong-long" |
| Warn if \fBlong long\fR type is used. This is enabled by either |
| \&\fB\-Wpedantic\fR or \fB\-Wtraditional\fR in \s-1ISO\s0 C90 and \*(C+98 |
| modes. To inhibit the warning messages, use \fB\-Wno\-long\-long\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wvariadic\-macros\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wvariadic-macros" |
| Warn if variadic macros are used in pedantic \s-1ISO\s0 C90 mode, or the \s-1GNU\s0 |
| alternate syntax when in pedantic \s-1ISO\s0 C99 mode. This is default. |
| To inhibit the warning messages, use \fB\-Wno\-variadic\-macros\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wvarargs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wvarargs" |
| Warn upon questionable usage of the macros used to handle variable |
| arguments like \fBva_start\fR. This is default. To inhibit the |
| warning messages, use \fB\-Wno\-varargs\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wvector\-operation\-performance\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wvector-operation-performance" |
| Warn if vector operation is not implemented via \s-1SIMD\s0 capabilities of the |
| architecture. Mainly useful for the performance tuning. |
| Vector operation can be implemented \f(CW\*(C`piecewise\*(C'\fR, which means that the |
| scalar operation is performed on every vector element; |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`in parallel\*(C'\fR, which means that the vector operation is implemented |
| using scalars of wider type, which normally is more performance efficient; |
| and \f(CW\*(C`as a single scalar\*(C'\fR, which means that vector fits into a |
| scalar type. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-virtual\-move\-assign\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-virtual-move-assign" |
| Suppress warnings about inheriting from a virtual base with a |
| non-trivial \*(C+11 move assignment operator. This is dangerous because |
| if the virtual base is reachable along more than one path, it will be |
| moved multiple times, which can mean both objects end up in the |
| moved-from state. If the move assignment operator is written to avoid |
| moving from a moved-from object, this warning can be disabled. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wvla\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wvla" |
| Warn if variable length array is used in the code. |
| \&\fB\-Wno\-vla\fR prevents the \fB\-Wpedantic\fR warning of |
| the variable length array. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wvolatile\-register\-var\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wvolatile-register-var" |
| Warn if a register variable is declared volatile. The volatile |
| modifier does not inhibit all optimizations that may eliminate reads |
| and/or writes to register variables. This warning is enabled by |
| \&\fB\-Wall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wdisabled\-optimization\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wdisabled-optimization" |
| Warn if a requested optimization pass is disabled. This warning does |
| not generally indicate that there is anything wrong with your code; it |
| merely indicates that \s-1GCC\s0's optimizers are unable to handle the code |
| effectively. Often, the problem is that your code is too big or too |
| complex; \s-1GCC\s0 refuses to optimize programs when the optimization |
| itself is likely to take inordinate amounts of time. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wpointer\-sign\fR (C and Objective-C only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wpointer-sign (C and Objective-C only)" |
| Warn for pointer argument passing or assignment with different signedness. |
| This option is only supported for C and Objective-C. It is implied by |
| \&\fB\-Wall\fR and by \fB\-Wpedantic\fR, which can be disabled with |
| \&\fB\-Wno\-pointer\-sign\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wstack\-protector\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wstack-protector" |
| This option is only active when \fB\-fstack\-protector\fR is active. It |
| warns about functions that are not protected against stack smashing. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wno\-mudflap\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wno-mudflap" |
| Suppress warnings about constructs that cannot be instrumented by |
| \&\fB\-fmudflap\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Woverlength\-strings\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Woverlength-strings" |
| Warn about string constants that are longer than the \*(L"minimum |
| maximum\*(R" length specified in the C standard. Modern compilers |
| generally allow string constants that are much longer than the |
| standard's minimum limit, but very portable programs should avoid |
| using longer strings. |
| .Sp |
| The limit applies \fIafter\fR string constant concatenation, and does |
| not count the trailing \s-1NUL\s0. In C90, the limit was 509 characters; in |
| C99, it was raised to 4095. \*(C+98 does not specify a normative |
| minimum maximum, so we do not diagnose overlength strings in \*(C+. |
| .Sp |
| This option is implied by \fB\-Wpedantic\fR, and can be disabled with |
| \&\fB\-Wno\-overlength\-strings\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wunsuffixed\-float\-constants\fR (C and Objective-C only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wunsuffixed-float-constants (C and Objective-C only)" |
| Issue a warning for any floating constant that does not have |
| a suffix. When used together with \fB\-Wsystem\-headers\fR it |
| warns about such constants in system header files. This can be useful |
| when preparing code to use with the \f(CW\*(C`FLOAT_CONST_DECIMAL64\*(C'\fR pragma |
| from the decimal floating-point extension to C99. |
| .SS "Options for Debugging Your Program or \s-1GCC\s0" |
| .IX Subsection "Options for Debugging Your Program or GCC" |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 has various special options that are used for debugging |
| either your program or \s-1GCC:\s0 |
| .IP "\fB\-g\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-g" |
| Produce debugging information in the operating system's native format |
| (stabs, \s-1COFF\s0, \s-1XCOFF\s0, or \s-1DWARF\s0 2). \s-1GDB\s0 can work with this debugging |
| information. |
| .Sp |
| On most systems that use stabs format, \fB\-g\fR enables use of extra |
| debugging information that only \s-1GDB\s0 can use; this extra information |
| makes debugging work better in \s-1GDB\s0 but probably makes other debuggers |
| crash or |
| refuse to read the program. If you want to control for certain whether |
| to generate the extra information, use \fB\-gstabs+\fR, \fB\-gstabs\fR, |
| \&\fB\-gxcoff+\fR, \fB\-gxcoff\fR, or \fB\-gvms\fR (see below). |
| .Sp |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 allows you to use \fB\-g\fR with |
| \&\fB\-O\fR. The shortcuts taken by optimized code may occasionally |
| produce surprising results: some variables you declared may not exist |
| at all; flow of control may briefly move where you did not expect it; |
| some statements may not be executed because they compute constant |
| results or their values are already at hand; some statements may |
| execute in different places because they have been moved out of loops. |
| .Sp |
| Nevertheless it proves possible to debug optimized output. This makes |
| it reasonable to use the optimizer for programs that might have bugs. |
| .Sp |
| The following options are useful when \s-1GCC\s0 is generated with the |
| capability for more than one debugging format. |
| .IP "\fB\-gsplit\-dwarf\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-gsplit-dwarf" |
| Separate as much dwarf debugging information as possible into a |
| separate output file with the extension .dwo. This option allows |
| the build system to avoid linking files with debug information. To |
| be useful, this option requires a debugger capable of reading .dwo |
| files. |
| .IP "\fB\-ggdb\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ggdb" |
| Produce debugging information for use by \s-1GDB\s0. This means to use the |
| most expressive format available (\s-1DWARF\s0 2, stabs, or the native format |
| if neither of those are supported), including \s-1GDB\s0 extensions if at all |
| possible. |
| .IP "\fB\-gpubnames\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-gpubnames" |
| Generate dwarf .debug_pubnames and .debug_pubtypes sections. |
| .IP "\fB\-gstabs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-gstabs" |
| Produce debugging information in stabs format (if that is supported), |
| without \s-1GDB\s0 extensions. This is the format used by \s-1DBX\s0 on most \s-1BSD\s0 |
| systems. On \s-1MIPS\s0, Alpha and System V Release 4 systems this option |
| produces stabs debugging output that is not understood by \s-1DBX\s0 or \s-1SDB\s0. |
| On System V Release 4 systems this option requires the \s-1GNU\s0 assembler. |
| .IP "\fB\-feliminate\-unused\-debug\-symbols\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-feliminate-unused-debug-symbols" |
| Produce debugging information in stabs format (if that is supported), |
| for only symbols that are actually used. |
| .IP "\fB\-femit\-class\-debug\-always\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-femit-class-debug-always" |
| Instead of emitting debugging information for a \*(C+ class in only one |
| object file, emit it in all object files using the class. This option |
| should be used only with debuggers that are unable to handle the way \s-1GCC\s0 |
| normally emits debugging information for classes because using this |
| option increases the size of debugging information by as much as a |
| factor of two. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdebug\-types\-section\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdebug-types-section" |
| When using \s-1DWARF\s0 Version 4 or higher, type DIEs can be put into |
| their own \f(CW\*(C`.debug_types\*(C'\fR section instead of making them part of the |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`.debug_info\*(C'\fR section. It is more efficient to put them in a separate |
| comdat sections since the linker can then remove duplicates. |
| But not all \s-1DWARF\s0 consumers support \f(CW\*(C`.debug_types\*(C'\fR sections yet |
| and on some objects \f(CW\*(C`.debug_types\*(C'\fR produces larger instead of smaller |
| debugging information. |
| .IP "\fB\-gstabs+\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-gstabs+" |
| Produce debugging information in stabs format (if that is supported), |
| using \s-1GNU\s0 extensions understood only by the \s-1GNU\s0 debugger (\s-1GDB\s0). The |
| use of these extensions is likely to make other debuggers crash or |
| refuse to read the program. |
| .IP "\fB\-gcoff\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-gcoff" |
| Produce debugging information in \s-1COFF\s0 format (if that is supported). |
| This is the format used by \s-1SDB\s0 on most System V systems prior to |
| System V Release 4. |
| .IP "\fB\-gxcoff\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-gxcoff" |
| Produce debugging information in \s-1XCOFF\s0 format (if that is supported). |
| This is the format used by the \s-1DBX\s0 debugger on \s-1IBM\s0 \s-1RS/6000\s0 systems. |
| .IP "\fB\-gxcoff+\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-gxcoff+" |
| Produce debugging information in \s-1XCOFF\s0 format (if that is supported), |
| using \s-1GNU\s0 extensions understood only by the \s-1GNU\s0 debugger (\s-1GDB\s0). The |
| use of these extensions is likely to make other debuggers crash or |
| refuse to read the program, and may cause assemblers other than the \s-1GNU\s0 |
| assembler (\s-1GAS\s0) to fail with an error. |
| .IP "\fB\-gdwarf\-\fR\fIversion\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-gdwarf-version" |
| Produce debugging information in \s-1DWARF\s0 format (if that is supported). |
| The value of \fIversion\fR may be either 2, 3 or 4; the default version |
| for most targets is 4. |
| .Sp |
| Note that with \s-1DWARF\s0 Version 2, some ports require and always |
| use some non-conflicting \s-1DWARF\s0 3 extensions in the unwind tables. |
| .Sp |
| Version 4 may require \s-1GDB\s0 7.0 and \fB\-fvar\-tracking\-assignments\fR |
| for maximum benefit. |
| .IP "\fB\-grecord\-gcc\-switches\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-grecord-gcc-switches" |
| This switch causes the command-line options used to invoke the |
| compiler that may affect code generation to be appended to the |
| DW_AT_producer attribute in \s-1DWARF\s0 debugging information. The options |
| are concatenated with spaces separating them from each other and from |
| the compiler version. See also \fB\-frecord\-gcc\-switches\fR for another |
| way of storing compiler options into the object file. This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-gno\-record\-gcc\-switches\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-gno-record-gcc-switches" |
| Disallow appending command-line options to the DW_AT_producer attribute |
| in \s-1DWARF\s0 debugging information. |
| .IP "\fB\-gstrict\-dwarf\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-gstrict-dwarf" |
| Disallow using extensions of later \s-1DWARF\s0 standard version than selected |
| with \fB\-gdwarf\-\fR\fIversion\fR. On most targets using non-conflicting |
| \&\s-1DWARF\s0 extensions from later standard versions is allowed. |
| .IP "\fB\-gno\-strict\-dwarf\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-gno-strict-dwarf" |
| Allow using extensions of later \s-1DWARF\s0 standard version than selected with |
| \&\fB\-gdwarf\-\fR\fIversion\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-gvms\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-gvms" |
| Produce debugging information in Alpha/VMS debug format (if that is |
| supported). This is the format used by \s-1DEBUG\s0 on Alpha/VMS systems. |
| .IP "\fB\-g\fR\fIlevel\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-glevel" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-ggdb\fR\fIlevel\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ggdblevel" |
| .IP "\fB\-gstabs\fR\fIlevel\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-gstabslevel" |
| .IP "\fB\-gcoff\fR\fIlevel\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-gcofflevel" |
| .IP "\fB\-gxcoff\fR\fIlevel\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-gxcofflevel" |
| .IP "\fB\-gvms\fR\fIlevel\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-gvmslevel" |
| .PD |
| Request debugging information and also use \fIlevel\fR to specify how |
| much information. The default level is 2. |
| .Sp |
| Level 0 produces no debug information at all. Thus, \fB\-g0\fR negates |
| \&\fB\-g\fR. |
| .Sp |
| Level 1 produces minimal information, enough for making backtraces in |
| parts of the program that you don't plan to debug. This includes |
| descriptions of functions and external variables, but no information |
| about local variables and no line numbers. |
| .Sp |
| Level 3 includes extra information, such as all the macro definitions |
| present in the program. Some debuggers support macro expansion when |
| you use \fB\-g3\fR. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-gdwarf\-2\fR does not accept a concatenated debug level, because |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 used to support an option \fB\-gdwarf\fR that meant to generate |
| debug information in version 1 of the \s-1DWARF\s0 format (which is very |
| different from version 2), and it would have been too confusing. That |
| debug format is long obsolete, but the option cannot be changed now. |
| Instead use an additional \fB\-g\fR\fIlevel\fR option to change the |
| debug level for \s-1DWARF\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-gtoggle\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-gtoggle" |
| Turn off generation of debug info, if leaving out this option |
| generates it, or turn it on at level 2 otherwise. The position of this |
| argument in the command line does not matter; it takes effect after all |
| other options are processed, and it does so only once, no matter how |
| many times it is given. This is mainly intended to be used with |
| \&\fB\-fcompare\-debug\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsanitize=address\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsanitize=address" |
| Enable AddressSanitizer, a fast memory error detector. |
| Memory access instructions will be instrumented to detect |
| out-of-bounds and use-after-free bugs. |
| See <\fBhttp://code.google.com/p/address\-sanitizer/\fR> for more details. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsanitize=thread\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsanitize=thread" |
| Enable ThreadSanitizer, a fast data race detector. |
| Memory access instructions will be instrumented to detect |
| data race bugs. |
| See <\fBhttp://code.google.com/p/data\-race\-test/wiki/ThreadSanitizer\fR> for more details. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-final\-insns\fR[\fB=\fR\fIfile\fR]" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-final-insns[=file]" |
| Dump the final internal representation (\s-1RTL\s0) to \fIfile\fR. If the |
| optional argument is omitted (or if \fIfile\fR is \f(CW\*(C`.\*(C'\fR), the name |
| of the dump file is determined by appending \f(CW\*(C`.gkd\*(C'\fR to the |
| compilation output file name. |
| .IP "\fB\-fcompare\-debug\fR[\fB=\fR\fIopts\fR]" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fcompare-debug[=opts]" |
| If no error occurs during compilation, run the compiler a second time, |
| adding \fIopts\fR and \fB\-fcompare\-debug\-second\fR to the arguments |
| passed to the second compilation. Dump the final internal |
| representation in both compilations, and print an error if they differ. |
| .Sp |
| If the equal sign is omitted, the default \fB\-gtoggle\fR is used. |
| .Sp |
| The environment variable \fB\s-1GCC_COMPARE_DEBUG\s0\fR, if defined, non-empty |
| and nonzero, implicitly enables \fB\-fcompare\-debug\fR. If |
| \&\fB\s-1GCC_COMPARE_DEBUG\s0\fR is defined to a string starting with a dash, |
| then it is used for \fIopts\fR, otherwise the default \fB\-gtoggle\fR |
| is used. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-fcompare\-debug=\fR, with the equal sign but without \fIopts\fR, |
| is equivalent to \fB\-fno\-compare\-debug\fR, which disables the dumping |
| of the final representation and the second compilation, preventing even |
| \&\fB\s-1GCC_COMPARE_DEBUG\s0\fR from taking effect. |
| .Sp |
| To verify full coverage during \fB\-fcompare\-debug\fR testing, set |
| \&\fB\s-1GCC_COMPARE_DEBUG\s0\fR to say \fB\-fcompare\-debug\-not\-overridden\fR, |
| which \s-1GCC\s0 rejects as an invalid option in any actual compilation |
| (rather than preprocessing, assembly or linking). To get just a |
| warning, setting \fB\s-1GCC_COMPARE_DEBUG\s0\fR to \fB\-w%n\-fcompare\-debug |
| not overridden\fR will do. |
| .IP "\fB\-fcompare\-debug\-second\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fcompare-debug-second" |
| This option is implicitly passed to the compiler for the second |
| compilation requested by \fB\-fcompare\-debug\fR, along with options to |
| silence warnings, and omitting other options that would cause |
| side-effect compiler outputs to files or to the standard output. Dump |
| files and preserved temporary files are renamed so as to contain the |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`.gk\*(C'\fR additional extension during the second compilation, to avoid |
| overwriting those generated by the first. |
| .Sp |
| When this option is passed to the compiler driver, it causes the |
| \&\fIfirst\fR compilation to be skipped, which makes it useful for little |
| other than debugging the compiler proper. |
| .IP "\fB\-feliminate\-dwarf2\-dups\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-feliminate-dwarf2-dups" |
| Compress \s-1DWARF\s0 2 debugging information by eliminating duplicated |
| information about each symbol. This option only makes sense when |
| generating \s-1DWARF\s0 2 debugging information with \fB\-gdwarf\-2\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-femit\-struct\-debug\-baseonly\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-femit-struct-debug-baseonly" |
| Emit debug information for struct-like types |
| only when the base name of the compilation source file |
| matches the base name of file in which the struct is defined. |
| .Sp |
| This option substantially reduces the size of debugging information, |
| but at significant potential loss in type information to the debugger. |
| See \fB\-femit\-struct\-debug\-reduced\fR for a less aggressive option. |
| See \fB\-femit\-struct\-debug\-detailed\fR for more detailed control. |
| .Sp |
| This option works only with \s-1DWARF\s0 2. |
| .IP "\fB\-femit\-struct\-debug\-reduced\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-femit-struct-debug-reduced" |
| Emit debug information for struct-like types |
| only when the base name of the compilation source file |
| matches the base name of file in which the type is defined, |
| unless the struct is a template or defined in a system header. |
| .Sp |
| This option significantly reduces the size of debugging information, |
| with some potential loss in type information to the debugger. |
| See \fB\-femit\-struct\-debug\-baseonly\fR for a more aggressive option. |
| See \fB\-femit\-struct\-debug\-detailed\fR for more detailed control. |
| .Sp |
| This option works only with \s-1DWARF\s0 2. |
| .IP "\fB\-femit\-struct\-debug\-detailed\fR[\fB=\fR\fIspec-list\fR]" 4 |
| .IX Item "-femit-struct-debug-detailed[=spec-list]" |
| Specify the struct-like types |
| for which the compiler generates debug information. |
| The intent is to reduce duplicate struct debug information |
| between different object files within the same program. |
| .Sp |
| This option is a detailed version of |
| \&\fB\-femit\-struct\-debug\-reduced\fR and \fB\-femit\-struct\-debug\-baseonly\fR, |
| which serves for most needs. |
| .Sp |
| A specification has the syntax[\fBdir:\fR|\fBind:\fR][\fBord:\fR|\fBgen:\fR](\fBany\fR|\fBsys\fR|\fBbase\fR|\fBnone\fR) |
| .Sp |
| The optional first word limits the specification to |
| structs that are used directly (\fBdir:\fR) or used indirectly (\fBind:\fR). |
| A struct type is used directly when it is the type of a variable, member. |
| Indirect uses arise through pointers to structs. |
| That is, when use of an incomplete struct is valid, the use is indirect. |
| An example is |
| \&\fBstruct one direct; struct two * indirect;\fR. |
| .Sp |
| The optional second word limits the specification to |
| ordinary structs (\fBord:\fR) or generic structs (\fBgen:\fR). |
| Generic structs are a bit complicated to explain. |
| For \*(C+, these are non-explicit specializations of template classes, |
| or non-template classes within the above. |
| Other programming languages have generics, |
| but \fB\-femit\-struct\-debug\-detailed\fR does not yet implement them. |
| .Sp |
| The third word specifies the source files for those |
| structs for which the compiler should emit debug information. |
| The values \fBnone\fR and \fBany\fR have the normal meaning. |
| The value \fBbase\fR means that |
| the base of name of the file in which the type declaration appears |
| must match the base of the name of the main compilation file. |
| In practice, this means that when compiling \fIfoo.c\fR, debug information |
| is generated for types declared in that file and \fIfoo.h\fR, |
| but not other header files. |
| The value \fBsys\fR means those types satisfying \fBbase\fR |
| or declared in system or compiler headers. |
| .Sp |
| You may need to experiment to determine the best settings for your application. |
| .Sp |
| The default is \fB\-femit\-struct\-debug\-detailed=all\fR. |
| .Sp |
| This option works only with \s-1DWARF\s0 2. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-merge\-debug\-strings\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-merge-debug-strings" |
| Direct the linker to not merge together strings in the debugging |
| information that are identical in different object files. Merging is |
| not supported by all assemblers or linkers. Merging decreases the size |
| of the debug information in the output file at the cost of increasing |
| link processing time. Merging is enabled by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdebug\-prefix\-map=\fR\fIold\fR\fB=\fR\fInew\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdebug-prefix-map=old=new" |
| When compiling files in directory \fI\fIold\fI\fR, record debugging |
| information describing them as in \fI\fInew\fI\fR instead. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-dwarf2\-cfi\-asm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-dwarf2-cfi-asm" |
| Emit \s-1DWARF\s0 2 unwind info as compiler generated \f(CW\*(C`.eh_frame\*(C'\fR section |
| instead of using \s-1GAS\s0 \f(CW\*(C`.cfi_*\*(C'\fR directives. |
| .IP "\fB\-p\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-p" |
| Generate extra code to write profile information suitable for the |
| analysis program \fBprof\fR. You must use this option when compiling |
| the source files you want data about, and you must also use it when |
| linking. |
| .IP "\fB\-pg\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-pg" |
| Generate extra code to write profile information suitable for the |
| analysis program \fBgprof\fR. You must use this option when compiling |
| the source files you want data about, and you must also use it when |
| linking. |
| .IP "\fB\-Q\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Q" |
| Makes the compiler print out each function name as it is compiled, and |
| print some statistics about each pass when it finishes. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftime\-report\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftime-report" |
| Makes the compiler print some statistics about the time consumed by each |
| pass when it finishes. |
| .IP "\fB\-fmem\-report\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fmem-report" |
| Makes the compiler print some statistics about permanent memory |
| allocation when it finishes. |
| .IP "\fB\-fmem\-report\-wpa\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fmem-report-wpa" |
| Makes the compiler print some statistics about permanent memory |
| allocation for the \s-1WPA\s0 phase only. |
| .IP "\fB\-fpre\-ipa\-mem\-report\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fpre-ipa-mem-report" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fpost\-ipa\-mem\-report\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fpost-ipa-mem-report" |
| .PD |
| Makes the compiler print some statistics about permanent memory |
| allocation before or after interprocedural optimization. |
| .IP "\fB\-fprofile\-report\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fprofile-report" |
| Makes the compiler print some statistics about consistency of the |
| (estimated) profile and effect of individual passes. |
| .IP "\fB\-fstack\-usage\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fstack-usage" |
| Makes the compiler output stack usage information for the program, on a |
| per-function basis. The filename for the dump is made by appending |
| \&\fI.su\fR to the \fIauxname\fR. \fIauxname\fR is generated from the name of |
| the output file, if explicitly specified and it is not an executable, |
| otherwise it is the basename of the source file. An entry is made up |
| of three fields: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| The name of the function. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| A number of bytes. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| One or more qualifiers: \f(CW\*(C`static\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`dynamic\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`bounded\*(C'\fR. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| The qualifier \f(CW\*(C`static\*(C'\fR means that the function manipulates the stack |
| statically: a fixed number of bytes are allocated for the frame on function |
| entry and released on function exit; no stack adjustments are otherwise made |
| in the function. The second field is this fixed number of bytes. |
| .Sp |
| The qualifier \f(CW\*(C`dynamic\*(C'\fR means that the function manipulates the stack |
| dynamically: in addition to the static allocation described above, stack |
| adjustments are made in the body of the function, for example to push/pop |
| arguments around function calls. If the qualifier \f(CW\*(C`bounded\*(C'\fR is also |
| present, the amount of these adjustments is bounded at compile time and |
| the second field is an upper bound of the total amount of stack used by |
| the function. If it is not present, the amount of these adjustments is |
| not bounded at compile time and the second field only represents the |
| bounded part. |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-fprofile\-arcs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fprofile-arcs" |
| Add code so that program flow \fIarcs\fR are instrumented. During |
| execution the program records how many times each branch and call is |
| executed and how many times it is taken or returns. When the compiled |
| program exits it saves this data to a file called |
| \&\fI\fIauxname\fI.gcda\fR for each source file. The data may be used for |
| profile-directed optimizations (\fB\-fbranch\-probabilities\fR), or for |
| test coverage analysis (\fB\-ftest\-coverage\fR). Each object file's |
| \&\fIauxname\fR is generated from the name of the output file, if |
| explicitly specified and it is not the final executable, otherwise it is |
| the basename of the source file. In both cases any suffix is removed |
| (e.g. \fIfoo.gcda\fR for input file \fIdir/foo.c\fR, or |
| \&\fIdir/foo.gcda\fR for output file specified as \fB\-o dir/foo.o\fR). |
| .IP "\fB\-\-coverage\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "--coverage" |
| This option is used to compile and link code instrumented for coverage |
| analysis. The option is a synonym for \fB\-fprofile\-arcs\fR |
| \&\fB\-ftest\-coverage\fR (when compiling) and \fB\-lgcov\fR (when |
| linking). See the documentation for those options for more details. |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Compile the source files with \fB\-fprofile\-arcs\fR plus optimization |
| and code generation options. For test coverage analysis, use the |
| additional \fB\-ftest\-coverage\fR option. You do not need to profile |
| every source file in a program. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Link your object files with \fB\-lgcov\fR or \fB\-fprofile\-arcs\fR |
| (the latter implies the former). |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Run the program on a representative workload to generate the arc profile |
| information. This may be repeated any number of times. You can run |
| concurrent instances of your program, and provided that the file system |
| supports locking, the data files will be correctly updated. Also |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`fork\*(C'\fR calls are detected and correctly handled (double counting |
| will not happen). |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| For profile-directed optimizations, compile the source files again with |
| the same optimization and code generation options plus |
| \&\fB\-fbranch\-probabilities\fR. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| For test coverage analysis, use \fBgcov\fR to produce human readable |
| information from the \fI.gcno\fR and \fI.gcda\fR files. Refer to the |
| \&\fBgcov\fR documentation for further information. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| With \fB\-fprofile\-arcs\fR, for each function of your program \s-1GCC\s0 |
| creates a program flow graph, then finds a spanning tree for the graph. |
| Only arcs that are not on the spanning tree have to be instrumented: the |
| compiler adds code to count the number of times that these arcs are |
| executed. When an arc is the only exit or only entrance to a block, the |
| instrumentation code can be added to the block; otherwise, a new basic |
| block must be created to hold the instrumentation code. |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-ftest\-coverage\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftest-coverage" |
| Produce a notes file that the \fBgcov\fR code-coverage utility can use to |
| show program coverage. Each source file's note file is called |
| \&\fI\fIauxname\fI.gcno\fR. Refer to the \fB\-fprofile\-arcs\fR option |
| above for a description of \fIauxname\fR and instructions on how to |
| generate test coverage data. Coverage data matches the source files |
| more closely if you do not optimize. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdbg\-cnt\-list\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdbg-cnt-list" |
| Print the name and the counter upper bound for all debug counters. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdbg\-cnt=\fR\fIcounter-value-list\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdbg-cnt=counter-value-list" |
| Set the internal debug counter upper bound. \fIcounter-value-list\fR |
| is a comma-separated list of \fIname\fR:\fIvalue\fR pairs |
| which sets the upper bound of each debug counter \fIname\fR to \fIvalue\fR. |
| All debug counters have the initial upper bound of \f(CW\*(C`UINT_MAX\*(C'\fR; |
| thus \f(CW\*(C`dbg_cnt()\*(C'\fR returns true always unless the upper bound |
| is set by this option. |
| For example, with \fB\-fdbg\-cnt=dce:10,tail_call:0\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`dbg_cnt(dce)\*(C'\fR returns true only for first 10 invocations. |
| .IP "\fB\-fenable\-\fR\fIkind\fR\fB\-\fR\fIpass\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fenable-kind-pass" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fdisable\-\fR\fIkind\fR\fB\-\fR\fIpass\fR\fB=\fR\fIrange-list\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdisable-kind-pass=range-list" |
| .PD |
| This is a set of options that are used to explicitly disable/enable |
| optimization passes. These options are intended for use for debugging \s-1GCC\s0. |
| Compiler users should use regular options for enabling/disabling |
| passes instead. |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fB\-fdisable\-ipa\-\fR\fIpass\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdisable-ipa-pass" |
| Disable \s-1IPA\s0 pass \fIpass\fR. \fIpass\fR is the pass name. If the same pass is |
| statically invoked in the compiler multiple times, the pass name should be |
| appended with a sequential number starting from 1. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdisable\-rtl\-\fR\fIpass\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdisable-rtl-pass" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fdisable\-rtl\-\fR\fIpass\fR\fB=\fR\fIrange-list\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdisable-rtl-pass=range-list" |
| .PD |
| Disable \s-1RTL\s0 pass \fIpass\fR. \fIpass\fR is the pass name. If the same pass is |
| statically invoked in the compiler multiple times, the pass name should be |
| appended with a sequential number starting from 1. \fIrange-list\fR is a |
| comma-separated list of function ranges or assembler names. Each range is a number |
| pair separated by a colon. The range is inclusive in both ends. If the range |
| is trivial, the number pair can be simplified as a single number. If the |
| function's call graph node's \fIuid\fR falls within one of the specified ranges, |
| the \fIpass\fR is disabled for that function. The \fIuid\fR is shown in the |
| function header of a dump file, and the pass names can be dumped by using |
| option \fB\-fdump\-passes\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdisable\-tree\-\fR\fIpass\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdisable-tree-pass" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fdisable\-tree\-\fR\fIpass\fR\fB=\fR\fIrange-list\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdisable-tree-pass=range-list" |
| .PD |
| Disable tree pass \fIpass\fR. See \fB\-fdisable\-rtl\fR for the description of |
| option arguments. |
| .IP "\fB\-fenable\-ipa\-\fR\fIpass\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fenable-ipa-pass" |
| Enable \s-1IPA\s0 pass \fIpass\fR. \fIpass\fR is the pass name. If the same pass is |
| statically invoked in the compiler multiple times, the pass name should be |
| appended with a sequential number starting from 1. |
| .IP "\fB\-fenable\-rtl\-\fR\fIpass\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fenable-rtl-pass" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fenable\-rtl\-\fR\fIpass\fR\fB=\fR\fIrange-list\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fenable-rtl-pass=range-list" |
| .PD |
| Enable \s-1RTL\s0 pass \fIpass\fR. See \fB\-fdisable\-rtl\fR for option argument |
| description and examples. |
| .IP "\fB\-fenable\-tree\-\fR\fIpass\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fenable-tree-pass" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fenable\-tree\-\fR\fIpass\fR\fB=\fR\fIrange-list\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fenable-tree-pass=range-list" |
| .PD |
| Enable tree pass \fIpass\fR. See \fB\-fdisable\-rtl\fR for the description |
| of option arguments. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| Here are some examples showing uses of these options. |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 10 |
| \& # disable ccp1 for all functions |
| \& \-fdisable\-tree\-ccp1 |
| \& # disable complete unroll for function whose cgraph node uid is 1 |
| \& \-fenable\-tree\-cunroll=1 |
| \& # disable gcse2 for functions at the following ranges [1,1], |
| \& # [300,400], and [400,1000] |
| \& # disable gcse2 for functions foo and foo2 |
| \& \-fdisable\-rtl\-gcse2=foo,foo2 |
| \& # disable early inlining |
| \& \-fdisable\-tree\-einline |
| \& # disable ipa inlining |
| \& \-fdisable\-ipa\-inline |
| \& # enable tree full unroll |
| \& \-fenable\-tree\-unroll |
| .Ve |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-d\fR\fIletters\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-dletters" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-\fR\fIpass\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-pass" |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-\fR\fIpass\fR\fB=\fR\fIfilename\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-pass=filename" |
| .PD |
| Says to make debugging dumps during compilation at times specified by |
| \&\fIletters\fR. This is used for debugging the RTL-based passes of the |
| compiler. The file names for most of the dumps are made by appending |
| a pass number and a word to the \fIdumpname\fR, and the files are |
| created in the directory of the output file. In case of |
| \&\fB=\fR\fIfilename\fR option, the dump is output on the given file |
| instead of the pass numbered dump files. Note that the pass number is |
| computed statically as passes get registered into the pass manager. |
| Thus the numbering is not related to the dynamic order of execution of |
| passes. In particular, a pass installed by a plugin could have a |
| number over 200 even if it executed quite early. \fIdumpname\fR is |
| generated from the name of the output file, if explicitly specified |
| and it is not an executable, otherwise it is the basename of the |
| source file. These switches may have different effects when |
| \&\fB\-E\fR is used for preprocessing. |
| .Sp |
| Debug dumps can be enabled with a \fB\-fdump\-rtl\fR switch or some |
| \&\fB\-d\fR option \fIletters\fR. Here are the possible |
| letters for use in \fIpass\fR and \fIletters\fR, and their meanings: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-alignments\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-alignments" |
| Dump after branch alignments have been computed. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-asmcons\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-asmcons" |
| Dump after fixing rtl statements that have unsatisfied in/out constraints. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-auto_inc_dec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-auto_inc_dec" |
| Dump after auto-inc-dec discovery. This pass is only run on |
| architectures that have auto inc or auto dec instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-barriers\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-barriers" |
| Dump after cleaning up the barrier instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-bbpart\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-bbpart" |
| Dump after partitioning hot and cold basic blocks. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-bbro\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-bbro" |
| Dump after block reordering. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-btl1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-btl1" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-btl2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-btl2" |
| .PD |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-btl1\fR and \fB\-fdump\-rtl\-btl2\fR enable dumping |
| after the two branch |
| target load optimization passes. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-bypass\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-bypass" |
| Dump after jump bypassing and control flow optimizations. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-combine\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-combine" |
| Dump after the \s-1RTL\s0 instruction combination pass. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-compgotos\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-compgotos" |
| Dump after duplicating the computed gotos. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-ce1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-ce1" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-ce2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-ce2" |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-ce3\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-ce3" |
| .PD |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-ce1\fR, \fB\-fdump\-rtl\-ce2\fR, and |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-ce3\fR enable dumping after the three |
| if conversion passes. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-cprop_hardreg\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-cprop_hardreg" |
| Dump after hard register copy propagation. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-csa\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-csa" |
| Dump after combining stack adjustments. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-cse1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-cse1" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-cse2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-cse2" |
| .PD |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-cse1\fR and \fB\-fdump\-rtl\-cse2\fR enable dumping after |
| the two common subexpression elimination passes. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-dce\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-dce" |
| Dump after the standalone dead code elimination passes. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-dbr\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-dbr" |
| Dump after delayed branch scheduling. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-dce1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-dce1" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-dce2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-dce2" |
| .PD |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-dce1\fR and \fB\-fdump\-rtl\-dce2\fR enable dumping after |
| the two dead store elimination passes. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-eh\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-eh" |
| Dump after finalization of \s-1EH\s0 handling code. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-eh_ranges\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-eh_ranges" |
| Dump after conversion of \s-1EH\s0 handling range regions. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-expand\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-expand" |
| Dump after \s-1RTL\s0 generation. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-fwprop1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-fwprop1" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-fwprop2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-fwprop2" |
| .PD |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-fwprop1\fR and \fB\-fdump\-rtl\-fwprop2\fR enable |
| dumping after the two forward propagation passes. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-gcse1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-gcse1" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-gcse2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-gcse2" |
| .PD |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-gcse1\fR and \fB\-fdump\-rtl\-gcse2\fR enable dumping |
| after global common subexpression elimination. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-init\-regs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-init-regs" |
| Dump after the initialization of the registers. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-initvals\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-initvals" |
| Dump after the computation of the initial value sets. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-into_cfglayout\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-into_cfglayout" |
| Dump after converting to cfglayout mode. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-ira\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-ira" |
| Dump after iterated register allocation. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-jump\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-jump" |
| Dump after the second jump optimization. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-loop2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-loop2" |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-loop2\fR enables dumping after the rtl |
| loop optimization passes. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-mach\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-mach" |
| Dump after performing the machine dependent reorganization pass, if that |
| pass exists. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-mode_sw\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-mode_sw" |
| Dump after removing redundant mode switches. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-rnreg\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-rnreg" |
| Dump after register renumbering. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-outof_cfglayout\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-outof_cfglayout" |
| Dump after converting from cfglayout mode. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-peephole2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-peephole2" |
| Dump after the peephole pass. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-postreload\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-postreload" |
| Dump after post-reload optimizations. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-pro_and_epilogue\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-pro_and_epilogue" |
| Dump after generating the function prologues and epilogues. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-regmove\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-regmove" |
| Dump after the register move pass. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-sched1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-sched1" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-sched2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-sched2" |
| .PD |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-sched1\fR and \fB\-fdump\-rtl\-sched2\fR enable dumping |
| after the basic block scheduling passes. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-see\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-see" |
| Dump after sign extension elimination. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-seqabstr\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-seqabstr" |
| Dump after common sequence discovery. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-shorten\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-shorten" |
| Dump after shortening branches. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-sibling\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-sibling" |
| Dump after sibling call optimizations. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-split1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-split1" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-split2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-split2" |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-split3\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-split3" |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-split4\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-split4" |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-split5\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-split5" |
| .PD |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-split1\fR, \fB\-fdump\-rtl\-split2\fR, |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-split3\fR, \fB\-fdump\-rtl\-split4\fR and |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-split5\fR enable dumping after five rounds of |
| instruction splitting. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-sms\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-sms" |
| Dump after modulo scheduling. This pass is only run on some |
| architectures. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-stack\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-stack" |
| Dump after conversion from \s-1GCC\s0's \*(L"flat register file\*(R" registers to the |
| x87's stack-like registers. This pass is only run on x86 variants. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-subreg1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-subreg1" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-subreg2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-subreg2" |
| .PD |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-subreg1\fR and \fB\-fdump\-rtl\-subreg2\fR enable dumping after |
| the two subreg expansion passes. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-unshare\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-unshare" |
| Dump after all rtl has been unshared. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-vartrack\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-vartrack" |
| Dump after variable tracking. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-vregs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-vregs" |
| Dump after converting virtual registers to hard registers. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-web\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-web" |
| Dump after live range splitting. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-regclass\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-regclass" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-subregs_of_mode_init\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-subregs_of_mode_init" |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-subregs_of_mode_finish\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-subregs_of_mode_finish" |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-dfinit\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-dfinit" |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-dfinish\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-dfinish" |
| .PD |
| These dumps are defined but always produce empty files. |
| .IP "\fB\-da\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-da" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-all\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-rtl-all" |
| .PD |
| Produce all the dumps listed above. |
| .IP "\fB\-dA\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-dA" |
| Annotate the assembler output with miscellaneous debugging information. |
| .IP "\fB\-dD\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-dD" |
| Dump all macro definitions, at the end of preprocessing, in addition to |
| normal output. |
| .IP "\fB\-dH\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-dH" |
| Produce a core dump whenever an error occurs. |
| .IP "\fB\-dp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-dp" |
| Annotate the assembler output with a comment indicating which |
| pattern and alternative is used. The length of each instruction is |
| also printed. |
| .IP "\fB\-dP\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-dP" |
| Dump the \s-1RTL\s0 in the assembler output as a comment before each instruction. |
| Also turns on \fB\-dp\fR annotation. |
| .IP "\fB\-dx\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-dx" |
| Just generate \s-1RTL\s0 for a function instead of compiling it. Usually used |
| with \fB\-fdump\-rtl\-expand\fR. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-noaddr\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-noaddr" |
| When doing debugging dumps, suppress address output. This makes it more |
| feasible to use diff on debugging dumps for compiler invocations with |
| different compiler binaries and/or different |
| text / bss / data / heap / stack / dso start locations. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-unnumbered\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-unnumbered" |
| When doing debugging dumps, suppress instruction numbers and address output. |
| This makes it more feasible to use diff on debugging dumps for compiler |
| invocations with different options, in particular with and without |
| \&\fB\-g\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-unnumbered\-links\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-unnumbered-links" |
| When doing debugging dumps (see \fB\-d\fR option above), suppress |
| instruction numbers for the links to the previous and next instructions |
| in a sequence. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-translation\-unit\fR (\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-translation-unit ( only)" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-translation\-unit\-\fR\fIoptions\fR\fB \fR(\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-translation-unit-options ( only)" |
| .PD |
| Dump a representation of the tree structure for the entire translation |
| unit to a file. The file name is made by appending \fI.tu\fR to the |
| source file name, and the file is created in the same directory as the |
| output file. If the \fB\-\fR\fIoptions\fR form is used, \fIoptions\fR |
| controls the details of the dump as described for the |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-tree\fR options. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-class\-hierarchy\fR (\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-class-hierarchy ( only)" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-class\-hierarchy\-\fR\fIoptions\fR\fB \fR(\*(C+ only)" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-class-hierarchy-options ( only)" |
| .PD |
| Dump a representation of each class's hierarchy and virtual function |
| table layout to a file. The file name is made by appending |
| \&\fI.class\fR to the source file name, and the file is created in the |
| same directory as the output file. If the \fB\-\fR\fIoptions\fR form |
| is used, \fIoptions\fR controls the details of the dump as described |
| for the \fB\-fdump\-tree\fR options. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-ipa\-\fR\fIswitch\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-ipa-switch" |
| Control the dumping at various stages of inter-procedural analysis |
| language tree to a file. The file name is generated by appending a |
| switch specific suffix to the source file name, and the file is created |
| in the same directory as the output file. The following dumps are |
| possible: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBall\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "all" |
| Enables all inter-procedural analysis dumps. |
| .IP "\fBcgraph\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "cgraph" |
| Dumps information about call-graph optimization, unused function removal, |
| and inlining decisions. |
| .IP "\fBinline\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "inline" |
| Dump after function inlining. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-passes\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-passes" |
| Dump the list of optimization passes that are turned on and off by |
| the current command-line options. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-statistics\-\fR\fIoption\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-statistics-option" |
| Enable and control dumping of pass statistics in a separate file. The |
| file name is generated by appending a suffix ending in |
| \&\fB.statistics\fR to the source file name, and the file is created in |
| the same directory as the output file. If the \fB\-\fR\fIoption\fR |
| form is used, \fB\-stats\fR causes counters to be summed over the |
| whole compilation unit while \fB\-details\fR dumps every event as |
| the passes generate them. The default with no option is to sum |
| counters for each function compiled. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-tree\-\fR\fIswitch\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-tree-switch" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-tree\-\fR\fIswitch\fR\fB\-\fR\fIoptions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-tree-switch-options" |
| .IP "\fB\-fdump\-tree\-\fR\fIswitch\fR\fB\-\fR\fIoptions\fR\fB=\fR\fIfilename\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdump-tree-switch-options=filename" |
| .PD |
| Control the dumping at various stages of processing the intermediate |
| language tree to a file. The file name is generated by appending a |
| switch-specific suffix to the source file name, and the file is |
| created in the same directory as the output file. In case of |
| \&\fB=\fR\fIfilename\fR option, the dump is output on the given file |
| instead of the auto named dump files. If the \fB\-\fR\fIoptions\fR |
| form is used, \fIoptions\fR is a list of \fB\-\fR separated options |
| which control the details of the dump. Not all options are applicable |
| to all dumps; those that are not meaningful are ignored. The |
| following options are available |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBaddress\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "address" |
| Print the address of each node. Usually this is not meaningful as it |
| changes according to the environment and source file. Its primary use |
| is for tying up a dump file with a debug environment. |
| .IP "\fBasmname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "asmname" |
| If \f(CW\*(C`DECL_ASSEMBLER_NAME\*(C'\fR has been set for a given decl, use that |
| in the dump instead of \f(CW\*(C`DECL_NAME\*(C'\fR. Its primary use is ease of |
| use working backward from mangled names in the assembly file. |
| .IP "\fBslim\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "slim" |
| When dumping front-end intermediate representations, inhibit dumping |
| of members of a scope or body of a function merely because that scope |
| has been reached. Only dump such items when they are directly reachable |
| by some other path. |
| .Sp |
| When dumping pretty-printed trees, this option inhibits dumping the |
| bodies of control structures. |
| .Sp |
| When dumping \s-1RTL\s0, print the \s-1RTL\s0 in slim (condensed) form instead of |
| the default LISP-like representation. |
| .IP "\fBraw\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "raw" |
| Print a raw representation of the tree. By default, trees are |
| pretty-printed into a C\-like representation. |
| .IP "\fBdetails\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "details" |
| Enable more detailed dumps (not honored by every dump option). Also |
| include information from the optimization passes. |
| .IP "\fBstats\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "stats" |
| Enable dumping various statistics about the pass (not honored by every dump |
| option). |
| .IP "\fBblocks\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "blocks" |
| Enable showing basic block boundaries (disabled in raw dumps). |
| .IP "\fBgraph\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "graph" |
| For each of the other indicated dump files (\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-\fR\fIpass\fR), |
| dump a representation of the control flow graph suitable for viewing with |
| GraphViz to \fI\fIfile\fI.\fIpassid\fI.\fIpass\fI.dot\fR. Each function in |
| the file is pretty-printed as a subgraph, so that GraphViz can render them |
| all in a single plot. |
| .Sp |
| This option currently only works for \s-1RTL\s0 dumps, and the \s-1RTL\s0 is always |
| dumped in slim form. |
| .IP "\fBvops\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "vops" |
| Enable showing virtual operands for every statement. |
| .IP "\fBlineno\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "lineno" |
| Enable showing line numbers for statements. |
| .IP "\fBuid\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "uid" |
| Enable showing the unique \s-1ID\s0 (\f(CW\*(C`DECL_UID\*(C'\fR) for each variable. |
| .IP "\fBverbose\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "verbose" |
| Enable showing the tree dump for each statement. |
| .IP "\fBeh\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "eh" |
| Enable showing the \s-1EH\s0 region number holding each statement. |
| .IP "\fBscev\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "scev" |
| Enable showing scalar evolution analysis details. |
| .IP "\fBoptimized\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "optimized" |
| Enable showing optimization information (only available in certain |
| passes). |
| .IP "\fBmissed\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "missed" |
| Enable showing missed optimization information (only available in certain |
| passes). |
| .IP "\fBnotes\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "notes" |
| Enable other detailed optimization information (only available in |
| certain passes). |
| .IP "\fB=\fR\fIfilename\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "=filename" |
| Instead of an auto named dump file, output into the given file |
| name. The file names \fIstdout\fR and \fIstderr\fR are treated |
| specially and are considered already open standard streams. For |
| example, |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 2 |
| \& gcc \-O2 \-ftree\-vectorize \-fdump\-tree\-vect\-blocks=foo.dump |
| \& \-fdump\-tree\-pre=stderr file.c |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| outputs vectorizer dump into \fIfoo.dump\fR, while the \s-1PRE\s0 dump is |
| output on to \fIstderr\fR. If two conflicting dump filenames are |
| given for the same pass, then the latter option overrides the earlier |
| one. |
| .IP "\fBall\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "all" |
| Turn on all options, except \fBraw\fR, \fBslim\fR, \fBverbose\fR |
| and \fBlineno\fR. |
| .IP "\fBoptall\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "optall" |
| Turn on all optimization options, i.e., \fBoptimized\fR, |
| \&\fBmissed\fR, and \fBnote\fR. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| The following tree dumps are possible: |
| .IP "\fBoriginal\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "original" |
| Dump before any tree based optimization, to \fI\fIfile\fI.original\fR. |
| .IP "\fBoptimized\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "optimized" |
| Dump after all tree based optimization, to \fI\fIfile\fI.optimized\fR. |
| .IP "\fBgimple\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "gimple" |
| Dump each function before and after the gimplification pass to a file. The |
| file name is made by appending \fI.gimple\fR to the source file name. |
| .IP "\fBcfg\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "cfg" |
| Dump the control flow graph of each function to a file. The file name is |
| made by appending \fI.cfg\fR to the source file name. |
| .IP "\fBch\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "ch" |
| Dump each function after copying loop headers. The file name is made by |
| appending \fI.ch\fR to the source file name. |
| .IP "\fBssa\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "ssa" |
| Dump \s-1SSA\s0 related information to a file. The file name is made by appending |
| \&\fI.ssa\fR to the source file name. |
| .IP "\fBalias\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "alias" |
| Dump aliasing information for each function. The file name is made by |
| appending \fI.alias\fR to the source file name. |
| .IP "\fBccp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "ccp" |
| Dump each function after \s-1CCP\s0. The file name is made by appending |
| \&\fI.ccp\fR to the source file name. |
| .IP "\fBstoreccp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "storeccp" |
| Dump each function after STORE-CCP. The file name is made by appending |
| \&\fI.storeccp\fR to the source file name. |
| .IP "\fBpre\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "pre" |
| Dump trees after partial redundancy elimination. The file name is made |
| by appending \fI.pre\fR to the source file name. |
| .IP "\fBfre\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "fre" |
| Dump trees after full redundancy elimination. The file name is made |
| by appending \fI.fre\fR to the source file name. |
| .IP "\fBcopyprop\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "copyprop" |
| Dump trees after copy propagation. The file name is made |
| by appending \fI.copyprop\fR to the source file name. |
| .IP "\fBstore_copyprop\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "store_copyprop" |
| Dump trees after store copy-propagation. The file name is made |
| by appending \fI.store_copyprop\fR to the source file name. |
| .IP "\fBdce\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "dce" |
| Dump each function after dead code elimination. The file name is made by |
| appending \fI.dce\fR to the source file name. |
| .IP "\fBmudflap\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "mudflap" |
| Dump each function after adding mudflap instrumentation. The file name is |
| made by appending \fI.mudflap\fR to the source file name. |
| .IP "\fBsra\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "sra" |
| Dump each function after performing scalar replacement of aggregates. The |
| file name is made by appending \fI.sra\fR to the source file name. |
| .IP "\fBsink\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "sink" |
| Dump each function after performing code sinking. The file name is made |
| by appending \fI.sink\fR to the source file name. |
| .IP "\fBdom\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "dom" |
| Dump each function after applying dominator tree optimizations. The file |
| name is made by appending \fI.dom\fR to the source file name. |
| .IP "\fBdse\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "dse" |
| Dump each function after applying dead store elimination. The file |
| name is made by appending \fI.dse\fR to the source file name. |
| .IP "\fBphiopt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "phiopt" |
| Dump each function after optimizing \s-1PHI\s0 nodes into straightline code. The file |
| name is made by appending \fI.phiopt\fR to the source file name. |
| .IP "\fBforwprop\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "forwprop" |
| Dump each function after forward propagating single use variables. The file |
| name is made by appending \fI.forwprop\fR to the source file name. |
| .IP "\fBcopyrename\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "copyrename" |
| Dump each function after applying the copy rename optimization. The file |
| name is made by appending \fI.copyrename\fR to the source file name. |
| .IP "\fBnrv\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "nrv" |
| Dump each function after applying the named return value optimization on |
| generic trees. The file name is made by appending \fI.nrv\fR to the source |
| file name. |
| .IP "\fBvect\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "vect" |
| Dump each function after applying vectorization of loops. The file name is |
| made by appending \fI.vect\fR to the source file name. |
| .IP "\fBslp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "slp" |
| Dump each function after applying vectorization of basic blocks. The file name |
| is made by appending \fI.slp\fR to the source file name. |
| .IP "\fBvrp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "vrp" |
| Dump each function after Value Range Propagation (\s-1VRP\s0). The file name |
| is made by appending \fI.vrp\fR to the source file name. |
| .IP "\fBall\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "all" |
| Enable all the available tree dumps with the flags provided in this option. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-fopt\-info\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fopt-info" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fopt\-info\-\fR\fIoptions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fopt-info-options" |
| .IP "\fB\-fopt\-info\-\fR\fIoptions\fR\fB=\fR\fIfilename\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fopt-info-options=filename" |
| .PD |
| Controls optimization dumps from various optimization passes. If the |
| \&\fB\-\fR\fIoptions\fR form is used, \fIoptions\fR is a list of |
| \&\fB\-\fR separated options to select the dump details and |
| optimizations. If \fIoptions\fR is not specified, it defaults to |
| \&\fBall\fR for details and \fBoptall\fR for optimization |
| groups. If the \fIfilename\fR is not specified, it defaults to |
| \&\fIstderr\fR. Note that the output \fIfilename\fR will be overwritten |
| in case of multiple translation units. If a combined output from |
| multiple translation units is desired, \fIstderr\fR should be used |
| instead. |
| .Sp |
| The options can be divided into two groups, 1) options describing the |
| verbosity of the dump, and 2) options describing which optimizations |
| should be included. The options from both the groups can be freely |
| mixed as they are non-overlapping. However, in case of any conflicts, |
| the latter options override the earlier options on the command |
| line. Though multiple \-fopt\-info options are accepted, only one of |
| them can have \fB=filename\fR. If other filenames are provided then |
| all but the first one are ignored. |
| .Sp |
| The dump verbosity has the following options |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBoptimized\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "optimized" |
| Print information when an optimization is successfully applied. It is |
| up to a pass to decide which information is relevant. For example, the |
| vectorizer passes print the source location of loops which got |
| successfully vectorized. |
| .IP "\fBmissed\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "missed" |
| Print information about missed optimizations. Individual passes |
| control which information to include in the output. For example, |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& gcc \-O2 \-ftree\-vectorize \-fopt\-info\-vec\-missed |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| will print information about missed optimization opportunities from |
| vectorization passes on stderr. |
| .IP "\fBnote\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "note" |
| Print verbose information about optimizations, such as certain |
| transformations, more detailed messages about decisions etc. |
| .IP "\fBall\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "all" |
| Print detailed optimization information. This includes |
| \&\fIoptimized\fR, \fImissed\fR, and \fInote\fR. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| The second set of options describes a group of optimizations and may |
| include one or more of the following. |
| .IP "\fBipa\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "ipa" |
| Enable dumps from all interprocedural optimizations. |
| .IP "\fBloop\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "loop" |
| Enable dumps from all loop optimizations. |
| .IP "\fBinline\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "inline" |
| Enable dumps from all inlining optimizations. |
| .IP "\fBvec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "vec" |
| Enable dumps from all vectorization optimizations. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| For example, |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& gcc \-O3 \-fopt\-info\-missed=missed.all |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| outputs missed optimization report from all the passes into |
| \&\fImissed.all\fR. |
| .Sp |
| As another example, |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& gcc \-O3 \-fopt\-info\-inline\-optimized\-missed=inline.txt |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| will output information about missed optimizations as well as |
| optimized locations from all the inlining passes into |
| \&\fIinline.txt\fR. |
| .Sp |
| If the \fIfilename\fR is provided, then the dumps from all the |
| applicable optimizations are concatenated into the \fIfilename\fR. |
| Otherwise the dump is output onto \fIstderr\fR. If \fIoptions\fR is |
| omitted, it defaults to \fBall-optall\fR, which means dump all |
| available optimization info from all the passes. In the following |
| example, all optimization info is output on to \fIstderr\fR. |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& gcc \-O3 \-fopt\-info |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| Note that \fB\-fopt\-info\-vec\-missed\fR behaves the same as |
| \&\fB\-fopt\-info\-missed\-vec\fR. |
| .Sp |
| As another example, consider |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& gcc \-fopt\-info\-vec\-missed=vec.miss \-fopt\-info\-loop\-optimized=loop.opt |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| Here the two output filenames \fIvec.miss\fR and \fIloop.opt\fR are |
| in conflict since only one output file is allowed. In this case, only |
| the first option takes effect and the subsequent options are |
| ignored. Thus only the \fIvec.miss\fR is produced which cotaints |
| dumps from the vectorizer about missed opportunities. |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-vectorizer\-verbose=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-vectorizer-verbose=n" |
| This option is deprecated and is implemented in terms of |
| \&\fB\-fopt\-info\fR. Please use \fB\-fopt\-info\-\fR\fIkind\fR form |
| instead, where \fIkind\fR is one of the valid opt-info options. It |
| prints additional optimization information. For \fIn\fR=0 no |
| diagnostic information is reported. If \fIn\fR=1 the vectorizer |
| reports each loop that got vectorized, and the total number of loops |
| that got vectorized. If \fIn\fR=2 the vectorizer reports locations |
| which could not be vectorized and the reasons for those. For any |
| higher verbosity levels all the analysis and transformation |
| information from the vectorizer is reported. |
| .Sp |
| Note that the information output by \fB\-ftree\-vectorizer\-verbose\fR |
| option is sent to \fIstderr\fR. If the equivalent form |
| \&\fB\-fopt\-info\-\fR\fIoptions\fR\fB=\fR\fIfilename\fR is used then the |
| output is sent into \fIfilename\fR instead. |
| .IP "\fB\-frandom\-seed=\fR\fIstring\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-frandom-seed=string" |
| This option provides a seed that \s-1GCC\s0 uses in place of |
| random numbers in generating certain symbol names |
| that have to be different in every compiled file. It is also used to |
| place unique stamps in coverage data files and the object files that |
| produce them. You can use the \fB\-frandom\-seed\fR option to produce |
| reproducibly identical object files. |
| .Sp |
| The \fIstring\fR should be different for every file you compile. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsched\-verbose=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsched-verbose=n" |
| On targets that use instruction scheduling, this option controls the |
| amount of debugging output the scheduler prints. This information is |
| written to standard error, unless \fB\-fdump\-rtl\-sched1\fR or |
| \&\fB\-fdump\-rtl\-sched2\fR is specified, in which case it is output |
| to the usual dump listing file, \fI.sched1\fR or \fI.sched2\fR |
| respectively. However for \fIn\fR greater than nine, the output is |
| always printed to standard error. |
| .Sp |
| For \fIn\fR greater than zero, \fB\-fsched\-verbose\fR outputs the |
| same information as \fB\-fdump\-rtl\-sched1\fR and \fB\-fdump\-rtl\-sched2\fR. |
| For \fIn\fR greater than one, it also output basic block probabilities, |
| detailed ready list information and unit/insn info. For \fIn\fR greater |
| than two, it includes \s-1RTL\s0 at abort point, control-flow and regions info. |
| And for \fIn\fR over four, \fB\-fsched\-verbose\fR also includes |
| dependence info. |
| .IP "\fB\-save\-temps\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-save-temps" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-save\-temps=cwd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-save-temps=cwd" |
| .PD |
| Store the usual \*(L"temporary\*(R" intermediate files permanently; place them |
| in the current directory and name them based on the source file. Thus, |
| compiling \fIfoo.c\fR with \fB\-c \-save\-temps\fR produces files |
| \&\fIfoo.i\fR and \fIfoo.s\fR, as well as \fIfoo.o\fR. This creates a |
| preprocessed \fIfoo.i\fR output file even though the compiler now |
| normally uses an integrated preprocessor. |
| .Sp |
| When used in combination with the \fB\-x\fR command-line option, |
| \&\fB\-save\-temps\fR is sensible enough to avoid over writing an |
| input source file with the same extension as an intermediate file. |
| The corresponding intermediate file may be obtained by renaming the |
| source file before using \fB\-save\-temps\fR. |
| .Sp |
| If you invoke \s-1GCC\s0 in parallel, compiling several different source |
| files that share a common base name in different subdirectories or the |
| same source file compiled for multiple output destinations, it is |
| likely that the different parallel compilers will interfere with each |
| other, and overwrite the temporary files. For instance: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 2 |
| \& gcc \-save\-temps \-o outdir1/foo.o indir1/foo.c& |
| \& gcc \-save\-temps \-o outdir2/foo.o indir2/foo.c& |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| may result in \fIfoo.i\fR and \fIfoo.o\fR being written to |
| simultaneously by both compilers. |
| .IP "\fB\-save\-temps=obj\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-save-temps=obj" |
| Store the usual \*(L"temporary\*(R" intermediate files permanently. If the |
| \&\fB\-o\fR option is used, the temporary files are based on the |
| object file. If the \fB\-o\fR option is not used, the |
| \&\fB\-save\-temps=obj\fR switch behaves like \fB\-save\-temps\fR. |
| .Sp |
| For example: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 3 |
| \& gcc \-save\-temps=obj \-c foo.c |
| \& gcc \-save\-temps=obj \-c bar.c \-o dir/xbar.o |
| \& gcc \-save\-temps=obj foobar.c \-o dir2/yfoobar |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| creates \fIfoo.i\fR, \fIfoo.s\fR, \fIdir/xbar.i\fR, |
| \&\fIdir/xbar.s\fR, \fIdir2/yfoobar.i\fR, \fIdir2/yfoobar.s\fR, and |
| \&\fIdir2/yfoobar.o\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-time\fR[\fB=\fR\fIfile\fR]" 4 |
| .IX Item "-time[=file]" |
| Report the \s-1CPU\s0 time taken by each subprocess in the compilation |
| sequence. For C source files, this is the compiler proper and assembler |
| (plus the linker if linking is done). |
| .Sp |
| Without the specification of an output file, the output looks like this: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 2 |
| \& # cc1 0.12 0.01 |
| \& # as 0.00 0.01 |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| The first number on each line is the \*(L"user time\*(R", that is time spent |
| executing the program itself. The second number is \*(L"system time\*(R", |
| time spent executing operating system routines on behalf of the program. |
| Both numbers are in seconds. |
| .Sp |
| With the specification of an output file, the output is appended to the |
| named file, and it looks like this: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 2 |
| \& 0.12 0.01 cc1 <options> |
| \& 0.00 0.01 as <options> |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| The \*(L"user time\*(R" and the \*(L"system time\*(R" are moved before the program |
| name, and the options passed to the program are displayed, so that one |
| can later tell what file was being compiled, and with which options. |
| .IP "\fB\-fvar\-tracking\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fvar-tracking" |
| Run variable tracking pass. It computes where variables are stored at each |
| position in code. Better debugging information is then generated |
| (if the debugging information format supports this information). |
| .Sp |
| It is enabled by default when compiling with optimization (\fB\-Os\fR, |
| \&\fB\-O\fR, \fB\-O2\fR, ...), debugging information (\fB\-g\fR) and |
| the debug info format supports it. |
| .IP "\fB\-fvar\-tracking\-assignments\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fvar-tracking-assignments" |
| Annotate assignments to user variables early in the compilation and |
| attempt to carry the annotations over throughout the compilation all the |
| way to the end, in an attempt to improve debug information while |
| optimizing. Use of \fB\-gdwarf\-4\fR is recommended along with it. |
| .Sp |
| It can be enabled even if var-tracking is disabled, in which case |
| annotations are created and maintained, but discarded at the end. |
| .IP "\fB\-fvar\-tracking\-assignments\-toggle\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fvar-tracking-assignments-toggle" |
| Toggle \fB\-fvar\-tracking\-assignments\fR, in the same way that |
| \&\fB\-gtoggle\fR toggles \fB\-g\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-print\-file\-name=\fR\fIlibrary\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-print-file-name=library" |
| Print the full absolute name of the library file \fIlibrary\fR that |
| would be used when linking\-\-\-and don't do anything else. With this |
| option, \s-1GCC\s0 does not compile or link anything; it just prints the |
| file name. |
| .IP "\fB\-print\-multi\-directory\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-print-multi-directory" |
| Print the directory name corresponding to the multilib selected by any |
| other switches present in the command line. This directory is supposed |
| to exist in \fB\s-1GCC_EXEC_PREFIX\s0\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-print\-multi\-lib\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-print-multi-lib" |
| Print the mapping from multilib directory names to compiler switches |
| that enable them. The directory name is separated from the switches by |
| \&\fB;\fR, and each switch starts with an \fB@\fR instead of the |
| \&\fB\-\fR, without spaces between multiple switches. This is supposed to |
| ease shell processing. |
| .IP "\fB\-print\-multi\-os\-directory\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-print-multi-os-directory" |
| Print the path to \s-1OS\s0 libraries for the selected |
| multilib, relative to some \fIlib\fR subdirectory. If \s-1OS\s0 libraries are |
| present in the \fIlib\fR subdirectory and no multilibs are used, this is |
| usually just \fI.\fR, if \s-1OS\s0 libraries are present in \fIlib\fIsuffix\fI\fR |
| sibling directories this prints e.g. \fI../lib64\fR, \fI../lib\fR or |
| \&\fI../lib32\fR, or if \s-1OS\s0 libraries are present in \fIlib/\fIsubdir\fI\fR |
| subdirectories it prints e.g. \fIamd64\fR, \fIsparcv9\fR or \fIev6\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-print\-multiarch\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-print-multiarch" |
| Print the path to \s-1OS\s0 libraries for the selected multiarch, |
| relative to some \fIlib\fR subdirectory. |
| .IP "\fB\-print\-prog\-name=\fR\fIprogram\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-print-prog-name=program" |
| Like \fB\-print\-file\-name\fR, but searches for a program such as \fBcpp\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-print\-libgcc\-file\-name\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-print-libgcc-file-name" |
| Same as \fB\-print\-file\-name=libgcc.a\fR. |
| .Sp |
| This is useful when you use \fB\-nostdlib\fR or \fB\-nodefaultlibs\fR |
| but you do want to link with \fIlibgcc.a\fR. You can do: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& gcc \-nostdlib <files>... \`gcc \-print\-libgcc\-file\-name\` |
| .Ve |
| .IP "\fB\-print\-search\-dirs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-print-search-dirs" |
| Print the name of the configured installation directory and a list of |
| program and library directories \fBgcc\fR searches\-\-\-and don't do anything else. |
| .Sp |
| This is useful when \fBgcc\fR prints the error message |
| \&\fBinstallation problem, cannot exec cpp0: No such file or directory\fR. |
| To resolve this you either need to put \fIcpp0\fR and the other compiler |
| components where \fBgcc\fR expects to find them, or you can set the environment |
| variable \fB\s-1GCC_EXEC_PREFIX\s0\fR to the directory where you installed them. |
| Don't forget the trailing \fB/\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-print\-sysroot\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-print-sysroot" |
| Print the target sysroot directory that is used during |
| compilation. This is the target sysroot specified either at configure |
| time or using the \fB\-\-sysroot\fR option, possibly with an extra |
| suffix that depends on compilation options. If no target sysroot is |
| specified, the option prints nothing. |
| .IP "\fB\-print\-sysroot\-headers\-suffix\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-print-sysroot-headers-suffix" |
| Print the suffix added to the target sysroot when searching for |
| headers, or give an error if the compiler is not configured with such |
| a suffix\-\-\-and don't do anything else. |
| .IP "\fB\-dumpmachine\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-dumpmachine" |
| Print the compiler's target machine (for example, |
| \&\fBi686\-pc\-linux\-gnu\fR)\-\-\-and don't do anything else. |
| .IP "\fB\-dumpversion\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-dumpversion" |
| Print the compiler version (for example, \fB3.0\fR)\-\-\-and don't do |
| anything else. |
| .IP "\fB\-dumpspecs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-dumpspecs" |
| Print the compiler's built-in specs\-\-\-and don't do anything else. (This |
| is used when \s-1GCC\s0 itself is being built.) |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-eliminate\-unused\-debug\-types\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-eliminate-unused-debug-types" |
| Normally, when producing \s-1DWARF\s0 2 output, \s-1GCC\s0 avoids producing debug symbol |
| output for types that are nowhere used in the source file being compiled. |
| Sometimes it is useful to have \s-1GCC\s0 emit debugging |
| information for all types declared in a compilation |
| unit, regardless of whether or not they are actually used |
| in that compilation unit, for example |
| if, in the debugger, you want to cast a value to a type that is |
| not actually used in your program (but is declared). More often, |
| however, this results in a significant amount of wasted space. |
| .SS "Options That Control Optimization" |
| .IX Subsection "Options That Control Optimization" |
| These options control various sorts of optimizations. |
| .PP |
| Without any optimization option, the compiler's goal is to reduce the |
| cost of compilation and to make debugging produce the expected |
| results. Statements are independent: if you stop the program with a |
| breakpoint between statements, you can then assign a new value to any |
| variable or change the program counter to any other statement in the |
| function and get exactly the results you expect from the source |
| code. |
| .PP |
| Turning on optimization flags makes the compiler attempt to improve |
| the performance and/or code size at the expense of compilation time |
| and possibly the ability to debug the program. |
| .PP |
| The compiler performs optimization based on the knowledge it has of the |
| program. Compiling multiple files at once to a single output file mode allows |
| the compiler to use information gained from all of the files when compiling |
| each of them. |
| .PP |
| Not all optimizations are controlled directly by a flag. Only |
| optimizations that have a flag are listed in this section. |
| .PP |
| Most optimizations are only enabled if an \fB\-O\fR level is set on |
| the command line. Otherwise they are disabled, even if individual |
| optimization flags are specified. |
| .PP |
| Depending on the target and how \s-1GCC\s0 was configured, a slightly different |
| set of optimizations may be enabled at each \fB\-O\fR level than |
| those listed here. You can invoke \s-1GCC\s0 with \fB\-Q \-\-help=optimizers\fR |
| to find out the exact set of optimizations that are enabled at each level. |
| .IP "\fB\-O\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-O" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-O1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-O1" |
| .PD |
| Optimize. Optimizing compilation takes somewhat more time, and a lot |
| more memory for a large function. |
| .Sp |
| With \fB\-O\fR, the compiler tries to reduce code size and execution |
| time, without performing any optimizations that take a great deal of |
| compilation time. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-O\fR turns on the following optimization flags: |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-fauto\-inc\-dec |
| \&\-fcompare\-elim |
| \&\-fcprop\-registers |
| \&\-fdce |
| \&\-fdefer\-pop |
| \&\-fdelayed\-branch |
| \&\-fdse |
| \&\-fguess\-branch\-probability |
| \&\-fif\-conversion2 |
| \&\-fif\-conversion |
| \&\-fipa\-pure\-const |
| \&\-fipa\-profile |
| \&\-fipa\-reference |
| \&\-fmerge\-constants |
| \&\-fsplit\-wide\-types |
| \&\-ftree\-bit\-ccp |
| \&\-ftree\-builtin\-call\-dce |
| \&\-ftree\-ccp |
| \&\-ftree\-ch |
| \&\-ftree\-copyrename |
| \&\-ftree\-dce |
| \&\-ftree\-dominator\-opts |
| \&\-ftree\-dse |
| \&\-ftree\-forwprop |
| \&\-ftree\-fre |
| \&\-ftree\-phiprop |
| \&\-ftree\-slsr |
| \&\-ftree\-sra |
| \&\-ftree\-pta |
| \&\-ftree\-ter |
| \&\-funit\-at\-a\-time\fR |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-O\fR also turns on \fB\-fomit\-frame\-pointer\fR on machines |
| where doing so does not interfere with debugging. |
| .IP "\fB\-O2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-O2" |
| Optimize even more. \s-1GCC\s0 performs nearly all supported optimizations |
| that do not involve a space-speed tradeoff. |
| As compared to \fB\-O\fR, this option increases both compilation time |
| and the performance of the generated code. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-O2\fR turns on all optimization flags specified by \fB\-O\fR. It |
| also turns on the following optimization flags: |
| \&\fB\-fthread\-jumps |
| \&\-falign\-functions \-falign\-jumps |
| \&\-falign\-loops \-falign\-labels |
| \&\-fcaller\-saves |
| \&\-fcrossjumping |
| \&\-fcse\-follow\-jumps \-fcse\-skip\-blocks |
| \&\-fdelete\-null\-pointer\-checks |
| \&\-fdevirtualize |
| \&\-fexpensive\-optimizations |
| \&\-fgcse \-fgcse\-lm |
| \&\-fhoist\-adjacent\-loads |
| \&\-finline\-small\-functions |
| \&\-findirect\-inlining |
| \&\-fipa\-sra |
| \&\-foptimize\-sibling\-calls |
| \&\-fpartial\-inlining |
| \&\-fpeephole2 |
| \&\-fregmove |
| \&\-freorder\-blocks \-freorder\-functions |
| \&\-frerun\-cse\-after\-loop |
| \&\-fsched\-interblock \-fsched\-spec |
| \&\-fschedule\-insns \-fschedule\-insns2 |
| \&\-fstrict\-aliasing \-fstrict\-overflow |
| \&\-ftree\-switch\-conversion \-ftree\-tail\-merge |
| \&\-ftree\-pre |
| \&\-ftree\-vrp\fR |
| .Sp |
| Please note the warning under \fB\-fgcse\fR about |
| invoking \fB\-O2\fR on programs that use computed gotos. |
| .IP "\fB\-O3\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-O3" |
| Optimize yet more. \fB\-O3\fR turns on all optimizations specified |
| by \fB\-O2\fR and also turns on the \fB\-finline\-functions\fR, |
| \&\fB\-funswitch\-loops\fR, \fB\-fpredictive\-commoning\fR, |
| \&\fB\-fgcse\-after\-reload\fR, \fB\-ftree\-vectorize\fR, |
| \&\fB\-fvect\-cost\-model\fR, |
| \&\fB\-ftree\-partial\-pre\fR and \fB\-fipa\-cp\-clone\fR options. |
| .IP "\fB\-O0\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-O0" |
| Reduce compilation time and make debugging produce the expected |
| results. This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-Os\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Os" |
| Optimize for size. \fB\-Os\fR enables all \fB\-O2\fR optimizations that |
| do not typically increase code size. It also performs further |
| optimizations designed to reduce code size. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-Os\fR disables the following optimization flags: |
| \&\fB\-falign\-functions \-falign\-jumps \-falign\-loops |
| \&\-falign\-labels \-freorder\-blocks \-freorder\-blocks\-and\-partition |
| \&\-fprefetch\-loop\-arrays\fR |
| .IP "\fB\-Ofast\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Ofast" |
| Disregard strict standards compliance. \fB\-Ofast\fR enables all |
| \&\fB\-O3\fR optimizations. It also enables optimizations that are not |
| valid for all standard-compliant programs. |
| It turns on \fB\-ffast\-math\fR and the Fortran-specific |
| \&\fB\-fno\-protect\-parens\fR and \fB\-fstack\-arrays\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Og\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Og" |
| Optimize debugging experience. \fB\-Og\fR enables optimizations |
| that do not interfere with debugging. It should be the optimization |
| level of choice for the standard edit-compile-debug cycle, offering |
| a reasonable level of optimization while maintaining fast compilation |
| and a good debugging experience. |
| .Sp |
| If you use multiple \fB\-O\fR options, with or without level numbers, |
| the last such option is the one that is effective. |
| .PP |
| Options of the form \fB\-f\fR\fIflag\fR specify machine-independent |
| flags. Most flags have both positive and negative forms; the negative |
| form of \fB\-ffoo\fR is \fB\-fno\-foo\fR. In the table |
| below, only one of the forms is listed\-\-\-the one you typically |
| use. You can figure out the other form by either removing \fBno\-\fR |
| or adding it. |
| .PP |
| The following options control specific optimizations. They are either |
| activated by \fB\-O\fR options or are related to ones that are. You |
| can use the following flags in the rare cases when \*(L"fine-tuning\*(R" of |
| optimizations to be performed is desired. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-default\-inline\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-default-inline" |
| Do not make member functions inline by default merely because they are |
| defined inside the class scope (\*(C+ only). Otherwise, when you specify |
| \&\fB\-O\fR, member functions defined inside class scope are compiled |
| inline by default; i.e., you don't need to add \fBinline\fR in front of |
| the member function name. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-defer\-pop\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-defer-pop" |
| Always pop the arguments to each function call as soon as that function |
| returns. For machines that must pop arguments after a function call, |
| the compiler normally lets arguments accumulate on the stack for several |
| function calls and pops them all at once. |
| .Sp |
| Disabled at levels \fB\-O\fR, \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fforward\-propagate\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fforward-propagate" |
| Perform a forward propagation pass on \s-1RTL\s0. The pass tries to combine two |
| instructions and checks if the result can be simplified. If loop unrolling |
| is active, two passes are performed and the second is scheduled after |
| loop unrolling. |
| .Sp |
| This option is enabled by default at optimization levels \fB\-O\fR, |
| \&\fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-ffp\-contract=\fR\fIstyle\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ffp-contract=style" |
| \&\fB\-ffp\-contract=off\fR disables floating-point expression contraction. |
| \&\fB\-ffp\-contract=fast\fR enables floating-point expression contraction |
| such as forming of fused multiply-add operations if the target has |
| native support for them. |
| \&\fB\-ffp\-contract=on\fR enables floating-point expression contraction |
| if allowed by the language standard. This is currently not implemented |
| and treated equal to \fB\-ffp\-contract=off\fR. |
| .Sp |
| The default is \fB\-ffp\-contract=fast\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fomit\-frame\-pointer\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fomit-frame-pointer" |
| Don't keep the frame pointer in a register for functions that |
| don't need one. This avoids the instructions to save, set up and |
| restore frame pointers; it also makes an extra register available |
| in many functions. \fBIt also makes debugging impossible on |
| some machines.\fR |
| .Sp |
| On some machines, such as the \s-1VAX\s0, this flag has no effect, because |
| the standard calling sequence automatically handles the frame pointer |
| and nothing is saved by pretending it doesn't exist. The |
| machine-description macro \f(CW\*(C`FRAME_POINTER_REQUIRED\*(C'\fR controls |
| whether a target machine supports this flag. |
| .Sp |
| Starting with \s-1GCC\s0 version 4.6, the default setting (when not optimizing for |
| size) for 32\-bit GNU/Linux x86 and 32\-bit Darwin x86 targets has been changed to |
| \&\fB\-fomit\-frame\-pointer\fR. The default can be reverted to |
| \&\fB\-fno\-omit\-frame\-pointer\fR by configuring \s-1GCC\s0 with the |
| \&\fB\-\-enable\-frame\-pointer\fR configure option. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O\fR, \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-foptimize\-sibling\-calls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-foptimize-sibling-calls" |
| Optimize sibling and tail recursive calls. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-inline\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-inline" |
| Do not expand any functions inline apart from those marked with |
| the \f(CW\*(C`always_inline\*(C'\fR attribute. This is the default when not |
| optimizing. |
| .Sp |
| Single functions can be exempted from inlining by marking them |
| with the \f(CW\*(C`noinline\*(C'\fR attribute. |
| .IP "\fB\-finline\-small\-functions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-finline-small-functions" |
| Integrate functions into their callers when their body is smaller than expected |
| function call code (so overall size of program gets smaller). The compiler |
| heuristically decides which functions are simple enough to be worth integrating |
| in this way. This inlining applies to all functions, even those not declared |
| inline. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at level \fB\-O2\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-findirect\-inlining\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-findirect-inlining" |
| Inline also indirect calls that are discovered to be known at compile |
| time thanks to previous inlining. This option has any effect only |
| when inlining itself is turned on by the \fB\-finline\-functions\fR |
| or \fB\-finline\-small\-functions\fR options. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at level \fB\-O2\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-finline\-functions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-finline-functions" |
| Consider all functions for inlining, even if they are not declared inline. |
| The compiler heuristically decides which functions are worth integrating |
| in this way. |
| .Sp |
| If all calls to a given function are integrated, and the function is |
| declared \f(CW\*(C`static\*(C'\fR, then the function is normally not output as |
| assembler code in its own right. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at level \fB\-O3\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-finline\-functions\-called\-once\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-finline-functions-called-once" |
| Consider all \f(CW\*(C`static\*(C'\fR functions called once for inlining into their |
| caller even if they are not marked \f(CW\*(C`inline\*(C'\fR. If a call to a given |
| function is integrated, then the function is not output as assembler code |
| in its own right. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O1\fR, \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR and \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fearly\-inlining\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fearly-inlining" |
| Inline functions marked by \f(CW\*(C`always_inline\*(C'\fR and functions whose body seems |
| smaller than the function call overhead early before doing |
| \&\fB\-fprofile\-generate\fR instrumentation and real inlining pass. Doing so |
| makes profiling significantly cheaper and usually inlining faster on programs |
| having large chains of nested wrapper functions. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-fipa\-sra\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fipa-sra" |
| Perform interprocedural scalar replacement of aggregates, removal of |
| unused parameters and replacement of parameters passed by reference |
| by parameters passed by value. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR and \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-finline\-limit=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-finline-limit=n" |
| By default, \s-1GCC\s0 limits the size of functions that can be inlined. This flag |
| allows coarse control of this limit. \fIn\fR is the size of functions that |
| can be inlined in number of pseudo instructions. |
| .Sp |
| Inlining is actually controlled by a number of parameters, which may be |
| specified individually by using \fB\-\-param\fR \fIname\fR\fB=\fR\fIvalue\fR. |
| The \fB\-finline\-limit=\fR\fIn\fR option sets some of these parameters |
| as follows: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBmax-inline-insns-single\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-inline-insns-single" |
| is set to \fIn\fR/2. |
| .IP "\fBmax-inline-insns-auto\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-inline-insns-auto" |
| is set to \fIn\fR/2. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| See below for a documentation of the individual |
| parameters controlling inlining and for the defaults of these parameters. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fINote:\fR there may be no value to \fB\-finline\-limit\fR that results |
| in default behavior. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fINote:\fR pseudo instruction represents, in this particular context, an |
| abstract measurement of function's size. In no way does it represent a count |
| of assembly instructions and as such its exact meaning might change from one |
| release to an another. |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-keep\-inline\-dllexport\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-keep-inline-dllexport" |
| This is a more fine-grained version of \fB\-fkeep\-inline\-functions\fR, |
| which applies only to functions that are declared using the \f(CW\*(C`dllexport\*(C'\fR |
| attribute or declspec |
| .IP "\fB\-fkeep\-inline\-functions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fkeep-inline-functions" |
| In C, emit \f(CW\*(C`static\*(C'\fR functions that are declared \f(CW\*(C`inline\*(C'\fR |
| into the object file, even if the function has been inlined into all |
| of its callers. This switch does not affect functions using the |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`extern inline\*(C'\fR extension in \s-1GNU\s0 C90. In \*(C+, emit any and all |
| inline functions into the object file. |
| .IP "\fB\-fkeep\-static\-consts\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fkeep-static-consts" |
| Emit variables declared \f(CW\*(C`static const\*(C'\fR when optimization isn't turned |
| on, even if the variables aren't referenced. |
| .Sp |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 enables this option by default. If you want to force the compiler to |
| check if a variable is referenced, regardless of whether or not |
| optimization is turned on, use the \fB\-fno\-keep\-static\-consts\fR option. |
| .IP "\fB\-fmerge\-constants\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fmerge-constants" |
| Attempt to merge identical constants (string constants and floating-point |
| constants) across compilation units. |
| .Sp |
| This option is the default for optimized compilation if the assembler and |
| linker support it. Use \fB\-fno\-merge\-constants\fR to inhibit this |
| behavior. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O\fR, \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fmerge\-all\-constants\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fmerge-all-constants" |
| Attempt to merge identical constants and identical variables. |
| .Sp |
| This option implies \fB\-fmerge\-constants\fR. In addition to |
| \&\fB\-fmerge\-constants\fR this considers e.g. even constant initialized |
| arrays or initialized constant variables with integral or floating-point |
| types. Languages like C or \*(C+ require each variable, including multiple |
| instances of the same variable in recursive calls, to have distinct locations, |
| so using this option results in non-conforming |
| behavior. |
| .IP "\fB\-fmodulo\-sched\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fmodulo-sched" |
| Perform swing modulo scheduling immediately before the first scheduling |
| pass. This pass looks at innermost loops and reorders their |
| instructions by overlapping different iterations. |
| .IP "\fB\-fmodulo\-sched\-allow\-regmoves\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fmodulo-sched-allow-regmoves" |
| Perform more aggressive SMS-based modulo scheduling with register moves |
| allowed. By setting this flag certain anti-dependences edges are |
| deleted, which triggers the generation of reg-moves based on the |
| life-range analysis. This option is effective only with |
| \&\fB\-fmodulo\-sched\fR enabled. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-branch\-count\-reg\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-branch-count-reg" |
| Do not use \*(L"decrement and branch\*(R" instructions on a count register, |
| but instead generate a sequence of instructions that decrement a |
| register, compare it against zero, then branch based upon the result. |
| This option is only meaningful on architectures that support such |
| instructions, which include x86, PowerPC, \s-1IA\-64\s0 and S/390. |
| .Sp |
| The default is \fB\-fbranch\-count\-reg\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-function\-cse\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-function-cse" |
| Do not put function addresses in registers; make each instruction that |
| calls a constant function contain the function's address explicitly. |
| .Sp |
| This option results in less efficient code, but some strange hacks |
| that alter the assembler output may be confused by the optimizations |
| performed when this option is not used. |
| .Sp |
| The default is \fB\-ffunction\-cse\fR |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-zero\-initialized\-in\-bss\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-zero-initialized-in-bss" |
| If the target supports a \s-1BSS\s0 section, \s-1GCC\s0 by default puts variables that |
| are initialized to zero into \s-1BSS\s0. This can save space in the resulting |
| code. |
| .Sp |
| This option turns off this behavior because some programs explicitly |
| rely on variables going to the data section\-\-\-e.g., so that the |
| resulting executable can find the beginning of that section and/or make |
| assumptions based on that. |
| .Sp |
| The default is \fB\-fzero\-initialized\-in\-bss\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fmudflap \-fmudflapth \-fmudflapir\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fmudflap -fmudflapth -fmudflapir" |
| For front-ends that support it (C and \*(C+), instrument all risky |
| pointer/array dereferencing operations, some standard library |
| string/heap functions, and some other associated constructs with |
| range/validity tests. Modules so instrumented should be immune to |
| buffer overflows, invalid heap use, and some other classes of C/\*(C+ |
| programming errors. The instrumentation relies on a separate runtime |
| library (\fIlibmudflap\fR), which is linked into a program if |
| \&\fB\-fmudflap\fR is given at link time. Run-time behavior of the |
| instrumented program is controlled by the \fB\s-1MUDFLAP_OPTIONS\s0\fR |
| environment variable. See \f(CW\*(C`env MUDFLAP_OPTIONS=\-help a.out\*(C'\fR |
| for its options. |
| .Sp |
| Use \fB\-fmudflapth\fR instead of \fB\-fmudflap\fR to compile and to |
| link if your program is multi-threaded. Use \fB\-fmudflapir\fR, in |
| addition to \fB\-fmudflap\fR or \fB\-fmudflapth\fR, if |
| instrumentation should ignore pointer reads. This produces less |
| instrumentation (and therefore faster execution) and still provides |
| some protection against outright memory corrupting writes, but allows |
| erroneously read data to propagate within a program. |
| .IP "\fB\-fthread\-jumps\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fthread-jumps" |
| Perform optimizations that check to see if a jump branches to a |
| location where another comparison subsumed by the first is found. If |
| so, the first branch is redirected to either the destination of the |
| second branch or a point immediately following it, depending on whether |
| the condition is known to be true or false. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsplit\-wide\-types\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsplit-wide-types" |
| When using a type that occupies multiple registers, such as \f(CW\*(C`long |
| long\*(C'\fR on a 32\-bit system, split the registers apart and allocate them |
| independently. This normally generates better code for those types, |
| but may make debugging more difficult. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O\fR, \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, |
| \&\fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fcse\-follow\-jumps\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fcse-follow-jumps" |
| In common subexpression elimination (\s-1CSE\s0), scan through jump instructions |
| when the target of the jump is not reached by any other path. For |
| example, when \s-1CSE\s0 encounters an \f(CW\*(C`if\*(C'\fR statement with an |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`else\*(C'\fR clause, \s-1CSE\s0 follows the jump when the condition |
| tested is false. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fcse\-skip\-blocks\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fcse-skip-blocks" |
| This is similar to \fB\-fcse\-follow\-jumps\fR, but causes \s-1CSE\s0 to |
| follow jumps that conditionally skip over blocks. When \s-1CSE\s0 |
| encounters a simple \f(CW\*(C`if\*(C'\fR statement with no else clause, |
| \&\fB\-fcse\-skip\-blocks\fR causes \s-1CSE\s0 to follow the jump around the |
| body of the \f(CW\*(C`if\*(C'\fR. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-frerun\-cse\-after\-loop\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-frerun-cse-after-loop" |
| Re-run common subexpression elimination after loop optimizations are |
| performed. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fgcse\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fgcse" |
| Perform a global common subexpression elimination pass. |
| This pass also performs global constant and copy propagation. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fINote:\fR When compiling a program using computed gotos, a \s-1GCC\s0 |
| extension, you may get better run-time performance if you disable |
| the global common subexpression elimination pass by adding |
| \&\fB\-fno\-gcse\fR to the command line. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fgcse\-lm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fgcse-lm" |
| When \fB\-fgcse\-lm\fR is enabled, global common subexpression elimination |
| attempts to move loads that are only killed by stores into themselves. This |
| allows a loop containing a load/store sequence to be changed to a load outside |
| the loop, and a copy/store within the loop. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled by default when \fB\-fgcse\fR is enabled. |
| .IP "\fB\-fgcse\-sm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fgcse-sm" |
| When \fB\-fgcse\-sm\fR is enabled, a store motion pass is run after |
| global common subexpression elimination. This pass attempts to move |
| stores out of loops. When used in conjunction with \fB\-fgcse\-lm\fR, |
| loops containing a load/store sequence can be changed to a load before |
| the loop and a store after the loop. |
| .Sp |
| Not enabled at any optimization level. |
| .IP "\fB\-fgcse\-las\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fgcse-las" |
| When \fB\-fgcse\-las\fR is enabled, the global common subexpression |
| elimination pass eliminates redundant loads that come after stores to the |
| same memory location (both partial and full redundancies). |
| .Sp |
| Not enabled at any optimization level. |
| .IP "\fB\-fgcse\-after\-reload\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fgcse-after-reload" |
| When \fB\-fgcse\-after\-reload\fR is enabled, a redundant load elimination |
| pass is performed after reload. The purpose of this pass is to clean up |
| redundant spilling. |
| .IP "\fB\-faggressive\-loop\-optimizations\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-faggressive-loop-optimizations" |
| This option tells the loop optimizer to use language constraints to |
| derive bounds for the number of iterations of a loop. This assumes that |
| loop code does not invoke undefined behavior by for example causing signed |
| integer overflows or out-of-bound array accesses. The bounds for the |
| number of iterations of a loop are used to guide loop unrolling and peeling |
| and loop exit test optimizations. |
| This option is enabled by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-funsafe\-loop\-optimizations\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-funsafe-loop-optimizations" |
| This option tells the loop optimizer to assume that loop indices do not |
| overflow, and that loops with nontrivial exit condition are not |
| infinite. This enables a wider range of loop optimizations even if |
| the loop optimizer itself cannot prove that these assumptions are valid. |
| If you use \fB\-Wunsafe\-loop\-optimizations\fR, the compiler warns you |
| if it finds this kind of loop. |
| .IP "\fB\-fcrossjumping\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fcrossjumping" |
| Perform cross-jumping transformation. |
| This transformation unifies equivalent code and saves code size. The |
| resulting code may or may not perform better than without cross-jumping. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fauto\-inc\-dec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fauto-inc-dec" |
| Combine increments or decrements of addresses with memory accesses. |
| This pass is always skipped on architectures that do not have |
| instructions to support this. Enabled by default at \fB\-O\fR and |
| higher on architectures that support this. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdce\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdce" |
| Perform dead code elimination (\s-1DCE\s0) on \s-1RTL\s0. |
| Enabled by default at \fB\-O\fR and higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdse\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdse" |
| Perform dead store elimination (\s-1DSE\s0) on \s-1RTL\s0. |
| Enabled by default at \fB\-O\fR and higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-fif\-conversion\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fif-conversion" |
| Attempt to transform conditional jumps into branch-less equivalents. This |
| includes use of conditional moves, min, max, set flags and abs instructions, and |
| some tricks doable by standard arithmetics. The use of conditional execution |
| on chips where it is available is controlled by \f(CW\*(C`if\-conversion2\*(C'\fR. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O\fR, \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fif\-conversion2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fif-conversion2" |
| Use conditional execution (where available) to transform conditional jumps into |
| branch-less equivalents. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O\fR, \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdelete\-null\-pointer\-checks\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdelete-null-pointer-checks" |
| Assume that programs cannot safely dereference null pointers, and that |
| no code or data element resides there. This enables simple constant |
| folding optimizations at all optimization levels. In addition, other |
| optimization passes in \s-1GCC\s0 use this flag to control global dataflow |
| analyses that eliminate useless checks for null pointers; these assume |
| that if a pointer is checked after it has already been dereferenced, |
| it cannot be null. |
| .Sp |
| Note however that in some environments this assumption is not true. |
| Use \fB\-fno\-delete\-null\-pointer\-checks\fR to disable this optimization |
| for programs that depend on that behavior. |
| .Sp |
| Some targets, especially embedded ones, disable this option at all levels. |
| Otherwise it is enabled at all levels: \fB\-O0\fR, \fB\-O1\fR, |
| \&\fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. Passes that use the information |
| are enabled independently at different optimization levels. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdevirtualize\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdevirtualize" |
| Attempt to convert calls to virtual functions to direct calls. This |
| is done both within a procedure and interprocedurally as part of |
| indirect inlining (\f(CW\*(C`\-findirect\-inlining\*(C'\fR) and interprocedural constant |
| propagation (\fB\-fipa\-cp\fR). |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fexpensive\-optimizations\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fexpensive-optimizations" |
| Perform a number of minor optimizations that are relatively expensive. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-free\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-free" |
| Attempt to remove redundant extension instructions. This is especially |
| helpful for the x86\-64 architecture, which implicitly zero-extends in 64\-bit |
| registers after writing to their lower 32\-bit half. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled for x86 at levels \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-foptimize\-register\-move\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-foptimize-register-move" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fregmove\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fregmove" |
| .PD |
| Attempt to reassign register numbers in move instructions and as |
| operands of other simple instructions in order to maximize the amount of |
| register tying. This is especially helpful on machines with two-operand |
| instructions. |
| .Sp |
| Note \fB\-fregmove\fR and \fB\-foptimize\-register\-move\fR are the same |
| optimization. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fira\-algorithm=\fR\fIalgorithm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fira-algorithm=algorithm" |
| Use the specified coloring algorithm for the integrated register |
| allocator. The \fIalgorithm\fR argument can be \fBpriority\fR, which |
| specifies Chow's priority coloring, or \fB\s-1CB\s0\fR, which specifies |
| Chaitin-Briggs coloring. Chaitin-Briggs coloring is not implemented |
| for all architectures, but for those targets that do support it, it is |
| the default because it generates better code. |
| .IP "\fB\-fira\-region=\fR\fIregion\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fira-region=region" |
| Use specified regions for the integrated register allocator. The |
| \&\fIregion\fR argument should be one of the following: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBall\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "all" |
| Use all loops as register allocation regions. |
| This can give the best results for machines with a small and/or |
| irregular register set. |
| .IP "\fBmixed\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "mixed" |
| Use all loops except for loops with small register pressure |
| as the regions. This value usually gives |
| the best results in most cases and for most architectures, |
| and is enabled by default when compiling with optimization for speed |
| (\fB\-O\fR, \fB\-O2\fR, ...). |
| .IP "\fBone\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "one" |
| Use all functions as a single region. |
| This typically results in the smallest code size, and is enabled by default for |
| \&\fB\-Os\fR or \fB\-O0\fR. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-fira\-hoist\-pressure\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fira-hoist-pressure" |
| Use \s-1IRA\s0 to evaluate register pressure in the code hoisting pass for |
| decisions to hoist expressions. This option usually results in smaller |
| code, but it can slow the compiler down. |
| .Sp |
| This option is enabled at level \fB\-Os\fR for all targets. |
| .IP "\fB\-fira\-loop\-pressure\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fira-loop-pressure" |
| Use \s-1IRA\s0 to evaluate register pressure in loops for decisions to move |
| loop invariants. This option usually results in generation |
| of faster and smaller code on machines with large register files (>= 32 |
| registers), but it can slow the compiler down. |
| .Sp |
| This option is enabled at level \fB\-O3\fR for some targets. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-ira\-share\-save\-slots\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-ira-share-save-slots" |
| Disable sharing of stack slots used for saving call-used hard |
| registers living through a call. Each hard register gets a |
| separate stack slot, and as a result function stack frames are |
| larger. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-ira\-share\-spill\-slots\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-ira-share-spill-slots" |
| Disable sharing of stack slots allocated for pseudo-registers. Each |
| pseudo-register that does not get a hard register gets a separate |
| stack slot, and as a result function stack frames are larger. |
| .IP "\fB\-fira\-verbose=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fira-verbose=n" |
| Control the verbosity of the dump file for the integrated register allocator. |
| The default value is 5. If the value \fIn\fR is greater or equal to 10, |
| the dump output is sent to stderr using the same format as \fIn\fR minus 10. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdelayed\-branch\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdelayed-branch" |
| If supported for the target machine, attempt to reorder instructions |
| to exploit instruction slots available after delayed branch |
| instructions. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O\fR, \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fschedule\-insns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fschedule-insns" |
| If supported for the target machine, attempt to reorder instructions to |
| eliminate execution stalls due to required data being unavailable. This |
| helps machines that have slow floating point or memory load instructions |
| by allowing other instructions to be issued until the result of the load |
| or floating-point instruction is required. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fschedule\-insns2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fschedule-insns2" |
| Similar to \fB\-fschedule\-insns\fR, but requests an additional pass of |
| instruction scheduling after register allocation has been done. This is |
| especially useful on machines with a relatively small number of |
| registers and where memory load instructions take more than one cycle. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-sched\-interblock\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-sched-interblock" |
| Don't schedule instructions across basic blocks. This is normally |
| enabled by default when scheduling before register allocation, i.e. |
| with \fB\-fschedule\-insns\fR or at \fB\-O2\fR or higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-sched\-spec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-sched-spec" |
| Don't allow speculative motion of non-load instructions. This is normally |
| enabled by default when scheduling before register allocation, i.e. |
| with \fB\-fschedule\-insns\fR or at \fB\-O2\fR or higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsched\-pressure\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsched-pressure" |
| Enable register pressure sensitive insn scheduling before register |
| allocation. This only makes sense when scheduling before register |
| allocation is enabled, i.e. with \fB\-fschedule\-insns\fR or at |
| \&\fB\-O2\fR or higher. Usage of this option can improve the |
| generated code and decrease its size by preventing register pressure |
| increase above the number of available hard registers and subsequent |
| spills in register allocation. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsched\-spec\-load\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsched-spec-load" |
| Allow speculative motion of some load instructions. This only makes |
| sense when scheduling before register allocation, i.e. with |
| \&\fB\-fschedule\-insns\fR or at \fB\-O2\fR or higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsched\-spec\-load\-dangerous\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsched-spec-load-dangerous" |
| Allow speculative motion of more load instructions. This only makes |
| sense when scheduling before register allocation, i.e. with |
| \&\fB\-fschedule\-insns\fR or at \fB\-O2\fR or higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsched\-stalled\-insns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsched-stalled-insns" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fsched\-stalled\-insns=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsched-stalled-insns=n" |
| .PD |
| Define how many insns (if any) can be moved prematurely from the queue |
| of stalled insns into the ready list during the second scheduling pass. |
| \&\fB\-fno\-sched\-stalled\-insns\fR means that no insns are moved |
| prematurely, \fB\-fsched\-stalled\-insns=0\fR means there is no limit |
| on how many queued insns can be moved prematurely. |
| \&\fB\-fsched\-stalled\-insns\fR without a value is equivalent to |
| \&\fB\-fsched\-stalled\-insns=1\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsched\-stalled\-insns\-dep\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsched-stalled-insns-dep" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fsched\-stalled\-insns\-dep=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsched-stalled-insns-dep=n" |
| .PD |
| Define how many insn groups (cycles) are examined for a dependency |
| on a stalled insn that is a candidate for premature removal from the queue |
| of stalled insns. This has an effect only during the second scheduling pass, |
| and only if \fB\-fsched\-stalled\-insns\fR is used. |
| \&\fB\-fno\-sched\-stalled\-insns\-dep\fR is equivalent to |
| \&\fB\-fsched\-stalled\-insns\-dep=0\fR. |
| \&\fB\-fsched\-stalled\-insns\-dep\fR without a value is equivalent to |
| \&\fB\-fsched\-stalled\-insns\-dep=1\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsched2\-use\-superblocks\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsched2-use-superblocks" |
| When scheduling after register allocation, use superblock scheduling. |
| This allows motion across basic block boundaries, |
| resulting in faster schedules. This option is experimental, as not all machine |
| descriptions used by \s-1GCC\s0 model the \s-1CPU\s0 closely enough to avoid unreliable |
| results from the algorithm. |
| .Sp |
| This only makes sense when scheduling after register allocation, i.e. with |
| \&\fB\-fschedule\-insns2\fR or at \fB\-O2\fR or higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsched\-group\-heuristic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsched-group-heuristic" |
| Enable the group heuristic in the scheduler. This heuristic favors |
| the instruction that belongs to a schedule group. This is enabled |
| by default when scheduling is enabled, i.e. with \fB\-fschedule\-insns\fR |
| or \fB\-fschedule\-insns2\fR or at \fB\-O2\fR or higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsched\-critical\-path\-heuristic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsched-critical-path-heuristic" |
| Enable the critical-path heuristic in the scheduler. This heuristic favors |
| instructions on the critical path. This is enabled by default when |
| scheduling is enabled, i.e. with \fB\-fschedule\-insns\fR |
| or \fB\-fschedule\-insns2\fR or at \fB\-O2\fR or higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsched\-spec\-insn\-heuristic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsched-spec-insn-heuristic" |
| Enable the speculative instruction heuristic in the scheduler. This |
| heuristic favors speculative instructions with greater dependency weakness. |
| This is enabled by default when scheduling is enabled, i.e. |
| with \fB\-fschedule\-insns\fR or \fB\-fschedule\-insns2\fR |
| or at \fB\-O2\fR or higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsched\-rank\-heuristic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsched-rank-heuristic" |
| Enable the rank heuristic in the scheduler. This heuristic favors |
| the instruction belonging to a basic block with greater size or frequency. |
| This is enabled by default when scheduling is enabled, i.e. |
| with \fB\-fschedule\-insns\fR or \fB\-fschedule\-insns2\fR or |
| at \fB\-O2\fR or higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsched\-last\-insn\-heuristic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsched-last-insn-heuristic" |
| Enable the last-instruction heuristic in the scheduler. This heuristic |
| favors the instruction that is less dependent on the last instruction |
| scheduled. This is enabled by default when scheduling is enabled, |
| i.e. with \fB\-fschedule\-insns\fR or \fB\-fschedule\-insns2\fR or |
| at \fB\-O2\fR or higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsched\-dep\-count\-heuristic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsched-dep-count-heuristic" |
| Enable the dependent-count heuristic in the scheduler. This heuristic |
| favors the instruction that has more instructions depending on it. |
| This is enabled by default when scheduling is enabled, i.e. |
| with \fB\-fschedule\-insns\fR or \fB\-fschedule\-insns2\fR or |
| at \fB\-O2\fR or higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-freschedule\-modulo\-scheduled\-loops\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-freschedule-modulo-scheduled-loops" |
| Modulo scheduling is performed before traditional scheduling. If a loop |
| is modulo scheduled, later scheduling passes may change its schedule. |
| Use this option to control that behavior. |
| .IP "\fB\-fselective\-scheduling\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fselective-scheduling" |
| Schedule instructions using selective scheduling algorithm. Selective |
| scheduling runs instead of the first scheduler pass. |
| .IP "\fB\-fselective\-scheduling2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fselective-scheduling2" |
| Schedule instructions using selective scheduling algorithm. Selective |
| scheduling runs instead of the second scheduler pass. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsel\-sched\-pipelining\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsel-sched-pipelining" |
| Enable software pipelining of innermost loops during selective scheduling. |
| This option has no effect unless one of \fB\-fselective\-scheduling\fR or |
| \&\fB\-fselective\-scheduling2\fR is turned on. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsel\-sched\-pipelining\-outer\-loops\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsel-sched-pipelining-outer-loops" |
| When pipelining loops during selective scheduling, also pipeline outer loops. |
| This option has no effect unless \fB\-fsel\-sched\-pipelining\fR is turned on. |
| .IP "\fB\-fshrink\-wrap\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fshrink-wrap" |
| Emit function prologues only before parts of the function that need it, |
| rather than at the top of the function. This flag is enabled by default at |
| \&\fB\-O\fR and higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-fcaller\-saves\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fcaller-saves" |
| Enable allocation of values to registers that are clobbered by |
| function calls, by emitting extra instructions to save and restore the |
| registers around such calls. Such allocation is done only when it |
| seems to result in better code. |
| .Sp |
| This option is always enabled by default on certain machines, usually |
| those which have no call-preserved registers to use instead. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fcombine\-stack\-adjustments\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fcombine-stack-adjustments" |
| Tracks stack adjustments (pushes and pops) and stack memory references |
| and then tries to find ways to combine them. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled by default at \fB\-O1\fR and higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-fconserve\-stack\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fconserve-stack" |
| Attempt to minimize stack usage. The compiler attempts to use less |
| stack space, even if that makes the program slower. This option |
| implies setting the \fBlarge-stack-frame\fR parameter to 100 |
| and the \fBlarge-stack-frame-growth\fR parameter to 400. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-reassoc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-reassoc" |
| Perform reassociation on trees. This flag is enabled by default |
| at \fB\-O\fR and higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-pre\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-pre" |
| Perform partial redundancy elimination (\s-1PRE\s0) on trees. This flag is |
| enabled by default at \fB\-O2\fR and \fB\-O3\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-partial\-pre\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-partial-pre" |
| Make partial redundancy elimination (\s-1PRE\s0) more aggressive. This flag is |
| enabled by default at \fB\-O3\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-forwprop\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-forwprop" |
| Perform forward propagation on trees. This flag is enabled by default |
| at \fB\-O\fR and higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-fre\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-fre" |
| Perform full redundancy elimination (\s-1FRE\s0) on trees. The difference |
| between \s-1FRE\s0 and \s-1PRE\s0 is that \s-1FRE\s0 only considers expressions |
| that are computed on all paths leading to the redundant computation. |
| This analysis is faster than \s-1PRE\s0, though it exposes fewer redundancies. |
| This flag is enabled by default at \fB\-O\fR and higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-phiprop\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-phiprop" |
| Perform hoisting of loads from conditional pointers on trees. This |
| pass is enabled by default at \fB\-O\fR and higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-fhoist\-adjacent\-loads\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fhoist-adjacent-loads" |
| Speculatively hoist loads from both branches of an if-then-else if the |
| loads are from adjacent locations in the same structure and the target |
| architecture has a conditional move instruction. This flag is enabled |
| by default at \fB\-O2\fR and higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-copy\-prop\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-copy-prop" |
| Perform copy propagation on trees. This pass eliminates unnecessary |
| copy operations. This flag is enabled by default at \fB\-O\fR and |
| higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-fipa\-pure\-const\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fipa-pure-const" |
| Discover which functions are pure or constant. |
| Enabled by default at \fB\-O\fR and higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-fipa\-reference\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fipa-reference" |
| Discover which static variables do not escape the |
| compilation unit. |
| Enabled by default at \fB\-O\fR and higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-fipa\-pta\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fipa-pta" |
| Perform interprocedural pointer analysis and interprocedural modification |
| and reference analysis. This option can cause excessive memory and |
| compile-time usage on large compilation units. It is not enabled by |
| default at any optimization level. |
| .IP "\fB\-fipa\-profile\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fipa-profile" |
| Perform interprocedural profile propagation. The functions called only from |
| cold functions are marked as cold. Also functions executed once (such as |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`cold\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`noreturn\*(C'\fR, static constructors or destructors) are identified. Cold |
| functions and loop less parts of functions executed once are then optimized for |
| size. |
| Enabled by default at \fB\-O\fR and higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-fipa\-cp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fipa-cp" |
| Perform interprocedural constant propagation. |
| This optimization analyzes the program to determine when values passed |
| to functions are constants and then optimizes accordingly. |
| This optimization can substantially increase performance |
| if the application has constants passed to functions. |
| This flag is enabled by default at \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-Os\fR and \fB\-O3\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fipa\-cp\-clone\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fipa-cp-clone" |
| Perform function cloning to make interprocedural constant propagation stronger. |
| When enabled, interprocedural constant propagation performs function cloning |
| when externally visible function can be called with constant arguments. |
| Because this optimization can create multiple copies of functions, |
| it may significantly increase code size |
| (see \fB\-\-param ipcp\-unit\-growth=\fR\fIvalue\fR). |
| This flag is enabled by default at \fB\-O3\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-sink\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-sink" |
| Perform forward store motion on trees. This flag is |
| enabled by default at \fB\-O\fR and higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-bit\-ccp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-bit-ccp" |
| Perform sparse conditional bit constant propagation on trees and propagate |
| pointer alignment information. |
| This pass only operates on local scalar variables and is enabled by default |
| at \fB\-O\fR and higher. It requires that \fB\-ftree\-ccp\fR is enabled. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-ccp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-ccp" |
| Perform sparse conditional constant propagation (\s-1CCP\s0) on trees. This |
| pass only operates on local scalar variables and is enabled by default |
| at \fB\-O\fR and higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-switch\-conversion\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-switch-conversion" |
| Perform conversion of simple initializations in a switch to |
| initializations from a scalar array. This flag is enabled by default |
| at \fB\-O2\fR and higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-tail\-merge\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-tail-merge" |
| Look for identical code sequences. When found, replace one with a jump to the |
| other. This optimization is known as tail merging or cross jumping. This flag |
| is enabled by default at \fB\-O2\fR and higher. The compilation time |
| in this pass can |
| be limited using \fBmax-tail-merge-comparisons\fR parameter and |
| \&\fBmax-tail-merge-iterations\fR parameter. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-dce\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-dce" |
| Perform dead code elimination (\s-1DCE\s0) on trees. This flag is enabled by |
| default at \fB\-O\fR and higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-builtin\-call\-dce\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-builtin-call-dce" |
| Perform conditional dead code elimination (\s-1DCE\s0) for calls to built-in functions |
| that may set \f(CW\*(C`errno\*(C'\fR but are otherwise side-effect free. This flag is |
| enabled by default at \fB\-O2\fR and higher if \fB\-Os\fR is not also |
| specified. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-dominator\-opts\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-dominator-opts" |
| Perform a variety of simple scalar cleanups (constant/copy |
| propagation, redundancy elimination, range propagation and expression |
| simplification) based on a dominator tree traversal. This also |
| performs jump threading (to reduce jumps to jumps). This flag is |
| enabled by default at \fB\-O\fR and higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-dse\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-dse" |
| Perform dead store elimination (\s-1DSE\s0) on trees. A dead store is a store into |
| a memory location that is later overwritten by another store without |
| any intervening loads. In this case the earlier store can be deleted. This |
| flag is enabled by default at \fB\-O\fR and higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-ch\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-ch" |
| Perform loop header copying on trees. This is beneficial since it increases |
| effectiveness of code motion optimizations. It also saves one jump. This flag |
| is enabled by default at \fB\-O\fR and higher. It is not enabled |
| for \fB\-Os\fR, since it usually increases code size. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-loop\-optimize\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-loop-optimize" |
| Perform loop optimizations on trees. This flag is enabled by default |
| at \fB\-O\fR and higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-loop\-linear\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-loop-linear" |
| Perform loop interchange transformations on tree. Same as |
| \&\fB\-floop\-interchange\fR. To use this code transformation, \s-1GCC\s0 has |
| to be configured with \fB\-\-with\-ppl\fR and \fB\-\-with\-cloog\fR to |
| enable the Graphite loop transformation infrastructure. |
| .IP "\fB\-floop\-interchange\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-floop-interchange" |
| Perform loop interchange transformations on loops. Interchanging two |
| nested loops switches the inner and outer loops. For example, given a |
| loop like: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 5 |
| \& DO J = 1, M |
| \& DO I = 1, N |
| \& A(J, I) = A(J, I) * C |
| \& ENDDO |
| \& ENDDO |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| loop interchange transforms the loop as if it were written: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 5 |
| \& DO I = 1, N |
| \& DO J = 1, M |
| \& A(J, I) = A(J, I) * C |
| \& ENDDO |
| \& ENDDO |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| which can be beneficial when \f(CW\*(C`N\*(C'\fR is larger than the caches, |
| because in Fortran, the elements of an array are stored in memory |
| contiguously by column, and the original loop iterates over rows, |
| potentially creating at each access a cache miss. This optimization |
| applies to all the languages supported by \s-1GCC\s0 and is not limited to |
| Fortran. To use this code transformation, \s-1GCC\s0 has to be configured |
| with \fB\-\-with\-ppl\fR and \fB\-\-with\-cloog\fR to enable the |
| Graphite loop transformation infrastructure. |
| .IP "\fB\-floop\-strip\-mine\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-floop-strip-mine" |
| Perform loop strip mining transformations on loops. Strip mining |
| splits a loop into two nested loops. The outer loop has strides |
| equal to the strip size and the inner loop has strides of the |
| original loop within a strip. The strip length can be changed |
| using the \fBloop-block-tile-size\fR parameter. For example, |
| given a loop like: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 3 |
| \& DO I = 1, N |
| \& A(I) = A(I) + C |
| \& ENDDO |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| loop strip mining transforms the loop as if it were written: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 5 |
| \& DO II = 1, N, 51 |
| \& DO I = II, min (II + 50, N) |
| \& A(I) = A(I) + C |
| \& ENDDO |
| \& ENDDO |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| This optimization applies to all the languages supported by \s-1GCC\s0 and is |
| not limited to Fortran. To use this code transformation, \s-1GCC\s0 has to |
| be configured with \fB\-\-with\-ppl\fR and \fB\-\-with\-cloog\fR to |
| enable the Graphite loop transformation infrastructure. |
| .IP "\fB\-floop\-block\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-floop-block" |
| Perform loop blocking transformations on loops. Blocking strip mines |
| each loop in the loop nest such that the memory accesses of the |
| element loops fit inside caches. The strip length can be changed |
| using the \fBloop-block-tile-size\fR parameter. For example, given |
| a loop like: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 5 |
| \& DO I = 1, N |
| \& DO J = 1, M |
| \& A(J, I) = B(I) + C(J) |
| \& ENDDO |
| \& ENDDO |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| loop blocking transforms the loop as if it were written: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 9 |
| \& DO II = 1, N, 51 |
| \& DO JJ = 1, M, 51 |
| \& DO I = II, min (II + 50, N) |
| \& DO J = JJ, min (JJ + 50, M) |
| \& A(J, I) = B(I) + C(J) |
| \& ENDDO |
| \& ENDDO |
| \& ENDDO |
| \& ENDDO |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| which can be beneficial when \f(CW\*(C`M\*(C'\fR is larger than the caches, |
| because the innermost loop iterates over a smaller amount of data |
| which can be kept in the caches. This optimization applies to all the |
| languages supported by \s-1GCC\s0 and is not limited to Fortran. To use this |
| code transformation, \s-1GCC\s0 has to be configured with \fB\-\-with\-ppl\fR |
| and \fB\-\-with\-cloog\fR to enable the Graphite loop transformation |
| infrastructure. |
| .IP "\fB\-fgraphite\-identity\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fgraphite-identity" |
| Enable the identity transformation for graphite. For every SCoP we generate |
| the polyhedral representation and transform it back to gimple. Using |
| \&\fB\-fgraphite\-identity\fR we can check the costs or benefits of the |
| \&\s-1GIMPLE\s0 \-> \s-1GRAPHITE\s0 \-> \s-1GIMPLE\s0 transformation. Some minimal optimizations |
| are also performed by the code generator CLooG, like index splitting and |
| dead code elimination in loops. |
| .IP "\fB\-floop\-nest\-optimize\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-floop-nest-optimize" |
| Enable the \s-1ISL\s0 based loop nest optimizer. This is a generic loop nest |
| optimizer based on the Pluto optimization algorithms. It calculates a loop |
| structure optimized for data-locality and parallelism. This option |
| is experimental. |
| .IP "\fB\-floop\-parallelize\-all\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-floop-parallelize-all" |
| Use the Graphite data dependence analysis to identify loops that can |
| be parallelized. Parallelize all the loops that can be analyzed to |
| not contain loop carried dependences without checking that it is |
| profitable to parallelize the loops. |
| .IP "\fB\-fcheck\-data\-deps\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fcheck-data-deps" |
| Compare the results of several data dependence analyzers. This option |
| is used for debugging the data dependence analyzers. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-loop\-if\-convert\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-loop-if-convert" |
| Attempt to transform conditional jumps in the innermost loops to |
| branch-less equivalents. The intent is to remove control-flow from |
| the innermost loops in order to improve the ability of the |
| vectorization pass to handle these loops. This is enabled by default |
| if vectorization is enabled. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-loop\-if\-convert\-stores\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-loop-if-convert-stores" |
| Attempt to also if-convert conditional jumps containing memory writes. |
| This transformation can be unsafe for multi-threaded programs as it |
| transforms conditional memory writes into unconditional memory writes. |
| For example, |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 3 |
| \& for (i = 0; i < N; i++) |
| \& if (cond) |
| \& A[i] = expr; |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| is transformed to |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 2 |
| \& for (i = 0; i < N; i++) |
| \& A[i] = cond ? expr : A[i]; |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| potentially producing data races. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-loop\-distribution\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-loop-distribution" |
| Perform loop distribution. This flag can improve cache performance on |
| big loop bodies and allow further loop optimizations, like |
| parallelization or vectorization, to take place. For example, the loop |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 4 |
| \& DO I = 1, N |
| \& A(I) = B(I) + C |
| \& D(I) = E(I) * F |
| \& ENDDO |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| is transformed to |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 6 |
| \& DO I = 1, N |
| \& A(I) = B(I) + C |
| \& ENDDO |
| \& DO I = 1, N |
| \& D(I) = E(I) * F |
| \& ENDDO |
| .Ve |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-loop\-distribute\-patterns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-loop-distribute-patterns" |
| Perform loop distribution of patterns that can be code generated with |
| calls to a library. This flag is enabled by default at \fB\-O3\fR. |
| .Sp |
| This pass distributes the initialization loops and generates a call to |
| memset zero. For example, the loop |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 4 |
| \& DO I = 1, N |
| \& A(I) = 0 |
| \& B(I) = A(I) + I |
| \& ENDDO |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| is transformed to |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 6 |
| \& DO I = 1, N |
| \& A(I) = 0 |
| \& ENDDO |
| \& DO I = 1, N |
| \& B(I) = A(I) + I |
| \& ENDDO |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| and the initialization loop is transformed into a call to memset zero. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-loop\-im\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-loop-im" |
| Perform loop invariant motion on trees. This pass moves only invariants that |
| are hard to handle at \s-1RTL\s0 level (function calls, operations that expand to |
| nontrivial sequences of insns). With \fB\-funswitch\-loops\fR it also moves |
| operands of conditions that are invariant out of the loop, so that we can use |
| just trivial invariantness analysis in loop unswitching. The pass also includes |
| store motion. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-loop\-ivcanon\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-loop-ivcanon" |
| Create a canonical counter for number of iterations in loops for which |
| determining number of iterations requires complicated analysis. Later |
| optimizations then may determine the number easily. Useful especially |
| in connection with unrolling. |
| .IP "\fB\-fivopts\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fivopts" |
| Perform induction variable optimizations (strength reduction, induction |
| variable merging and induction variable elimination) on trees. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-parallelize\-loops=n\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-parallelize-loops=n" |
| Parallelize loops, i.e., split their iteration space to run in n threads. |
| This is only possible for loops whose iterations are independent |
| and can be arbitrarily reordered. The optimization is only |
| profitable on multiprocessor machines, for loops that are CPU-intensive, |
| rather than constrained e.g. by memory bandwidth. This option |
| implies \fB\-pthread\fR, and thus is only supported on targets |
| that have support for \fB\-pthread\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-pta\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-pta" |
| Perform function-local points-to analysis on trees. This flag is |
| enabled by default at \fB\-O\fR and higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-sra\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-sra" |
| Perform scalar replacement of aggregates. This pass replaces structure |
| references with scalars to prevent committing structures to memory too |
| early. This flag is enabled by default at \fB\-O\fR and higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-copyrename\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-copyrename" |
| Perform copy renaming on trees. This pass attempts to rename compiler |
| temporaries to other variables at copy locations, usually resulting in |
| variable names which more closely resemble the original variables. This flag |
| is enabled by default at \fB\-O\fR and higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-coalesce\-inlined\-vars\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-coalesce-inlined-vars" |
| Tell the copyrename pass (see \fB\-ftree\-copyrename\fR) to attempt to |
| combine small user-defined variables too, but only if they were inlined |
| from other functions. It is a more limited form of |
| \&\fB\-ftree\-coalesce\-vars\fR. This may harm debug information of such |
| inlined variables, but it will keep variables of the inlined-into |
| function apart from each other, such that they are more likely to |
| contain the expected values in a debugging session. This was the |
| default in \s-1GCC\s0 versions older than 4.7. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-coalesce\-vars\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-coalesce-vars" |
| Tell the copyrename pass (see \fB\-ftree\-copyrename\fR) to attempt to |
| combine small user-defined variables too, instead of just compiler |
| temporaries. This may severely limit the ability to debug an optimized |
| program compiled with \fB\-fno\-var\-tracking\-assignments\fR. In the |
| negated form, this flag prevents \s-1SSA\s0 coalescing of user variables, |
| including inlined ones. This option is enabled by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-ter\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-ter" |
| Perform temporary expression replacement during the \s-1SSA\-\s0>normal phase. Single |
| use/single def temporaries are replaced at their use location with their |
| defining expression. This results in non-GIMPLE code, but gives the expanders |
| much more complex trees to work on resulting in better \s-1RTL\s0 generation. This is |
| enabled by default at \fB\-O\fR and higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-slsr\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-slsr" |
| Perform straight-line strength reduction on trees. This recognizes related |
| expressions involving multiplications and replaces them by less expensive |
| calculations when possible. This is enabled by default at \fB\-O\fR and |
| higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-vectorize\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-vectorize" |
| Perform loop vectorization on trees. This flag is enabled by default at |
| \&\fB\-O3\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-slp\-vectorize\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-slp-vectorize" |
| Perform basic block vectorization on trees. This flag is enabled by default at |
| \&\fB\-O3\fR and when \fB\-ftree\-vectorize\fR is enabled. |
| .IP "\fB\-fvect\-cost\-model=\fR\fImodel\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fvect-cost-model=model" |
| Alter the cost model used for vectorization. The \fImodel\fR argument |
| should be one of \f(CW\*(C`unlimited\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`dynamic\*(C'\fR or \f(CW\*(C`cheap\*(C'\fR. |
| With the \f(CW\*(C`unlimited\*(C'\fR model the vectorized code-path is assumed |
| to be profitable while with the \f(CW\*(C`dynamic\*(C'\fR model a runtime check |
| will guard the vectorized code-path to enable it only for iteration |
| counts that will likely execute faster than when executing the original |
| scalar loop. The \f(CW\*(C`cheap\*(C'\fR model will disable vectorization of |
| loops where doing so would be cost prohibitive for example due to |
| required runtime checks for data dependence or alignment but otherwise |
| is equal to the \f(CW\*(C`dynamic\*(C'\fR model. |
| The default cost model depends on other optimization flags and is |
| either \f(CW\*(C`dynamic\*(C'\fR or \f(CW\*(C`cheap\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftree\-vrp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftree-vrp" |
| Perform Value Range Propagation on trees. This is similar to the |
| constant propagation pass, but instead of values, ranges of values are |
| propagated. This allows the optimizers to remove unnecessary range |
| checks like array bound checks and null pointer checks. This is |
| enabled by default at \fB\-O2\fR and higher. Null pointer check |
| elimination is only done if \fB\-fdelete\-null\-pointer\-checks\fR is |
| enabled. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftracer\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftracer" |
| Perform tail duplication to enlarge superblock size. This transformation |
| simplifies the control flow of the function allowing other optimizations to do |
| a better job. |
| .IP "\fB\-funroll\-loops\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-funroll-loops" |
| Unroll loops whose number of iterations can be determined at compile |
| time or upon entry to the loop. \fB\-funroll\-loops\fR implies |
| \&\fB\-frerun\-cse\-after\-loop\fR. This option makes code larger, |
| and may or may not make it run faster. |
| .IP "\fB\-funroll\-all\-loops\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-funroll-all-loops" |
| Unroll all loops, even if their number of iterations is uncertain when |
| the loop is entered. This usually makes programs run more slowly. |
| \&\fB\-funroll\-all\-loops\fR implies the same options as |
| \&\fB\-funroll\-loops\fR, |
| .IP "\fB\-fsplit\-ivs\-in\-unroller\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsplit-ivs-in-unroller" |
| Enables expression of values of induction variables in later iterations |
| of the unrolled loop using the value in the first iteration. This breaks |
| long dependency chains, thus improving efficiency of the scheduling passes. |
| .Sp |
| A combination of \fB\-fweb\fR and \s-1CSE\s0 is often sufficient to obtain the |
| same effect. However, that is not reliable in cases where the loop body |
| is more complicated than a single basic block. It also does not work at all |
| on some architectures due to restrictions in the \s-1CSE\s0 pass. |
| .Sp |
| This optimization is enabled by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-fvariable\-expansion\-in\-unroller\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fvariable-expansion-in-unroller" |
| With this option, the compiler creates multiple copies of some |
| local variables when unrolling a loop, which can result in superior code. |
| .IP "\fB\-fpartial\-inlining\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fpartial-inlining" |
| Inline parts of functions. This option has any effect only |
| when inlining itself is turned on by the \fB\-finline\-functions\fR |
| or \fB\-finline\-small\-functions\fR options. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at level \fB\-O2\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fpredictive\-commoning\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fpredictive-commoning" |
| Perform predictive commoning optimization, i.e., reusing computations |
| (especially memory loads and stores) performed in previous |
| iterations of loops. |
| .Sp |
| This option is enabled at level \fB\-O3\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fprefetch\-loop\-arrays\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fprefetch-loop-arrays" |
| If supported by the target machine, generate instructions to prefetch |
| memory to improve the performance of loops that access large arrays. |
| .Sp |
| This option may generate better or worse code; results are highly |
| dependent on the structure of loops within the source code. |
| .Sp |
| Disabled at level \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-peephole\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-peephole" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-peephole2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-peephole2" |
| .PD |
| Disable any machine-specific peephole optimizations. The difference |
| between \fB\-fno\-peephole\fR and \fB\-fno\-peephole2\fR is in how they |
| are implemented in the compiler; some targets use one, some use the |
| other, a few use both. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-fpeephole\fR is enabled by default. |
| \&\fB\-fpeephole2\fR enabled at levels \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-guess\-branch\-probability\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-guess-branch-probability" |
| Do not guess branch probabilities using heuristics. |
| .Sp |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 uses heuristics to guess branch probabilities if they are |
| not provided by profiling feedback (\fB\-fprofile\-arcs\fR). These |
| heuristics are based on the control flow graph. If some branch probabilities |
| are specified by \fB_\|_builtin_expect\fR, then the heuristics are |
| used to guess branch probabilities for the rest of the control flow graph, |
| taking the \fB_\|_builtin_expect\fR info into account. The interactions |
| between the heuristics and \fB_\|_builtin_expect\fR can be complex, and in |
| some cases, it may be useful to disable the heuristics so that the effects |
| of \fB_\|_builtin_expect\fR are easier to understand. |
| .Sp |
| The default is \fB\-fguess\-branch\-probability\fR at levels |
| \&\fB\-O\fR, \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-freorder\-blocks\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-freorder-blocks" |
| Reorder basic blocks in the compiled function in order to reduce number of |
| taken branches and improve code locality. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-freorder\-blocks\-and\-partition\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-freorder-blocks-and-partition" |
| In addition to reordering basic blocks in the compiled function, in order |
| to reduce number of taken branches, partitions hot and cold basic blocks |
| into separate sections of the assembly and .o files, to improve |
| paging and cache locality performance. |
| .Sp |
| This optimization is automatically turned off in the presence of |
| exception handling, for linkonce sections, for functions with a user-defined |
| section attribute and on any architecture that does not support named |
| sections. |
| .IP "\fB\-freorder\-functions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-freorder-functions" |
| Reorder functions in the object file in order to |
| improve code locality. This is implemented by using special |
| subsections \f(CW\*(C`.text.hot\*(C'\fR for most frequently executed functions and |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`.text.unlikely\*(C'\fR for unlikely executed functions. Reordering is done by |
| the linker so object file format must support named sections and linker must |
| place them in a reasonable way. |
| .Sp |
| Also profile feedback must be available to make this option effective. See |
| \&\fB\-fprofile\-arcs\fR for details. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fstrict\-aliasing\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fstrict-aliasing" |
| Allow the compiler to assume the strictest aliasing rules applicable to |
| the language being compiled. For C (and \*(C+), this activates |
| optimizations based on the type of expressions. In particular, an |
| object of one type is assumed never to reside at the same address as an |
| object of a different type, unless the types are almost the same. For |
| example, an \f(CW\*(C`unsigned int\*(C'\fR can alias an \f(CW\*(C`int\*(C'\fR, but not a |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`void*\*(C'\fR or a \f(CW\*(C`double\*(C'\fR. A character type may alias any other |
| type. |
| .Sp |
| Pay special attention to code like this: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 4 |
| \& union a_union { |
| \& int i; |
| \& double d; |
| \& }; |
| \& |
| \& int f() { |
| \& union a_union t; |
| \& t.d = 3.0; |
| \& return t.i; |
| \& } |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| The practice of reading from a different union member than the one most |
| recently written to (called \*(L"type-punning\*(R") is common. Even with |
| \&\fB\-fstrict\-aliasing\fR, type-punning is allowed, provided the memory |
| is accessed through the union type. So, the code above works as |
| expected. However, this code might not: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 7 |
| \& int f() { |
| \& union a_union t; |
| \& int* ip; |
| \& t.d = 3.0; |
| \& ip = &t.i; |
| \& return *ip; |
| \& } |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| Similarly, access by taking the address, casting the resulting pointer |
| and dereferencing the result has undefined behavior, even if the cast |
| uses a union type, e.g.: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 4 |
| \& int f() { |
| \& double d = 3.0; |
| \& return ((union a_union *) &d)\->i; |
| \& } |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| The \fB\-fstrict\-aliasing\fR option is enabled at levels |
| \&\fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fstrict\-overflow\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fstrict-overflow" |
| Allow the compiler to assume strict signed overflow rules, depending |
| on the language being compiled. For C (and \*(C+) this means that |
| overflow when doing arithmetic with signed numbers is undefined, which |
| means that the compiler may assume that it does not happen. This |
| permits various optimizations. For example, the compiler assumes |
| that an expression like \f(CW\*(C`i + 10 > i\*(C'\fR is always true for |
| signed \f(CW\*(C`i\*(C'\fR. This assumption is only valid if signed overflow is |
| undefined, as the expression is false if \f(CW\*(C`i + 10\*(C'\fR overflows when |
| using twos complement arithmetic. When this option is in effect any |
| attempt to determine whether an operation on signed numbers |
| overflows must be written carefully to not actually involve overflow. |
| .Sp |
| This option also allows the compiler to assume strict pointer |
| semantics: given a pointer to an object, if adding an offset to that |
| pointer does not produce a pointer to the same object, the addition is |
| undefined. This permits the compiler to conclude that \f(CW\*(C`p + u > |
| p\*(C'\fR is always true for a pointer \f(CW\*(C`p\*(C'\fR and unsigned integer |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`u\*(C'\fR. This assumption is only valid because pointer wraparound is |
| undefined, as the expression is false if \f(CW\*(C`p + u\*(C'\fR overflows using |
| twos complement arithmetic. |
| .Sp |
| See also the \fB\-fwrapv\fR option. Using \fB\-fwrapv\fR means |
| that integer signed overflow is fully defined: it wraps. When |
| \&\fB\-fwrapv\fR is used, there is no difference between |
| \&\fB\-fstrict\-overflow\fR and \fB\-fno\-strict\-overflow\fR for |
| integers. With \fB\-fwrapv\fR certain types of overflow are |
| permitted. For example, if the compiler gets an overflow when doing |
| arithmetic on constants, the overflowed value can still be used with |
| \&\fB\-fwrapv\fR, but not otherwise. |
| .Sp |
| The \fB\-fstrict\-overflow\fR option is enabled at levels |
| \&\fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-falign\-functions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-falign-functions" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-falign\-functions=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-falign-functions=n" |
| .PD |
| Align the start of functions to the next power-of-two greater than |
| \&\fIn\fR, skipping up to \fIn\fR bytes. For instance, |
| \&\fB\-falign\-functions=32\fR aligns functions to the next 32\-byte |
| boundary, but \fB\-falign\-functions=24\fR aligns to the next |
| 32\-byte boundary only if this can be done by skipping 23 bytes or less. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-fno\-align\-functions\fR and \fB\-falign\-functions=1\fR are |
| equivalent and mean that functions are not aligned. |
| .Sp |
| Some assemblers only support this flag when \fIn\fR is a power of two; |
| in that case, it is rounded up. |
| .Sp |
| If \fIn\fR is not specified or is zero, use a machine-dependent default. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-falign\-labels\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-falign-labels" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-falign\-labels=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-falign-labels=n" |
| .PD |
| Align all branch targets to a power-of-two boundary, skipping up to |
| \&\fIn\fR bytes like \fB\-falign\-functions\fR. This option can easily |
| make code slower, because it must insert dummy operations for when the |
| branch target is reached in the usual flow of the code. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-fno\-align\-labels\fR and \fB\-falign\-labels=1\fR are |
| equivalent and mean that labels are not aligned. |
| .Sp |
| If \fB\-falign\-loops\fR or \fB\-falign\-jumps\fR are applicable and |
| are greater than this value, then their values are used instead. |
| .Sp |
| If \fIn\fR is not specified or is zero, use a machine-dependent default |
| which is very likely to be \fB1\fR, meaning no alignment. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-falign\-loops\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-falign-loops" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-falign\-loops=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-falign-loops=n" |
| .PD |
| Align loops to a power-of-two boundary, skipping up to \fIn\fR bytes |
| like \fB\-falign\-functions\fR. If the loops are |
| executed many times, this makes up for any execution of the dummy |
| operations. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-fno\-align\-loops\fR and \fB\-falign\-loops=1\fR are |
| equivalent and mean that loops are not aligned. |
| .Sp |
| If \fIn\fR is not specified or is zero, use a machine-dependent default. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-falign\-jumps\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-falign-jumps" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-falign\-jumps=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-falign-jumps=n" |
| .PD |
| Align branch targets to a power-of-two boundary, for branch targets |
| where the targets can only be reached by jumping, skipping up to \fIn\fR |
| bytes like \fB\-falign\-functions\fR. In this case, no dummy operations |
| need be executed. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-fno\-align\-jumps\fR and \fB\-falign\-jumps=1\fR are |
| equivalent and mean that loops are not aligned. |
| .Sp |
| If \fIn\fR is not specified or is zero, use a machine-dependent default. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-funit\-at\-a\-time\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-funit-at-a-time" |
| This option is left for compatibility reasons. \fB\-funit\-at\-a\-time\fR |
| has no effect, while \fB\-fno\-unit\-at\-a\-time\fR implies |
| \&\fB\-fno\-toplevel\-reorder\fR and \fB\-fno\-section\-anchors\fR. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-toplevel\-reorder\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-toplevel-reorder" |
| Do not reorder top-level functions, variables, and \f(CW\*(C`asm\*(C'\fR |
| statements. Output them in the same order that they appear in the |
| input file. When this option is used, unreferenced static variables |
| are not removed. This option is intended to support existing code |
| that relies on a particular ordering. For new code, it is better to |
| use attributes. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at level \fB\-O0\fR. When disabled explicitly, it also implies |
| \&\fB\-fno\-section\-anchors\fR, which is otherwise enabled at \fB\-O0\fR on some |
| targets. |
| .IP "\fB\-fweb\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fweb" |
| Constructs webs as commonly used for register allocation purposes and assign |
| each web individual pseudo register. This allows the register allocation pass |
| to operate on pseudos directly, but also strengthens several other optimization |
| passes, such as \s-1CSE\s0, loop optimizer and trivial dead code remover. It can, |
| however, make debugging impossible, since variables no longer stay in a |
| \&\*(L"home register\*(R". |
| .Sp |
| Enabled by default with \fB\-funroll\-loops\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fwhole\-program\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fwhole-program" |
| Assume that the current compilation unit represents the whole program being |
| compiled. All public functions and variables with the exception of \f(CW\*(C`main\*(C'\fR |
| and those merged by attribute \f(CW\*(C`externally_visible\*(C'\fR become static functions |
| and in effect are optimized more aggressively by interprocedural optimizers. |
| .Sp |
| This option should not be used in combination with \f(CW\*(C`\-flto\*(C'\fR. |
| Instead relying on a linker plugin should provide safer and more precise |
| information. |
| .IP "\fB\-flto[=\fR\fIn\fR\fB]\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-flto[=n]" |
| This option runs the standard link-time optimizer. When invoked |
| with source code, it generates \s-1GIMPLE\s0 (one of \s-1GCC\s0's internal |
| representations) and writes it to special \s-1ELF\s0 sections in the object |
| file. When the object files are linked together, all the function |
| bodies are read from these \s-1ELF\s0 sections and instantiated as if they |
| had been part of the same translation unit. |
| .Sp |
| To use the link-time optimizer, \fB\-flto\fR needs to be specified at |
| compile time and during the final link. For example: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 3 |
| \& gcc \-c \-O2 \-flto foo.c |
| \& gcc \-c \-O2 \-flto bar.c |
| \& gcc \-o myprog \-flto \-O2 foo.o bar.o |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| The first two invocations to \s-1GCC\s0 save a bytecode representation |
| of \s-1GIMPLE\s0 into special \s-1ELF\s0 sections inside \fIfoo.o\fR and |
| \&\fIbar.o\fR. The final invocation reads the \s-1GIMPLE\s0 bytecode from |
| \&\fIfoo.o\fR and \fIbar.o\fR, merges the two files into a single |
| internal image, and compiles the result as usual. Since both |
| \&\fIfoo.o\fR and \fIbar.o\fR are merged into a single image, this |
| causes all the interprocedural analyses and optimizations in \s-1GCC\s0 to |
| work across the two files as if they were a single one. This means, |
| for example, that the inliner is able to inline functions in |
| \&\fIbar.o\fR into functions in \fIfoo.o\fR and vice-versa. |
| .Sp |
| Another (simpler) way to enable link-time optimization is: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& gcc \-o myprog \-flto \-O2 foo.c bar.c |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| The above generates bytecode for \fIfoo.c\fR and \fIbar.c\fR, |
| merges them together into a single \s-1GIMPLE\s0 representation and optimizes |
| them as usual to produce \fImyprog\fR. |
| .Sp |
| The only important thing to keep in mind is that to enable link-time |
| optimizations the \fB\-flto\fR flag needs to be passed to both the |
| compile and the link commands. |
| .Sp |
| To make whole program optimization effective, it is necessary to make |
| certain whole program assumptions. The compiler needs to know |
| what functions and variables can be accessed by libraries and runtime |
| outside of the link-time optimized unit. When supported by the linker, |
| the linker plugin (see \fB\-fuse\-linker\-plugin\fR) passes information |
| to the compiler about used and externally visible symbols. When |
| the linker plugin is not available, \fB\-fwhole\-program\fR should be |
| used to allow the compiler to make these assumptions, which leads |
| to more aggressive optimization decisions. |
| .Sp |
| Note that when a file is compiled with \fB\-flto\fR, the generated |
| object file is larger than a regular object file because it |
| contains \s-1GIMPLE\s0 bytecodes and the usual final code. This means that |
| object files with \s-1LTO\s0 information can be linked as normal object |
| files; if \fB\-flto\fR is not passed to the linker, no |
| interprocedural optimizations are applied. |
| .Sp |
| Additionally, the optimization flags used to compile individual files |
| are not necessarily related to those used at link time. For instance, |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 3 |
| \& gcc \-c \-O0 \-flto foo.c |
| \& gcc \-c \-O0 \-flto bar.c |
| \& gcc \-o myprog \-flto \-O3 foo.o bar.o |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| This produces individual object files with unoptimized assembler |
| code, but the resulting binary \fImyprog\fR is optimized at |
| \&\fB\-O3\fR. If, instead, the final binary is generated without |
| \&\fB\-flto\fR, then \fImyprog\fR is not optimized. |
| .Sp |
| When producing the final binary with \fB\-flto\fR, \s-1GCC\s0 only |
| applies link-time optimizations to those files that contain bytecode. |
| Therefore, you can mix and match object files and libraries with |
| \&\s-1GIMPLE\s0 bytecodes and final object code. \s-1GCC\s0 automatically selects |
| which files to optimize in \s-1LTO\s0 mode and which files to link without |
| further processing. |
| .Sp |
| There are some code generation flags preserved by \s-1GCC\s0 when |
| generating bytecodes, as they need to be used during the final link |
| stage. Currently, the following options are saved into the \s-1GIMPLE\s0 |
| bytecode files: \fB\-fPIC\fR, \fB\-fcommon\fR and all the |
| \&\fB\-m\fR target flags. |
| .Sp |
| At link time, these options are read in and reapplied. Note that the |
| current implementation makes no attempt to recognize conflicting |
| values for these options. If different files have conflicting option |
| values (e.g., one file is compiled with \fB\-fPIC\fR and another |
| isn't), the compiler simply uses the last value read from the |
| bytecode files. It is recommended, then, that you compile all the files |
| participating in the same link with the same options. |
| .Sp |
| If \s-1LTO\s0 encounters objects with C linkage declared with incompatible |
| types in separate translation units to be linked together (undefined |
| behavior according to \s-1ISO\s0 C99 6.2.7), a non-fatal diagnostic may be |
| issued. The behavior is still undefined at run time. |
| .Sp |
| Another feature of \s-1LTO\s0 is that it is possible to apply interprocedural |
| optimizations on files written in different languages. This requires |
| support in the language front end. Currently, the C, \*(C+ and |
| Fortran front ends are capable of emitting \s-1GIMPLE\s0 bytecodes, so |
| something like this should work: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 4 |
| \& gcc \-c \-flto foo.c |
| \& g++ \-c \-flto bar.cc |
| \& gfortran \-c \-flto baz.f90 |
| \& g++ \-o myprog \-flto \-O3 foo.o bar.o baz.o \-lgfortran |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| Notice that the final link is done with \fBg++\fR to get the \*(C+ |
| runtime libraries and \fB\-lgfortran\fR is added to get the Fortran |
| runtime libraries. In general, when mixing languages in \s-1LTO\s0 mode, you |
| should use the same link command options as when mixing languages in a |
| regular (non-LTO) compilation; all you need to add is \fB\-flto\fR to |
| all the compile and link commands. |
| .Sp |
| If object files containing \s-1GIMPLE\s0 bytecode are stored in a library archive, say |
| \&\fIlibfoo.a\fR, it is possible to extract and use them in an \s-1LTO\s0 link if you |
| are using a linker with plugin support. To enable this feature, use |
| the flag \fB\-fuse\-linker\-plugin\fR at link time: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& gcc \-o myprog \-O2 \-flto \-fuse\-linker\-plugin a.o b.o \-lfoo |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| With the linker plugin enabled, the linker extracts the needed |
| \&\s-1GIMPLE\s0 files from \fIlibfoo.a\fR and passes them on to the running \s-1GCC\s0 |
| to make them part of the aggregated \s-1GIMPLE\s0 image to be optimized. |
| .Sp |
| If you are not using a linker with plugin support and/or do not |
| enable the linker plugin, then the objects inside \fIlibfoo.a\fR |
| are extracted and linked as usual, but they do not participate |
| in the \s-1LTO\s0 optimization process. |
| .Sp |
| Link-time optimizations do not require the presence of the whole program to |
| operate. If the program does not require any symbols to be exported, it is |
| possible to combine \fB\-flto\fR and \fB\-fwhole\-program\fR to allow |
| the interprocedural optimizers to use more aggressive assumptions which may |
| lead to improved optimization opportunities. |
| Use of \fB\-fwhole\-program\fR is not needed when linker plugin is |
| active (see \fB\-fuse\-linker\-plugin\fR). |
| .Sp |
| The current implementation of \s-1LTO\s0 makes no |
| attempt to generate bytecode that is portable between different |
| types of hosts. The bytecode files are versioned and there is a |
| strict version check, so bytecode files generated in one version of |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 will not work with an older/newer version of \s-1GCC\s0. |
| .Sp |
| Link-time optimization does not work well with generation of debugging |
| information. Combining \fB\-flto\fR with |
| \&\fB\-g\fR is currently experimental and expected to produce wrong |
| results. |
| .Sp |
| If you specify the optional \fIn\fR, the optimization and code |
| generation done at link time is executed in parallel using \fIn\fR |
| parallel jobs by utilizing an installed \fBmake\fR program. The |
| environment variable \fB\s-1MAKE\s0\fR may be used to override the program |
| used. The default value for \fIn\fR is 1. |
| .Sp |
| You can also specify \fB\-flto=jobserver\fR to use \s-1GNU\s0 make's |
| job server mode to determine the number of parallel jobs. This |
| is useful when the Makefile calling \s-1GCC\s0 is already executing in parallel. |
| You must prepend a \fB+\fR to the command recipe in the parent Makefile |
| for this to work. This option likely only works if \fB\s-1MAKE\s0\fR is |
| \&\s-1GNU\s0 make. |
| .Sp |
| This option is disabled by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-flto\-partition=\fR\fIalg\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-flto-partition=alg" |
| Specify the partitioning algorithm used by the link-time optimizer. |
| The value is either \f(CW\*(C`1to1\*(C'\fR to specify a partitioning mirroring |
| the original source files or \f(CW\*(C`balanced\*(C'\fR to specify partitioning |
| into equally sized chunks (whenever possible) or \f(CW\*(C`max\*(C'\fR to create |
| new partition for every symbol where possible. Specifying \f(CW\*(C`none\*(C'\fR |
| as an algorithm disables partitioning and streaming completely. |
| The default value is \f(CW\*(C`balanced\*(C'\fR. While \f(CW\*(C`1to1\*(C'\fR can be used |
| as an workaround for various code ordering issues, the \f(CW\*(C`max\*(C'\fR |
| partitioning is intended for internal testing only. |
| .IP "\fB\-flto\-compression\-level=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-flto-compression-level=n" |
| This option specifies the level of compression used for intermediate |
| language written to \s-1LTO\s0 object files, and is only meaningful in |
| conjunction with \s-1LTO\s0 mode (\fB\-flto\fR). Valid |
| values are 0 (no compression) to 9 (maximum compression). Values |
| outside this range are clamped to either 0 or 9. If the option is not |
| given, a default balanced compression setting is used. |
| .IP "\fB\-flto\-report\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-flto-report" |
| Prints a report with internal details on the workings of the link-time |
| optimizer. The contents of this report vary from version to version. |
| It is meant to be useful to \s-1GCC\s0 developers when processing object |
| files in \s-1LTO\s0 mode (via \fB\-flto\fR). |
| .Sp |
| Disabled by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-fuse\-linker\-plugin\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fuse-linker-plugin" |
| Enables the use of a linker plugin during link-time optimization. This |
| option relies on plugin support in the linker, which is available in gold |
| or in \s-1GNU\s0 ld 2.21 or newer. |
| .Sp |
| This option enables the extraction of object files with \s-1GIMPLE\s0 bytecode out |
| of library archives. This improves the quality of optimization by exposing |
| more code to the link-time optimizer. This information specifies what |
| symbols can be accessed externally (by non-LTO object or during dynamic |
| linking). Resulting code quality improvements on binaries (and shared |
| libraries that use hidden visibility) are similar to \f(CW\*(C`\-fwhole\-program\*(C'\fR. |
| See \fB\-flto\fR for a description of the effect of this flag and how to |
| use it. |
| .Sp |
| This option is enabled by default when \s-1LTO\s0 support in \s-1GCC\s0 is enabled |
| and \s-1GCC\s0 was configured for use with |
| a linker supporting plugins (\s-1GNU\s0 ld 2.21 or newer or gold). |
| .IP "\fB\-ffat\-lto\-objects\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ffat-lto-objects" |
| Fat \s-1LTO\s0 objects are object files that contain both the intermediate language |
| and the object code. This makes them usable for both \s-1LTO\s0 linking and normal |
| linking. This option is effective only when compiling with \fB\-flto\fR |
| and is ignored at link time. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-fno\-fat\-lto\-objects\fR improves compilation time over plain \s-1LTO\s0, but |
| requires the complete toolchain to be aware of \s-1LTO\s0. It requires a linker with |
| linker plugin support for basic functionality. Additionally, |
| \&\fBnm\fR, \fBar\fR and \fBranlib\fR |
| need to support linker plugins to allow a full-featured build environment |
| (capable of building static libraries etc). \s-1GCC\s0 provides the \fBgcc-ar\fR, |
| \&\fBgcc-nm\fR, \fBgcc-ranlib\fR wrappers to pass the right options |
| to these tools. With non fat \s-1LTO\s0 makefiles need to be modified to use them. |
| .Sp |
| The default is \fB\-ffat\-lto\-objects\fR but this default is intended to |
| change in future releases when linker plugin enabled environments become more |
| common. |
| .IP "\fB\-fcompare\-elim\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fcompare-elim" |
| After register allocation and post-register allocation instruction splitting, |
| identify arithmetic instructions that compute processor flags similar to a |
| comparison operation based on that arithmetic. If possible, eliminate the |
| explicit comparison operation. |
| .Sp |
| This pass only applies to certain targets that cannot explicitly represent |
| the comparison operation before register allocation is complete. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O\fR, \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fuse\-ld=bfd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fuse-ld=bfd" |
| Use the \fBbfd\fR linker instead of the default linker. |
| .IP "\fB\-fuse\-ld=gold\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fuse-ld=gold" |
| Use the \fBgold\fR linker instead of the default linker. |
| .IP "\fB\-fcprop\-registers\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fcprop-registers" |
| After register allocation and post-register allocation instruction splitting, |
| perform a copy-propagation pass to try to reduce scheduling dependencies |
| and occasionally eliminate the copy. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled at levels \fB\-O\fR, \fB\-O2\fR, \fB\-O3\fR, \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fprofile\-correction\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fprofile-correction" |
| Profiles collected using an instrumented binary for multi-threaded programs may |
| be inconsistent due to missed counter updates. When this option is specified, |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 uses heuristics to correct or smooth out such inconsistencies. By |
| default, \s-1GCC\s0 emits an error message when an inconsistent profile is detected. |
| .IP "\fB\-fprofile\-dir=\fR\fIpath\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fprofile-dir=path" |
| Set the directory to search for the profile data files in to \fIpath\fR. |
| This option affects only the profile data generated by |
| \&\fB\-fprofile\-generate\fR, \fB\-ftest\-coverage\fR, \fB\-fprofile\-arcs\fR |
| and used by \fB\-fprofile\-use\fR and \fB\-fbranch\-probabilities\fR |
| and its related options. Both absolute and relative paths can be used. |
| By default, \s-1GCC\s0 uses the current directory as \fIpath\fR, thus the |
| profile data file appears in the same directory as the object file. |
| .IP "\fB\-fprofile\-generate\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fprofile-generate" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fprofile\-generate=\fR\fIpath\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fprofile-generate=path" |
| .PD |
| Enable options usually used for instrumenting application to produce |
| profile useful for later recompilation with profile feedback based |
| optimization. You must use \fB\-fprofile\-generate\fR both when |
| compiling and when linking your program. |
| .Sp |
| The following options are enabled: \f(CW\*(C`\-fprofile\-arcs\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`\-fprofile\-values\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`\-fvpt\*(C'\fR. |
| .Sp |
| If \fIpath\fR is specified, \s-1GCC\s0 looks at the \fIpath\fR to find |
| the profile feedback data files. See \fB\-fprofile\-dir\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fprofile\-use\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fprofile-use" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fprofile\-use=\fR\fIpath\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fprofile-use=path" |
| .PD |
| Enable profile feedback directed optimizations, and optimizations |
| generally profitable only with profile feedback available. |
| .Sp |
| The following options are enabled: \f(CW\*(C`\-fbranch\-probabilities\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`\-fvpt\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`\-funroll\-loops\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`\-fpeel\-loops\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`\-ftracer\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`\-ftree\-vectorize\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`ftree\-loop\-distribute\-patterns\*(C'\fR |
| .Sp |
| By default, \s-1GCC\s0 emits an error message if the feedback profiles do not |
| match the source code. This error can be turned into a warning by using |
| \&\fB\-Wcoverage\-mismatch\fR. Note this may result in poorly optimized |
| code. |
| .Sp |
| If \fIpath\fR is specified, \s-1GCC\s0 looks at the \fIpath\fR to find |
| the profile feedback data files. See \fB\-fprofile\-dir\fR. |
| .PP |
| The following options control compiler behavior regarding floating-point |
| arithmetic. These options trade off between speed and |
| correctness. All must be specifically enabled. |
| .IP "\fB\-ffloat\-store\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ffloat-store" |
| Do not store floating-point variables in registers, and inhibit other |
| options that might change whether a floating-point value is taken from a |
| register or memory. |
| .Sp |
| This option prevents undesirable excess precision on machines such as |
| the 68000 where the floating registers (of the 68881) keep more |
| precision than a \f(CW\*(C`double\*(C'\fR is supposed to have. Similarly for the |
| x86 architecture. For most programs, the excess precision does only |
| good, but a few programs rely on the precise definition of \s-1IEEE\s0 floating |
| point. Use \fB\-ffloat\-store\fR for such programs, after modifying |
| them to store all pertinent intermediate computations into variables. |
| .IP "\fB\-fexcess\-precision=\fR\fIstyle\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fexcess-precision=style" |
| This option allows further control over excess precision on machines |
| where floating-point registers have more precision than the \s-1IEEE\s0 |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`float\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`double\*(C'\fR types and the processor does not |
| support operations rounding to those types. By default, |
| \&\fB\-fexcess\-precision=fast\fR is in effect; this means that |
| operations are carried out in the precision of the registers and that |
| it is unpredictable when rounding to the types specified in the source |
| code takes place. When compiling C, if |
| \&\fB\-fexcess\-precision=standard\fR is specified then excess |
| precision follows the rules specified in \s-1ISO\s0 C99; in particular, |
| both casts and assignments cause values to be rounded to their |
| semantic types (whereas \fB\-ffloat\-store\fR only affects |
| assignments). This option is enabled by default for C if a strict |
| conformance option such as \fB\-std=c99\fR is used. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-fexcess\-precision=standard\fR is not implemented for languages |
| other than C, and has no effect if |
| \&\fB\-funsafe\-math\-optimizations\fR or \fB\-ffast\-math\fR is |
| specified. On the x86, it also has no effect if \fB\-mfpmath=sse\fR |
| or \fB\-mfpmath=sse+387\fR is specified; in the former case, \s-1IEEE\s0 |
| semantics apply without excess precision, and in the latter, rounding |
| is unpredictable. |
| .IP "\fB\-ffast\-math\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ffast-math" |
| Sets \fB\-fno\-math\-errno\fR, \fB\-funsafe\-math\-optimizations\fR, |
| \&\fB\-ffinite\-math\-only\fR, \fB\-fno\-rounding\-math\fR, |
| \&\fB\-fno\-signaling\-nans\fR and \fB\-fcx\-limited\-range\fR. |
| .Sp |
| This option causes the preprocessor macro \f(CW\*(C`_\|_FAST_MATH_\|_\*(C'\fR to be defined. |
| .Sp |
| This option is not turned on by any \fB\-O\fR option besides |
| \&\fB\-Ofast\fR since it can result in incorrect output for programs |
| that depend on an exact implementation of \s-1IEEE\s0 or \s-1ISO\s0 rules/specifications |
| for math functions. It may, however, yield faster code for programs |
| that do not require the guarantees of these specifications. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-math\-errno\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-math-errno" |
| Do not set \f(CW\*(C`errno\*(C'\fR after calling math functions that are executed |
| with a single instruction, e.g., \f(CW\*(C`sqrt\*(C'\fR. A program that relies on |
| \&\s-1IEEE\s0 exceptions for math error handling may want to use this flag |
| for speed while maintaining \s-1IEEE\s0 arithmetic compatibility. |
| .Sp |
| This option is not turned on by any \fB\-O\fR option since |
| it can result in incorrect output for programs that depend on |
| an exact implementation of \s-1IEEE\s0 or \s-1ISO\s0 rules/specifications for |
| math functions. It may, however, yield faster code for programs |
| that do not require the guarantees of these specifications. |
| .Sp |
| The default is \fB\-fmath\-errno\fR. |
| .Sp |
| On Darwin systems, the math library never sets \f(CW\*(C`errno\*(C'\fR. There is |
| therefore no reason for the compiler to consider the possibility that |
| it might, and \fB\-fno\-math\-errno\fR is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-funsafe\-math\-optimizations\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-funsafe-math-optimizations" |
| Allow optimizations for floating-point arithmetic that (a) assume |
| that arguments and results are valid and (b) may violate \s-1IEEE\s0 or |
| \&\s-1ANSI\s0 standards. When used at link-time, it may include libraries |
| or startup files that change the default \s-1FPU\s0 control word or other |
| similar optimizations. |
| .Sp |
| This option is not turned on by any \fB\-O\fR option since |
| it can result in incorrect output for programs that depend on |
| an exact implementation of \s-1IEEE\s0 or \s-1ISO\s0 rules/specifications for |
| math functions. It may, however, yield faster code for programs |
| that do not require the guarantees of these specifications. |
| Enables \fB\-fno\-signed\-zeros\fR, \fB\-fno\-trapping\-math\fR, |
| \&\fB\-fassociative\-math\fR and \fB\-freciprocal\-math\fR. |
| .Sp |
| The default is \fB\-fno\-unsafe\-math\-optimizations\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fassociative\-math\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fassociative-math" |
| Allow re-association of operands in series of floating-point operations. |
| This violates the \s-1ISO\s0 C and \*(C+ language standard by possibly changing |
| computation result. \s-1NOTE:\s0 re-ordering may change the sign of zero as |
| well as ignore NaNs and inhibit or create underflow or overflow (and |
| thus cannot be used on code that relies on rounding behavior like |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`(x + 2**52) \- 2**52\*(C'\fR. May also reorder floating-point comparisons |
| and thus may not be used when ordered comparisons are required. |
| This option requires that both \fB\-fno\-signed\-zeros\fR and |
| \&\fB\-fno\-trapping\-math\fR be in effect. Moreover, it doesn't make |
| much sense with \fB\-frounding\-math\fR. For Fortran the option |
| is automatically enabled when both \fB\-fno\-signed\-zeros\fR and |
| \&\fB\-fno\-trapping\-math\fR are in effect. |
| .Sp |
| The default is \fB\-fno\-associative\-math\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-freciprocal\-math\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-freciprocal-math" |
| Allow the reciprocal of a value to be used instead of dividing by |
| the value if this enables optimizations. For example \f(CW\*(C`x / y\*(C'\fR |
| can be replaced with \f(CW\*(C`x * (1/y)\*(C'\fR, which is useful if \f(CW\*(C`(1/y)\*(C'\fR |
| is subject to common subexpression elimination. Note that this loses |
| precision and increases the number of flops operating on the value. |
| .Sp |
| The default is \fB\-fno\-reciprocal\-math\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-ffinite\-math\-only\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ffinite-math-only" |
| Allow optimizations for floating-point arithmetic that assume |
| that arguments and results are not NaNs or +\-Infs. |
| .Sp |
| This option is not turned on by any \fB\-O\fR option since |
| it can result in incorrect output for programs that depend on |
| an exact implementation of \s-1IEEE\s0 or \s-1ISO\s0 rules/specifications for |
| math functions. It may, however, yield faster code for programs |
| that do not require the guarantees of these specifications. |
| .Sp |
| The default is \fB\-fno\-finite\-math\-only\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-signed\-zeros\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-signed-zeros" |
| Allow optimizations for floating-point arithmetic that ignore the |
| signedness of zero. \s-1IEEE\s0 arithmetic specifies the behavior of |
| distinct +0.0 and \-0.0 values, which then prohibits simplification |
| of expressions such as x+0.0 or 0.0*x (even with \fB\-ffinite\-math\-only\fR). |
| This option implies that the sign of a zero result isn't significant. |
| .Sp |
| The default is \fB\-fsigned\-zeros\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-trapping\-math\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-trapping-math" |
| Compile code assuming that floating-point operations cannot generate |
| user-visible traps. These traps include division by zero, overflow, |
| underflow, inexact result and invalid operation. This option requires |
| that \fB\-fno\-signaling\-nans\fR be in effect. Setting this option may |
| allow faster code if one relies on \*(L"non-stop\*(R" \s-1IEEE\s0 arithmetic, for example. |
| .Sp |
| This option should never be turned on by any \fB\-O\fR option since |
| it can result in incorrect output for programs that depend on |
| an exact implementation of \s-1IEEE\s0 or \s-1ISO\s0 rules/specifications for |
| math functions. |
| .Sp |
| The default is \fB\-ftrapping\-math\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-frounding\-math\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-frounding-math" |
| Disable transformations and optimizations that assume default floating-point |
| rounding behavior. This is round-to-zero for all floating point |
| to integer conversions, and round-to-nearest for all other arithmetic |
| truncations. This option should be specified for programs that change |
| the \s-1FP\s0 rounding mode dynamically, or that may be executed with a |
| non-default rounding mode. This option disables constant folding of |
| floating-point expressions at compile time (which may be affected by |
| rounding mode) and arithmetic transformations that are unsafe in the |
| presence of sign-dependent rounding modes. |
| .Sp |
| The default is \fB\-fno\-rounding\-math\fR. |
| .Sp |
| This option is experimental and does not currently guarantee to |
| disable all \s-1GCC\s0 optimizations that are affected by rounding mode. |
| Future versions of \s-1GCC\s0 may provide finer control of this setting |
| using C99's \f(CW\*(C`FENV_ACCESS\*(C'\fR pragma. This command-line option |
| will be used to specify the default state for \f(CW\*(C`FENV_ACCESS\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsignaling\-nans\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsignaling-nans" |
| Compile code assuming that \s-1IEEE\s0 signaling NaNs may generate user-visible |
| traps during floating-point operations. Setting this option disables |
| optimizations that may change the number of exceptions visible with |
| signaling NaNs. This option implies \fB\-ftrapping\-math\fR. |
| .Sp |
| This option causes the preprocessor macro \f(CW\*(C`_\|_SUPPORT_SNAN_\|_\*(C'\fR to |
| be defined. |
| .Sp |
| The default is \fB\-fno\-signaling\-nans\fR. |
| .Sp |
| This option is experimental and does not currently guarantee to |
| disable all \s-1GCC\s0 optimizations that affect signaling NaN behavior. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsingle\-precision\-constant\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsingle-precision-constant" |
| Treat floating-point constants as single precision instead of |
| implicitly converting them to double-precision constants. |
| .IP "\fB\-fcx\-limited\-range\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fcx-limited-range" |
| When enabled, this option states that a range reduction step is not |
| needed when performing complex division. Also, there is no checking |
| whether the result of a complex multiplication or division is \f(CW\*(C`NaN |
| + I*NaN\*(C'\fR, with an attempt to rescue the situation in that case. The |
| default is \fB\-fno\-cx\-limited\-range\fR, but is enabled by |
| \&\fB\-ffast\-math\fR. |
| .Sp |
| This option controls the default setting of the \s-1ISO\s0 C99 |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`CX_LIMITED_RANGE\*(C'\fR pragma. Nevertheless, the option applies to |
| all languages. |
| .IP "\fB\-fcx\-fortran\-rules\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fcx-fortran-rules" |
| Complex multiplication and division follow Fortran rules. Range |
| reduction is done as part of complex division, but there is no checking |
| whether the result of a complex multiplication or division is \f(CW\*(C`NaN |
| + I*NaN\*(C'\fR, with an attempt to rescue the situation in that case. |
| .Sp |
| The default is \fB\-fno\-cx\-fortran\-rules\fR. |
| .PP |
| The following options control optimizations that may improve |
| performance, but are not enabled by any \fB\-O\fR options. This |
| section includes experimental options that may produce broken code. |
| .IP "\fB\-fbranch\-probabilities\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fbranch-probabilities" |
| After running a program compiled with \fB\-fprofile\-arcs\fR, you can compile it a second time using |
| \&\fB\-fbranch\-probabilities\fR, to improve optimizations based on |
| the number of times each branch was taken. When a program |
| compiled with \fB\-fprofile\-arcs\fR exits, it saves arc execution |
| counts to a file called \fI\fIsourcename\fI.gcda\fR for each source |
| file. The information in this data file is very dependent on the |
| structure of the generated code, so you must use the same source code |
| and the same optimization options for both compilations. |
| .Sp |
| With \fB\-fbranch\-probabilities\fR, \s-1GCC\s0 puts a |
| \&\fB\s-1REG_BR_PROB\s0\fR note on each \fB\s-1JUMP_INSN\s0\fR and \fB\s-1CALL_INSN\s0\fR. |
| These can be used to improve optimization. Currently, they are only |
| used in one place: in \fIreorg.c\fR, instead of guessing which path a |
| branch is most likely to take, the \fB\s-1REG_BR_PROB\s0\fR values are used to |
| exactly determine which path is taken more often. |
| .IP "\fB\-fprofile\-values\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fprofile-values" |
| If combined with \fB\-fprofile\-arcs\fR, it adds code so that some |
| data about values of expressions in the program is gathered. |
| .Sp |
| With \fB\-fbranch\-probabilities\fR, it reads back the data gathered |
| from profiling values of expressions for usage in optimizations. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled with \fB\-fprofile\-generate\fR and \fB\-fprofile\-use\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fvpt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fvpt" |
| If combined with \fB\-fprofile\-arcs\fR, this option instructs the compiler |
| to add code to gather information about values of expressions. |
| .Sp |
| With \fB\-fbranch\-probabilities\fR, it reads back the data gathered |
| and actually performs the optimizations based on them. |
| Currently the optimizations include specialization of division operations |
| using the knowledge about the value of the denominator. |
| .IP "\fB\-frename\-registers\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-frename-registers" |
| Attempt to avoid false dependencies in scheduled code by making use |
| of registers left over after register allocation. This optimization |
| most benefits processors with lots of registers. Depending on the |
| debug information format adopted by the target, however, it can |
| make debugging impossible, since variables no longer stay in |
| a \*(L"home register\*(R". |
| .Sp |
| Enabled by default with \fB\-funroll\-loops\fR and \fB\-fpeel\-loops\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftracer\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftracer" |
| Perform tail duplication to enlarge superblock size. This transformation |
| simplifies the control flow of the function allowing other optimizations to do |
| a better job. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled with \fB\-fprofile\-use\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-funroll\-loops\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-funroll-loops" |
| Unroll loops whose number of iterations can be determined at compile time or |
| upon entry to the loop. \fB\-funroll\-loops\fR implies |
| \&\fB\-frerun\-cse\-after\-loop\fR, \fB\-fweb\fR and \fB\-frename\-registers\fR. |
| It also turns on complete loop peeling (i.e. complete removal of loops with |
| a small constant number of iterations). This option makes code larger, and may |
| or may not make it run faster. |
| .Sp |
| Enabled with \fB\-fprofile\-use\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-funroll\-all\-loops\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-funroll-all-loops" |
| Unroll all loops, even if their number of iterations is uncertain when |
| the loop is entered. This usually makes programs run more slowly. |
| \&\fB\-funroll\-all\-loops\fR implies the same options as |
| \&\fB\-funroll\-loops\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fpeel\-loops\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fpeel-loops" |
| Peels loops for which there is enough information that they do not |
| roll much (from profile feedback). It also turns on complete loop peeling |
| (i.e. complete removal of loops with small constant number of iterations). |
| .Sp |
| Enabled with \fB\-fprofile\-use\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fmove\-loop\-invariants\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fmove-loop-invariants" |
| Enables the loop invariant motion pass in the \s-1RTL\s0 loop optimizer. Enabled |
| at level \fB\-O1\fR |
| .IP "\fB\-funswitch\-loops\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-funswitch-loops" |
| Move branches with loop invariant conditions out of the loop, with duplicates |
| of the loop on both branches (modified according to result of the condition). |
| .IP "\fB\-ffunction\-sections\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ffunction-sections" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fdata\-sections\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdata-sections" |
| .PD |
| Place each function or data item into its own section in the output |
| file if the target supports arbitrary sections. The name of the |
| function or the name of the data item determines the section's name |
| in the output file. |
| .Sp |
| Use these options on systems where the linker can perform optimizations |
| to improve locality of reference in the instruction space. Most systems |
| using the \s-1ELF\s0 object format and \s-1SPARC\s0 processors running Solaris 2 have |
| linkers with such optimizations. \s-1AIX\s0 may have these optimizations in |
| the future. |
| .Sp |
| Only use these options when there are significant benefits from doing |
| so. When you specify these options, the assembler and linker |
| create larger object and executable files and are also slower. |
| You cannot use \f(CW\*(C`gprof\*(C'\fR on all systems if you |
| specify this option, and you may have problems with debugging if |
| you specify both this option and \fB\-g\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fbranch\-target\-load\-optimize\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fbranch-target-load-optimize" |
| Perform branch target register load optimization before prologue / epilogue |
| threading. |
| The use of target registers can typically be exposed only during reload, |
| thus hoisting loads out of loops and doing inter-block scheduling needs |
| a separate optimization pass. |
| .IP "\fB\-fbranch\-target\-load\-optimize2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fbranch-target-load-optimize2" |
| Perform branch target register load optimization after prologue / epilogue |
| threading. |
| .IP "\fB\-fbtr\-bb\-exclusive\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fbtr-bb-exclusive" |
| When performing branch target register load optimization, don't reuse |
| branch target registers within any basic block. |
| .IP "\fB\-fstack\-protector\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fstack-protector" |
| Emit extra code to check for buffer overflows, such as stack smashing |
| attacks. This is done by adding a guard variable to functions with |
| vulnerable objects. This includes functions that call \f(CW\*(C`alloca\*(C'\fR, and |
| functions with buffers larger than 8 bytes. The guards are initialized |
| when a function is entered and then checked when the function exits. |
| If a guard check fails, an error message is printed and the program exits. |
| .IP "\fB\-fstack\-protector\-all\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fstack-protector-all" |
| Like \fB\-fstack\-protector\fR except that all functions are protected. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsection\-anchors\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsection-anchors" |
| Try to reduce the number of symbolic address calculations by using |
| shared \*(L"anchor\*(R" symbols to address nearby objects. This transformation |
| can help to reduce the number of \s-1GOT\s0 entries and \s-1GOT\s0 accesses on some |
| targets. |
| .Sp |
| For example, the implementation of the following function \f(CW\*(C`foo\*(C'\fR: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 2 |
| \& static int a, b, c; |
| \& int foo (void) { return a + b + c; } |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| usually calculates the addresses of all three variables, but if you |
| compile it with \fB\-fsection\-anchors\fR, it accesses the variables |
| from a common anchor point instead. The effect is similar to the |
| following pseudocode (which isn't valid C): |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 5 |
| \& int foo (void) |
| \& { |
| \& register int *xr = &x; |
| \& return xr[&a \- &x] + xr[&b \- &x] + xr[&c \- &x]; |
| \& } |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| Not all targets support this option. |
| .IP "\fB\-\-param\fR \fIname\fR\fB=\fR\fIvalue\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "--param name=value" |
| In some places, \s-1GCC\s0 uses various constants to control the amount of |
| optimization that is done. For example, \s-1GCC\s0 does not inline functions |
| that contain more than a certain number of instructions. You can |
| control some of these constants on the command line using the |
| \&\fB\-\-param\fR option. |
| .Sp |
| The names of specific parameters, and the meaning of the values, are |
| tied to the internals of the compiler, and are subject to change |
| without notice in future releases. |
| .Sp |
| In each case, the \fIvalue\fR is an integer. The allowable choices for |
| \&\fIname\fR are: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBpredictable-branch-outcome\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "predictable-branch-outcome" |
| When branch is predicted to be taken with probability lower than this threshold |
| (in percent), then it is considered well predictable. The default is 10. |
| .IP "\fBmax-crossjump-edges\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-crossjump-edges" |
| The maximum number of incoming edges to consider for cross-jumping. |
| The algorithm used by \fB\-fcrossjumping\fR is O(N^2) in |
| the number of edges incoming to each block. Increasing values mean |
| more aggressive optimization, making the compilation time increase with |
| probably small improvement in executable size. |
| .IP "\fBmin-crossjump-insns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "min-crossjump-insns" |
| The minimum number of instructions that must be matched at the end |
| of two blocks before cross-jumping is performed on them. This |
| value is ignored in the case where all instructions in the block being |
| cross-jumped from are matched. The default value is 5. |
| .IP "\fBmax-grow-copy-bb-insns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-grow-copy-bb-insns" |
| The maximum code size expansion factor when copying basic blocks |
| instead of jumping. The expansion is relative to a jump instruction. |
| The default value is 8. |
| .IP "\fBmax-goto-duplication-insns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-goto-duplication-insns" |
| The maximum number of instructions to duplicate to a block that jumps |
| to a computed goto. To avoid O(N^2) behavior in a number of |
| passes, \s-1GCC\s0 factors computed gotos early in the compilation process, |
| and unfactors them as late as possible. Only computed jumps at the |
| end of a basic blocks with no more than max-goto-duplication-insns are |
| unfactored. The default value is 8. |
| .IP "\fBmax-delay-slot-insn-search\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-delay-slot-insn-search" |
| The maximum number of instructions to consider when looking for an |
| instruction to fill a delay slot. If more than this arbitrary number of |
| instructions are searched, the time savings from filling the delay slot |
| are minimal, so stop searching. Increasing values mean more |
| aggressive optimization, making the compilation time increase with probably |
| small improvement in execution time. |
| .IP "\fBmax-delay-slot-live-search\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-delay-slot-live-search" |
| When trying to fill delay slots, the maximum number of instructions to |
| consider when searching for a block with valid live register |
| information. Increasing this arbitrarily chosen value means more |
| aggressive optimization, increasing the compilation time. This parameter |
| should be removed when the delay slot code is rewritten to maintain the |
| control-flow graph. |
| .IP "\fBmax-gcse-memory\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-gcse-memory" |
| The approximate maximum amount of memory that can be allocated in |
| order to perform the global common subexpression elimination |
| optimization. If more memory than specified is required, the |
| optimization is not done. |
| .IP "\fBmax-gcse-insertion-ratio\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-gcse-insertion-ratio" |
| If the ratio of expression insertions to deletions is larger than this value |
| for any expression, then \s-1RTL\s0 \s-1PRE\s0 inserts or removes the expression and thus |
| leaves partially redundant computations in the instruction stream. The default value is 20. |
| .IP "\fBmax-pending-list-length\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-pending-list-length" |
| The maximum number of pending dependencies scheduling allows |
| before flushing the current state and starting over. Large functions |
| with few branches or calls can create excessively large lists which |
| needlessly consume memory and resources. |
| .IP "\fBmax-modulo-backtrack-attempts\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-modulo-backtrack-attempts" |
| The maximum number of backtrack attempts the scheduler should make |
| when modulo scheduling a loop. Larger values can exponentially increase |
| compilation time. |
| .IP "\fBmax-inline-insns-single\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-inline-insns-single" |
| Several parameters control the tree inliner used in \s-1GCC\s0. |
| This number sets the maximum number of instructions (counted in \s-1GCC\s0's |
| internal representation) in a single function that the tree inliner |
| considers for inlining. This only affects functions declared |
| inline and methods implemented in a class declaration (\*(C+). |
| The default value is 400. |
| .IP "\fBmax-inline-insns-auto\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-inline-insns-auto" |
| When you use \fB\-finline\-functions\fR (included in \fB\-O3\fR), |
| a lot of functions that would otherwise not be considered for inlining |
| by the compiler are investigated. To those functions, a different |
| (more restrictive) limit compared to functions declared inline can |
| be applied. |
| The default value is 40. |
| .IP "\fBinline-min-speedup\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "inline-min-speedup" |
| When estimated performance improvement of caller + callee runtime exceeds this |
| threshold (in precent), the function can be inlined regardless the limit on |
| \&\fB\-\-param max-inline-insns-single\fR and \fB\-\-param |
| max-inline-insns-auto\fR. |
| .IP "\fBlarge-function-insns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "large-function-insns" |
| The limit specifying really large functions. For functions larger than this |
| limit after inlining, inlining is constrained by |
| \&\fB\-\-param large-function-growth\fR. This parameter is useful primarily |
| to avoid extreme compilation time caused by non-linear algorithms used by the |
| back end. |
| The default value is 2700. |
| .IP "\fBlarge-function-growth\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "large-function-growth" |
| Specifies maximal growth of large function caused by inlining in percents. |
| The default value is 100 which limits large function growth to 2.0 times |
| the original size. |
| .IP "\fBlarge-unit-insns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "large-unit-insns" |
| The limit specifying large translation unit. Growth caused by inlining of |
| units larger than this limit is limited by \fB\-\-param inline-unit-growth\fR. |
| For small units this might be too tight. |
| For example, consider a unit consisting of function A |
| that is inline and B that just calls A three times. If B is small relative to |
| A, the growth of unit is 300\e% and yet such inlining is very sane. For very |
| large units consisting of small inlineable functions, however, the overall unit |
| growth limit is needed to avoid exponential explosion of code size. Thus for |
| smaller units, the size is increased to \fB\-\-param large-unit-insns\fR |
| before applying \fB\-\-param inline-unit-growth\fR. The default is 10000. |
| .IP "\fBinline-unit-growth\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "inline-unit-growth" |
| Specifies maximal overall growth of the compilation unit caused by inlining. |
| The default value is 30 which limits unit growth to 1.3 times the original |
| size. |
| .IP "\fBipcp-unit-growth\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "ipcp-unit-growth" |
| Specifies maximal overall growth of the compilation unit caused by |
| interprocedural constant propagation. The default value is 10 which limits |
| unit growth to 1.1 times the original size. |
| .IP "\fBlarge-stack-frame\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "large-stack-frame" |
| The limit specifying large stack frames. While inlining the algorithm is trying |
| to not grow past this limit too much. The default value is 256 bytes. |
| .IP "\fBlarge-stack-frame-growth\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "large-stack-frame-growth" |
| Specifies maximal growth of large stack frames caused by inlining in percents. |
| The default value is 1000 which limits large stack frame growth to 11 times |
| the original size. |
| .IP "\fBmax-inline-insns-recursive\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-inline-insns-recursive" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBmax-inline-insns-recursive-auto\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-inline-insns-recursive-auto" |
| .PD |
| Specifies the maximum number of instructions an out-of-line copy of a |
| self-recursive inline |
| function can grow into by performing recursive inlining. |
| .Sp |
| For functions declared inline, \fB\-\-param max-inline-insns-recursive\fR is |
| taken into account. For functions not declared inline, recursive inlining |
| happens only when \fB\-finline\-functions\fR (included in \fB\-O3\fR) is |
| enabled and \fB\-\-param max-inline-insns-recursive-auto\fR is used. The |
| default value is 450. |
| .IP "\fBmax-inline-recursive-depth\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-inline-recursive-depth" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBmax-inline-recursive-depth-auto\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-inline-recursive-depth-auto" |
| .PD |
| Specifies the maximum recursion depth used for recursive inlining. |
| .Sp |
| For functions declared inline, \fB\-\-param max-inline-recursive-depth\fR is |
| taken into account. For functions not declared inline, recursive inlining |
| happens only when \fB\-finline\-functions\fR (included in \fB\-O3\fR) is |
| enabled and \fB\-\-param max-inline-recursive-depth-auto\fR is used. The |
| default value is 8. |
| .IP "\fBmin-inline-recursive-probability\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "min-inline-recursive-probability" |
| Recursive inlining is profitable only for function having deep recursion |
| in average and can hurt for function having little recursion depth by |
| increasing the prologue size or complexity of function body to other |
| optimizers. |
| .Sp |
| When profile feedback is available (see \fB\-fprofile\-generate\fR) the actual |
| recursion depth can be guessed from probability that function recurses via a |
| given call expression. This parameter limits inlining only to call expressions |
| whose probability exceeds the given threshold (in percents). |
| The default value is 10. |
| .IP "\fBearly-inlining-insns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "early-inlining-insns" |
| Specify growth that the early inliner can make. In effect it increases |
| the amount of inlining for code having a large abstraction penalty. |
| The default value is 10. |
| .IP "\fBmax-early-inliner-iterations\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-early-inliner-iterations" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBmax-early-inliner-iterations\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-early-inliner-iterations" |
| .PD |
| Limit of iterations of the early inliner. This basically bounds |
| the number of nested indirect calls the early inliner can resolve. |
| Deeper chains are still handled by late inlining. |
| .IP "\fBcomdat-sharing-probability\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "comdat-sharing-probability" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBcomdat-sharing-probability\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "comdat-sharing-probability" |
| .PD |
| Probability (in percent) that \*(C+ inline function with comdat visibility |
| are shared across multiple compilation units. The default value is 20. |
| .IP "\fBmin-vect-loop-bound\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "min-vect-loop-bound" |
| The minimum number of iterations under which loops are not vectorized |
| when \fB\-ftree\-vectorize\fR is used. The number of iterations after |
| vectorization needs to be greater than the value specified by this option |
| to allow vectorization. The default value is 0. |
| .IP "\fBgcse-cost-distance-ratio\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "gcse-cost-distance-ratio" |
| Scaling factor in calculation of maximum distance an expression |
| can be moved by \s-1GCSE\s0 optimizations. This is currently supported only in the |
| code hoisting pass. The bigger the ratio, the more aggressive code hoisting |
| is with simple expressions, i.e., the expressions that have cost |
| less than \fBgcse-unrestricted-cost\fR. Specifying 0 disables |
| hoisting of simple expressions. The default value is 10. |
| .IP "\fBgcse-unrestricted-cost\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "gcse-unrestricted-cost" |
| Cost, roughly measured as the cost of a single typical machine |
| instruction, at which \s-1GCSE\s0 optimizations do not constrain |
| the distance an expression can travel. This is currently |
| supported only in the code hoisting pass. The lesser the cost, |
| the more aggressive code hoisting is. Specifying 0 |
| allows all expressions to travel unrestricted distances. |
| The default value is 3. |
| .IP "\fBmax-hoist-depth\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-hoist-depth" |
| The depth of search in the dominator tree for expressions to hoist. |
| This is used to avoid quadratic behavior in hoisting algorithm. |
| The value of 0 does not limit on the search, but may slow down compilation |
| of huge functions. The default value is 30. |
| .IP "\fBmax-tail-merge-comparisons\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-tail-merge-comparisons" |
| The maximum amount of similar bbs to compare a bb with. This is used to |
| avoid quadratic behavior in tree tail merging. The default value is 10. |
| .IP "\fBmax-tail-merge-iterations\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-tail-merge-iterations" |
| The maximum amount of iterations of the pass over the function. This is used to |
| limit compilation time in tree tail merging. The default value is 2. |
| .IP "\fBmax-unrolled-insns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-unrolled-insns" |
| The maximum number of instructions that a loop may have to be unrolled. |
| If a loop is unrolled, this parameter also determines how many times |
| the loop code is unrolled. |
| .IP "\fBmax-average-unrolled-insns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-average-unrolled-insns" |
| The maximum number of instructions biased by probabilities of their execution |
| that a loop may have to be unrolled. If a loop is unrolled, |
| this parameter also determines how many times the loop code is unrolled. |
| .IP "\fBmax-unroll-times\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-unroll-times" |
| The maximum number of unrollings of a single loop. |
| .IP "\fBmax-peeled-insns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-peeled-insns" |
| The maximum number of instructions that a loop may have to be peeled. |
| If a loop is peeled, this parameter also determines how many times |
| the loop code is peeled. |
| .IP "\fBmax-peel-times\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-peel-times" |
| The maximum number of peelings of a single loop. |
| .IP "\fBmax-peel-branches\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-peel-branches" |
| The maximum number of branches on the hot path through the peeled sequence. |
| .IP "\fBmax-completely-peeled-insns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-completely-peeled-insns" |
| The maximum number of insns of a completely peeled loop. |
| .IP "\fBmax-completely-peel-times\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-completely-peel-times" |
| The maximum number of iterations of a loop to be suitable for complete peeling. |
| .IP "\fBmax-completely-peel-loop-nest-depth\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-completely-peel-loop-nest-depth" |
| The maximum depth of a loop nest suitable for complete peeling. |
| .IP "\fBmax-unswitch-insns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-unswitch-insns" |
| The maximum number of insns of an unswitched loop. |
| .IP "\fBmax-unswitch-level\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-unswitch-level" |
| The maximum number of branches unswitched in a single loop. |
| .IP "\fBlim-expensive\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "lim-expensive" |
| The minimum cost of an expensive expression in the loop invariant motion. |
| .IP "\fBiv-consider-all-candidates-bound\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "iv-consider-all-candidates-bound" |
| Bound on number of candidates for induction variables, below which |
| all candidates are considered for each use in induction variable |
| optimizations. If there are more candidates than this, |
| only the most relevant ones are considered to avoid quadratic time complexity. |
| .IP "\fBiv-max-considered-uses\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "iv-max-considered-uses" |
| The induction variable optimizations give up on loops that contain more |
| induction variable uses. |
| .IP "\fBiv-always-prune-cand-set-bound\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "iv-always-prune-cand-set-bound" |
| If the number of candidates in the set is smaller than this value, |
| always try to remove unnecessary ivs from the set |
| when adding a new one. |
| .IP "\fBscev-max-expr-size\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "scev-max-expr-size" |
| Bound on size of expressions used in the scalar evolutions analyzer. |
| Large expressions slow the analyzer. |
| .IP "\fBscev-max-expr-complexity\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "scev-max-expr-complexity" |
| Bound on the complexity of the expressions in the scalar evolutions analyzer. |
| Complex expressions slow the analyzer. |
| .IP "\fBomega-max-vars\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "omega-max-vars" |
| The maximum number of variables in an Omega constraint system. |
| The default value is 128. |
| .IP "\fBomega-max-geqs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "omega-max-geqs" |
| The maximum number of inequalities in an Omega constraint system. |
| The default value is 256. |
| .IP "\fBomega-max-eqs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "omega-max-eqs" |
| The maximum number of equalities in an Omega constraint system. |
| The default value is 128. |
| .IP "\fBomega-max-wild-cards\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "omega-max-wild-cards" |
| The maximum number of wildcard variables that the Omega solver is |
| able to insert. The default value is 18. |
| .IP "\fBomega-hash-table-size\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "omega-hash-table-size" |
| The size of the hash table in the Omega solver. The default value is |
| 550. |
| .IP "\fBomega-max-keys\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "omega-max-keys" |
| The maximal number of keys used by the Omega solver. The default |
| value is 500. |
| .IP "\fBomega-eliminate-redundant-constraints\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "omega-eliminate-redundant-constraints" |
| When set to 1, use expensive methods to eliminate all redundant |
| constraints. The default value is 0. |
| .IP "\fBvect-max-version-for-alignment-checks\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "vect-max-version-for-alignment-checks" |
| The maximum number of run-time checks that can be performed when |
| doing loop versioning for alignment in the vectorizer. |
| .IP "\fBvect-max-version-for-alias-checks\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "vect-max-version-for-alias-checks" |
| The maximum number of run-time checks that can be performed when |
| doing loop versioning for alias in the vectorizer. |
| .IP "\fBvect-max-peeling-for-alignment\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "vect-max-peeling-for-alignment" |
| The maximum number of loop peels to enhance access alignment |
| for vectorizer. Value \-1 means 'no limit'. |
| .IP "\fBmax-iterations-to-track\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-iterations-to-track" |
| The maximum number of iterations of a loop the brute-force algorithm |
| for analysis of the number of iterations of the loop tries to evaluate. |
| .IP "\fBhot-bb-count-ws-permille\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "hot-bb-count-ws-permille" |
| A basic block profile count is considered hot if it contributes to |
| the given permillage (i.e. 0...1000) of the entire profiled execution. |
| .IP "\fBhot-bb-frequency-fraction\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "hot-bb-frequency-fraction" |
| Select fraction of the entry block frequency of executions of basic block in |
| function given basic block needs to have to be considered hot. |
| .IP "\fBmax-predicted-iterations\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-predicted-iterations" |
| The maximum number of loop iterations we predict statically. This is useful |
| in cases where a function contains a single loop with known bound and |
| another loop with unknown bound. |
| The known number of iterations is predicted correctly, while |
| the unknown number of iterations average to roughly 10. This means that the |
| loop without bounds appears artificially cold relative to the other one. |
| .IP "\fBalign-threshold\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "align-threshold" |
| Select fraction of the maximal frequency of executions of a basic block in |
| a function to align the basic block. |
| .IP "\fBalign-loop-iterations\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "align-loop-iterations" |
| A loop expected to iterate at least the selected number of iterations is |
| aligned. |
| .IP "\fBtracer-dynamic-coverage\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "tracer-dynamic-coverage" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBtracer-dynamic-coverage-feedback\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "tracer-dynamic-coverage-feedback" |
| .PD |
| This value is used to limit superblock formation once the given percentage of |
| executed instructions is covered. This limits unnecessary code size |
| expansion. |
| .Sp |
| The \fBtracer-dynamic-coverage-feedback\fR is used only when profile |
| feedback is available. The real profiles (as opposed to statically estimated |
| ones) are much less balanced allowing the threshold to be larger value. |
| .IP "\fBtracer-max-code-growth\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "tracer-max-code-growth" |
| Stop tail duplication once code growth has reached given percentage. This is |
| a rather artificial limit, as most of the duplicates are eliminated later in |
| cross jumping, so it may be set to much higher values than is the desired code |
| growth. |
| .IP "\fBtracer-min-branch-ratio\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "tracer-min-branch-ratio" |
| Stop reverse growth when the reverse probability of best edge is less than this |
| threshold (in percent). |
| .IP "\fBtracer-min-branch-ratio\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "tracer-min-branch-ratio" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBtracer-min-branch-ratio-feedback\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "tracer-min-branch-ratio-feedback" |
| .PD |
| Stop forward growth if the best edge has probability lower than this |
| threshold. |
| .Sp |
| Similarly to \fBtracer-dynamic-coverage\fR two values are present, one for |
| compilation for profile feedback and one for compilation without. The value |
| for compilation with profile feedback needs to be more conservative (higher) in |
| order to make tracer effective. |
| .IP "\fBmax-cse-path-length\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-cse-path-length" |
| The maximum number of basic blocks on path that \s-1CSE\s0 considers. |
| The default is 10. |
| .IP "\fBmax-cse-insns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-cse-insns" |
| The maximum number of instructions \s-1CSE\s0 processes before flushing. |
| The default is 1000. |
| .IP "\fBggc-min-expand\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "ggc-min-expand" |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 uses a garbage collector to manage its own memory allocation. This |
| parameter specifies the minimum percentage by which the garbage |
| collector's heap should be allowed to expand between collections. |
| Tuning this may improve compilation speed; it has no effect on code |
| generation. |
| .Sp |
| The default is 30% + 70% * (\s-1RAM/1GB\s0) with an upper bound of 100% when |
| \&\s-1RAM\s0 >= 1GB. If \f(CW\*(C`getrlimit\*(C'\fR is available, the notion of \*(L"\s-1RAM\s0\*(R" is |
| the smallest of actual \s-1RAM\s0 and \f(CW\*(C`RLIMIT_DATA\*(C'\fR or \f(CW\*(C`RLIMIT_AS\*(C'\fR. If |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 is not able to calculate \s-1RAM\s0 on a particular platform, the lower |
| bound of 30% is used. Setting this parameter and |
| \&\fBggc-min-heapsize\fR to zero causes a full collection to occur at |
| every opportunity. This is extremely slow, but can be useful for |
| debugging. |
| .IP "\fBggc-min-heapsize\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "ggc-min-heapsize" |
| Minimum size of the garbage collector's heap before it begins bothering |
| to collect garbage. The first collection occurs after the heap expands |
| by \fBggc-min-expand\fR% beyond \fBggc-min-heapsize\fR. Again, |
| tuning this may improve compilation speed, and has no effect on code |
| generation. |
| .Sp |
| The default is the smaller of \s-1RAM/8\s0, \s-1RLIMIT_RSS\s0, or a limit that |
| tries to ensure that \s-1RLIMIT_DATA\s0 or \s-1RLIMIT_AS\s0 are not exceeded, but |
| with a lower bound of 4096 (four megabytes) and an upper bound of |
| 131072 (128 megabytes). If \s-1GCC\s0 is not able to calculate \s-1RAM\s0 on a |
| particular platform, the lower bound is used. Setting this parameter |
| very large effectively disables garbage collection. Setting this |
| parameter and \fBggc-min-expand\fR to zero causes a full collection |
| to occur at every opportunity. |
| .IP "\fBmax-reload-search-insns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-reload-search-insns" |
| The maximum number of instruction reload should look backward for equivalent |
| register. Increasing values mean more aggressive optimization, making the |
| compilation time increase with probably slightly better performance. |
| The default value is 100. |
| .IP "\fBmax-cselib-memory-locations\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-cselib-memory-locations" |
| The maximum number of memory locations cselib should take into account. |
| Increasing values mean more aggressive optimization, making the compilation time |
| increase with probably slightly better performance. The default value is 500. |
| .IP "\fBreorder-blocks-duplicate\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "reorder-blocks-duplicate" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBreorder-blocks-duplicate-feedback\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "reorder-blocks-duplicate-feedback" |
| .PD |
| Used by the basic block reordering pass to decide whether to use unconditional |
| branch or duplicate the code on its destination. Code is duplicated when its |
| estimated size is smaller than this value multiplied by the estimated size of |
| unconditional jump in the hot spots of the program. |
| .Sp |
| The \fBreorder-block-duplicate-feedback\fR is used only when profile |
| feedback is available. It may be set to higher values than |
| \&\fBreorder-block-duplicate\fR since information about the hot spots is more |
| accurate. |
| .IP "\fBmax-sched-ready-insns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-sched-ready-insns" |
| The maximum number of instructions ready to be issued the scheduler should |
| consider at any given time during the first scheduling pass. Increasing |
| values mean more thorough searches, making the compilation time increase |
| with probably little benefit. The default value is 100. |
| .IP "\fBmax-sched-region-blocks\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-sched-region-blocks" |
| The maximum number of blocks in a region to be considered for |
| interblock scheduling. The default value is 10. |
| .IP "\fBmax-pipeline-region-blocks\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-pipeline-region-blocks" |
| The maximum number of blocks in a region to be considered for |
| pipelining in the selective scheduler. The default value is 15. |
| .IP "\fBmax-sched-region-insns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-sched-region-insns" |
| The maximum number of insns in a region to be considered for |
| interblock scheduling. The default value is 100. |
| .IP "\fBmax-pipeline-region-insns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-pipeline-region-insns" |
| The maximum number of insns in a region to be considered for |
| pipelining in the selective scheduler. The default value is 200. |
| .IP "\fBmin-spec-prob\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "min-spec-prob" |
| The minimum probability (in percents) of reaching a source block |
| for interblock speculative scheduling. The default value is 40. |
| .IP "\fBmax-sched-extend-regions-iters\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-sched-extend-regions-iters" |
| The maximum number of iterations through \s-1CFG\s0 to extend regions. |
| A value of 0 (the default) disables region extensions. |
| .IP "\fBmax-sched-insn-conflict-delay\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-sched-insn-conflict-delay" |
| The maximum conflict delay for an insn to be considered for speculative motion. |
| The default value is 3. |
| .IP "\fBsched-spec-prob-cutoff\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "sched-spec-prob-cutoff" |
| The minimal probability of speculation success (in percents), so that |
| speculative insns are scheduled. |
| The default value is 40. |
| .IP "\fBsched-spec-state-edge-prob-cutoff\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "sched-spec-state-edge-prob-cutoff" |
| The minimum probability an edge must have for the scheduler to save its |
| state across it. |
| The default value is 10. |
| .IP "\fBsched-mem-true-dep-cost\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "sched-mem-true-dep-cost" |
| Minimal distance (in \s-1CPU\s0 cycles) between store and load targeting same |
| memory locations. The default value is 1. |
| .IP "\fBselsched-max-lookahead\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "selsched-max-lookahead" |
| The maximum size of the lookahead window of selective scheduling. It is a |
| depth of search for available instructions. |
| The default value is 50. |
| .IP "\fBselsched-max-sched-times\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "selsched-max-sched-times" |
| The maximum number of times that an instruction is scheduled during |
| selective scheduling. This is the limit on the number of iterations |
| through which the instruction may be pipelined. The default value is 2. |
| .IP "\fBselsched-max-insns-to-rename\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "selsched-max-insns-to-rename" |
| The maximum number of best instructions in the ready list that are considered |
| for renaming in the selective scheduler. The default value is 2. |
| .IP "\fBsms-min-sc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "sms-min-sc" |
| The minimum value of stage count that swing modulo scheduler |
| generates. The default value is 2. |
| .IP "\fBmax-last-value-rtl\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-last-value-rtl" |
| The maximum size measured as number of RTLs that can be recorded in an expression |
| in combiner for a pseudo register as last known value of that register. The default |
| is 10000. |
| .IP "\fBinteger-share-limit\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "integer-share-limit" |
| Small integer constants can use a shared data structure, reducing the |
| compiler's memory usage and increasing its speed. This sets the maximum |
| value of a shared integer constant. The default value is 256. |
| .IP "\fBssp-buffer-size\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "ssp-buffer-size" |
| The minimum size of buffers (i.e. arrays) that receive stack smashing |
| protection when \fB\-fstack\-protection\fR is used. |
| .IP "\fBmax-jump-thread-duplication-stmts\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-jump-thread-duplication-stmts" |
| Maximum number of statements allowed in a block that needs to be |
| duplicated when threading jumps. |
| .IP "\fBmax-fields-for-field-sensitive\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-fields-for-field-sensitive" |
| Maximum number of fields in a structure treated in |
| a field sensitive manner during pointer analysis. The default is zero |
| for \fB\-O0\fR and \fB\-O1\fR, |
| and 100 for \fB\-Os\fR, \fB\-O2\fR, and \fB\-O3\fR. |
| .IP "\fBprefetch-latency\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "prefetch-latency" |
| Estimate on average number of instructions that are executed before |
| prefetch finishes. The distance prefetched ahead is proportional |
| to this constant. Increasing this number may also lead to less |
| streams being prefetched (see \fBsimultaneous-prefetches\fR). |
| .IP "\fBsimultaneous-prefetches\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "simultaneous-prefetches" |
| Maximum number of prefetches that can run at the same time. |
| .IP "\fBl1\-cache\-line\-size\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "l1-cache-line-size" |
| The size of cache line in L1 cache, in bytes. |
| .IP "\fBl1\-cache\-size\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "l1-cache-size" |
| The size of L1 cache, in kilobytes. |
| .IP "\fBl2\-cache\-size\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "l2-cache-size" |
| The size of L2 cache, in kilobytes. |
| .IP "\fBmin-insn-to-prefetch-ratio\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "min-insn-to-prefetch-ratio" |
| The minimum ratio between the number of instructions and the |
| number of prefetches to enable prefetching in a loop. |
| .IP "\fBprefetch-min-insn-to-mem-ratio\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "prefetch-min-insn-to-mem-ratio" |
| The minimum ratio between the number of instructions and the |
| number of memory references to enable prefetching in a loop. |
| .IP "\fBuse-canonical-types\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "use-canonical-types" |
| Whether the compiler should use the \*(L"canonical\*(R" type system. By |
| default, this should always be 1, which uses a more efficient internal |
| mechanism for comparing types in \*(C+ and Objective\-\*(C+. However, if |
| bugs in the canonical type system are causing compilation failures, |
| set this value to 0 to disable canonical types. |
| .IP "\fBswitch-conversion-max-branch-ratio\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "switch-conversion-max-branch-ratio" |
| Switch initialization conversion refuses to create arrays that are |
| bigger than \fBswitch-conversion-max-branch-ratio\fR times the number of |
| branches in the switch. |
| .IP "\fBmax-partial-antic-length\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-partial-antic-length" |
| Maximum length of the partial antic set computed during the tree |
| partial redundancy elimination optimization (\fB\-ftree\-pre\fR) when |
| optimizing at \fB\-O3\fR and above. For some sorts of source code |
| the enhanced partial redundancy elimination optimization can run away, |
| consuming all of the memory available on the host machine. This |
| parameter sets a limit on the length of the sets that are computed, |
| which prevents the runaway behavior. Setting a value of 0 for |
| this parameter allows an unlimited set length. |
| .IP "\fBsccvn-max-scc-size\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "sccvn-max-scc-size" |
| Maximum size of a strongly connected component (\s-1SCC\s0) during \s-1SCCVN\s0 |
| processing. If this limit is hit, \s-1SCCVN\s0 processing for the whole |
| function is not done and optimizations depending on it are |
| disabled. The default maximum \s-1SCC\s0 size is 10000. |
| .IP "\fBsccvn-max-alias-queries-per-access\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "sccvn-max-alias-queries-per-access" |
| Maximum number of alias-oracle queries we perform when looking for |
| redundancies for loads and stores. If this limit is hit the search |
| is aborted and the load or store is not considered redundant. The |
| number of queries is algorithmically limited to the number of |
| stores on all paths from the load to the function entry. |
| The default maxmimum number of queries is 1000. |
| .IP "\fBira-max-loops-num\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "ira-max-loops-num" |
| \&\s-1IRA\s0 uses regional register allocation by default. If a function |
| contains more loops than the number given by this parameter, only at most |
| the given number of the most frequently-executed loops form regions |
| for regional register allocation. The default value of the |
| parameter is 100. |
| .IP "\fBira-max-conflict-table-size\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "ira-max-conflict-table-size" |
| Although \s-1IRA\s0 uses a sophisticated algorithm to compress the conflict |
| table, the table can still require excessive amounts of memory for |
| huge functions. If the conflict table for a function could be more |
| than the size in \s-1MB\s0 given by this parameter, the register allocator |
| instead uses a faster, simpler, and lower-quality |
| algorithm that does not require building a pseudo-register conflict table. |
| The default value of the parameter is 2000. |
| .IP "\fBira-loop-reserved-regs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "ira-loop-reserved-regs" |
| \&\s-1IRA\s0 can be used to evaluate more accurate register pressure in loops |
| for decisions to move loop invariants (see \fB\-O3\fR). The number |
| of available registers reserved for some other purposes is given |
| by this parameter. The default value of the parameter is 2, which is |
| the minimal number of registers needed by typical instructions. |
| This value is the best found from numerous experiments. |
| .IP "\fBloop-invariant-max-bbs-in-loop\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "loop-invariant-max-bbs-in-loop" |
| Loop invariant motion can be very expensive, both in compilation time and |
| in amount of needed compile-time memory, with very large loops. Loops |
| with more basic blocks than this parameter won't have loop invariant |
| motion optimization performed on them. The default value of the |
| parameter is 1000 for \fB\-O1\fR and 10000 for \fB\-O2\fR and above. |
| .IP "\fBloop-max-datarefs-for-datadeps\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "loop-max-datarefs-for-datadeps" |
| Building data dapendencies is expensive for very large loops. This |
| parameter limits the number of data references in loops that are |
| considered for data dependence analysis. These large loops are no |
| handled by the optimizations using loop data dependencies. |
| The default value is 1000. |
| .IP "\fBmax-vartrack-size\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-vartrack-size" |
| Sets a maximum number of hash table slots to use during variable |
| tracking dataflow analysis of any function. If this limit is exceeded |
| with variable tracking at assignments enabled, analysis for that |
| function is retried without it, after removing all debug insns from |
| the function. If the limit is exceeded even without debug insns, var |
| tracking analysis is completely disabled for the function. Setting |
| the parameter to zero makes it unlimited. |
| .IP "\fBmax-vartrack-expr-depth\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-vartrack-expr-depth" |
| Sets a maximum number of recursion levels when attempting to map |
| variable names or debug temporaries to value expressions. This trades |
| compilation time for more complete debug information. If this is set too |
| low, value expressions that are available and could be represented in |
| debug information may end up not being used; setting this higher may |
| enable the compiler to find more complex debug expressions, but compile |
| time and memory use may grow. The default is 12. |
| .IP "\fBmin-nondebug-insn-uid\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "min-nondebug-insn-uid" |
| Use uids starting at this parameter for nondebug insns. The range below |
| the parameter is reserved exclusively for debug insns created by |
| \&\fB\-fvar\-tracking\-assignments\fR, but debug insns may get |
| (non-overlapping) uids above it if the reserved range is exhausted. |
| .IP "\fBipa-sra-ptr-growth-factor\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "ipa-sra-ptr-growth-factor" |
| IPA-SRA replaces a pointer to an aggregate with one or more new |
| parameters only when their cumulative size is less or equal to |
| \&\fBipa-sra-ptr-growth-factor\fR times the size of the original |
| pointer parameter. |
| .IP "\fBtm-max-aggregate-size\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "tm-max-aggregate-size" |
| When making copies of thread-local variables in a transaction, this |
| parameter specifies the size in bytes after which variables are |
| saved with the logging functions as opposed to save/restore code |
| sequence pairs. This option only applies when using |
| \&\fB\-fgnu\-tm\fR. |
| .IP "\fBgraphite-max-nb-scop-params\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "graphite-max-nb-scop-params" |
| To avoid exponential effects in the Graphite loop transforms, the |
| number of parameters in a Static Control Part (SCoP) is bounded. The |
| default value is 10 parameters. A variable whose value is unknown at |
| compilation time and defined outside a SCoP is a parameter of the SCoP. |
| .IP "\fBgraphite-max-bbs-per-function\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "graphite-max-bbs-per-function" |
| To avoid exponential effects in the detection of SCoPs, the size of |
| the functions analyzed by Graphite is bounded. The default value is |
| 100 basic blocks. |
| .IP "\fBloop-block-tile-size\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "loop-block-tile-size" |
| Loop blocking or strip mining transforms, enabled with |
| \&\fB\-floop\-block\fR or \fB\-floop\-strip\-mine\fR, strip mine each |
| loop in the loop nest by a given number of iterations. The strip |
| length can be changed using the \fBloop-block-tile-size\fR |
| parameter. The default value is 51 iterations. |
| .IP "\fBipa-cp-value-list-size\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "ipa-cp-value-list-size" |
| IPA-CP attempts to track all possible values and types passed to a function's |
| parameter in order to propagate them and perform devirtualization. |
| \&\fBipa-cp-value-list-size\fR is the maximum number of values and types it |
| stores per one formal parameter of a function. |
| .IP "\fBlto-partitions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "lto-partitions" |
| Specify desired number of partitions produced during \s-1WHOPR\s0 compilation. |
| The number of partitions should exceed the number of CPUs used for compilation. |
| The default value is 32. |
| .IP "\fBlto-minpartition\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "lto-minpartition" |
| Size of minimal partition for \s-1WHOPR\s0 (in estimated instructions). |
| This prevents expenses of splitting very small programs into too many |
| partitions. |
| .IP "\fBcxx-max-namespaces-for-diagnostic-help\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "cxx-max-namespaces-for-diagnostic-help" |
| The maximum number of namespaces to consult for suggestions when \*(C+ |
| name lookup fails for an identifier. The default is 1000. |
| .IP "\fBsink-frequency-threshold\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "sink-frequency-threshold" |
| The maximum relative execution frequency (in percents) of the target block |
| relative to a statement's original block to allow statement sinking of a |
| statement. Larger numbers result in more aggressive statement sinking. |
| The default value is 75. A small positive adjustment is applied for |
| statements with memory operands as those are even more profitable so sink. |
| .IP "\fBmax-stores-to-sink\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-stores-to-sink" |
| The maximum number of conditional stores paires that can be sunk. Set to 0 |
| if either vectorization (\fB\-ftree\-vectorize\fR) or if-conversion |
| (\fB\-ftree\-loop\-if\-convert\fR) is disabled. The default is 2. |
| .IP "\fBallow-load-data-races\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "allow-load-data-races" |
| Allow optimizers to introduce new data races on loads. |
| Set to 1 to allow, otherwise to 0. This option is enabled by default |
| unless implicitly set by the \fB\-fmemory\-model=\fR option. |
| .IP "\fBallow-store-data-races\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "allow-store-data-races" |
| Allow optimizers to introduce new data races on stores. |
| Set to 1 to allow, otherwise to 0. This option is enabled by default |
| unless implicitly set by the \fB\-fmemory\-model=\fR option. |
| .IP "\fBallow-packed-load-data-races\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "allow-packed-load-data-races" |
| Allow optimizers to introduce new data races on packed data loads. |
| Set to 1 to allow, otherwise to 0. This option is enabled by default |
| unless implicitly set by the \fB\-fmemory\-model=\fR option. |
| .IP "\fBallow-packed-store-data-races\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "allow-packed-store-data-races" |
| Allow optimizers to introduce new data races on packed data stores. |
| Set to 1 to allow, otherwise to 0. This option is enabled by default |
| unless implicitly set by the \fB\-fmemory\-model=\fR option. |
| .IP "\fBcase-values-threshold\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "case-values-threshold" |
| The smallest number of different values for which it is best to use a |
| jump-table instead of a tree of conditional branches. If the value is |
| 0, use the default for the machine. The default is 0. |
| .IP "\fBtree-reassoc-width\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "tree-reassoc-width" |
| Set the maximum number of instructions executed in parallel in |
| reassociated tree. This parameter overrides target dependent |
| heuristics used by default if has non zero value. |
| .IP "\fBsched-pressure-algorithm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "sched-pressure-algorithm" |
| Choose between the two available implementations of |
| \&\fB\-fsched\-pressure\fR. Algorithm 1 is the original implementation |
| and is the more likely to prevent instructions from being reordered. |
| Algorithm 2 was designed to be a compromise between the relatively |
| conservative approach taken by algorithm 1 and the rather aggressive |
| approach taken by the default scheduler. It relies more heavily on |
| having a regular register file and accurate register pressure classes. |
| See \fIhaifa\-sched.c\fR in the \s-1GCC\s0 sources for more details. |
| .Sp |
| The default choice depends on the target. |
| .IP "\fBmax-slsr-cand-scan\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "max-slsr-cand-scan" |
| Set the maximum number of existing candidates that will be considered when |
| seeking a basis for a new straight-line strength reduction candidate. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .SS "Options Controlling the Preprocessor" |
| .IX Subsection "Options Controlling the Preprocessor" |
| These options control the C preprocessor, which is run on each C source |
| file before actual compilation. |
| .PP |
| If you use the \fB\-E\fR option, nothing is done except preprocessing. |
| Some of these options make sense only together with \fB\-E\fR because |
| they cause the preprocessor output to be unsuitable for actual |
| compilation. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wp,\fR\fIoption\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wp,option" |
| You can use \fB\-Wp,\fR\fIoption\fR to bypass the compiler driver |
| and pass \fIoption\fR directly through to the preprocessor. If |
| \&\fIoption\fR contains commas, it is split into multiple options at the |
| commas. However, many options are modified, translated or interpreted |
| by the compiler driver before being passed to the preprocessor, and |
| \&\fB\-Wp\fR forcibly bypasses this phase. The preprocessor's direct |
| interface is undocumented and subject to change, so whenever possible |
| you should avoid using \fB\-Wp\fR and let the driver handle the |
| options instead. |
| .IP "\fB\-Xpreprocessor\fR \fIoption\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Xpreprocessor option" |
| Pass \fIoption\fR as an option to the preprocessor. You can use this to |
| supply system-specific preprocessor options that \s-1GCC\s0 does not |
| recognize. |
| .Sp |
| If you want to pass an option that takes an argument, you must use |
| \&\fB\-Xpreprocessor\fR twice, once for the option and once for the argument. |
| .IP "\fB\-no\-integrated\-cpp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-no-integrated-cpp" |
| Perform preprocessing as a separate pass before compilation. |
| By default, \s-1GCC\s0 performs preprocessing as an integrated part of |
| input tokenization and parsing. |
| If this option is provided, the appropriate language front end |
| (\fBcc1\fR, \fBcc1plus\fR, or \fBcc1obj\fR for C, \*(C+, |
| and Objective-C, respectively) is instead invoked twice, |
| once for preprocessing only and once for actual compilation |
| of the preprocessed input. |
| This option may be useful in conjunction with the \fB\-B\fR or |
| \&\fB\-wrapper\fR options to specify an alternate preprocessor or |
| perform additional processing of the program source between |
| normal preprocessing and compilation. |
| .IP "\fB\-D\fR \fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-D name" |
| Predefine \fIname\fR as a macro, with definition \f(CW1\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-D\fR \fIname\fR\fB=\fR\fIdefinition\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-D name=definition" |
| The contents of \fIdefinition\fR are tokenized and processed as if |
| they appeared during translation phase three in a \fB#define\fR |
| directive. In particular, the definition will be truncated by |
| embedded newline characters. |
| .Sp |
| If you are invoking the preprocessor from a shell or shell-like |
| program you may need to use the shell's quoting syntax to protect |
| characters such as spaces that have a meaning in the shell syntax. |
| .Sp |
| If you wish to define a function-like macro on the command line, write |
| its argument list with surrounding parentheses before the equals sign |
| (if any). Parentheses are meaningful to most shells, so you will need |
| to quote the option. With \fBsh\fR and \fBcsh\fR, |
| \&\fB\-D'\fR\fIname\fR\fB(\fR\fIargs...\fR\fB)=\fR\fIdefinition\fR\fB'\fR works. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-D\fR and \fB\-U\fR options are processed in the order they |
| are given on the command line. All \fB\-imacros\fR \fIfile\fR and |
| \&\fB\-include\fR \fIfile\fR options are processed after all |
| \&\fB\-D\fR and \fB\-U\fR options. |
| .IP "\fB\-U\fR \fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-U name" |
| Cancel any previous definition of \fIname\fR, either built in or |
| provided with a \fB\-D\fR option. |
| .IP "\fB\-undef\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-undef" |
| Do not predefine any system-specific or GCC-specific macros. The |
| standard predefined macros remain defined. |
| .IP "\fB\-I\fR \fIdir\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-I dir" |
| Add the directory \fIdir\fR to the list of directories to be searched |
| for header files. |
| Directories named by \fB\-I\fR are searched before the standard |
| system include directories. If the directory \fIdir\fR is a standard |
| system include directory, the option is ignored to ensure that the |
| default search order for system directories and the special treatment |
| of system headers are not defeated |
| \&. |
| If \fIdir\fR begins with \f(CW\*(C`=\*(C'\fR, then the \f(CW\*(C`=\*(C'\fR will be replaced |
| by the sysroot prefix; see \fB\-\-sysroot\fR and \fB\-isysroot\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-o\fR \fIfile\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-o file" |
| Write output to \fIfile\fR. This is the same as specifying \fIfile\fR |
| as the second non-option argument to \fBcpp\fR. \fBgcc\fR has a |
| different interpretation of a second non-option argument, so you must |
| use \fB\-o\fR to specify the output file. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wall\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wall" |
| Turns on all optional warnings which are desirable for normal code. |
| At present this is \fB\-Wcomment\fR, \fB\-Wtrigraphs\fR, |
| \&\fB\-Wmultichar\fR and a warning about integer promotion causing a |
| change of sign in \f(CW\*(C`#if\*(C'\fR expressions. Note that many of the |
| preprocessor's warnings are on by default and have no options to |
| control them. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wcomment\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wcomment" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-Wcomments\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wcomments" |
| .PD |
| Warn whenever a comment-start sequence \fB/*\fR appears in a \fB/*\fR |
| comment, or whenever a backslash-newline appears in a \fB//\fR comment. |
| (Both forms have the same effect.) |
| .IP "\fB\-Wtrigraphs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wtrigraphs" |
| Most trigraphs in comments cannot affect the meaning of the program. |
| However, a trigraph that would form an escaped newline (\fB??/\fR at |
| the end of a line) can, by changing where the comment begins or ends. |
| Therefore, only trigraphs that would form escaped newlines produce |
| warnings inside a comment. |
| .Sp |
| This option is implied by \fB\-Wall\fR. If \fB\-Wall\fR is not |
| given, this option is still enabled unless trigraphs are enabled. To |
| get trigraph conversion without warnings, but get the other |
| \&\fB\-Wall\fR warnings, use \fB\-trigraphs \-Wall \-Wno\-trigraphs\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wtraditional\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wtraditional" |
| Warn about certain constructs that behave differently in traditional and |
| \&\s-1ISO\s0 C. Also warn about \s-1ISO\s0 C constructs that have no traditional C |
| equivalent, and problematic constructs which should be avoided. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wundef\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wundef" |
| Warn whenever an identifier which is not a macro is encountered in an |
| \&\fB#if\fR directive, outside of \fBdefined\fR. Such identifiers are |
| replaced with zero. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wunused\-macros\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wunused-macros" |
| Warn about macros defined in the main file that are unused. A macro |
| is \fIused\fR if it is expanded or tested for existence at least once. |
| The preprocessor will also warn if the macro has not been used at the |
| time it is redefined or undefined. |
| .Sp |
| Built-in macros, macros defined on the command line, and macros |
| defined in include files are not warned about. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fINote:\fR If a macro is actually used, but only used in skipped |
| conditional blocks, then \s-1CPP\s0 will report it as unused. To avoid the |
| warning in such a case, you might improve the scope of the macro's |
| definition by, for example, moving it into the first skipped block. |
| Alternatively, you could provide a dummy use with something like: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 2 |
| \& #if defined the_macro_causing_the_warning |
| \& #endif |
| .Ve |
| .IP "\fB\-Wendif\-labels\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wendif-labels" |
| Warn whenever an \fB#else\fR or an \fB#endif\fR are followed by text. |
| This usually happens in code of the form |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 5 |
| \& #if FOO |
| \& ... |
| \& #else FOO |
| \& ... |
| \& #endif FOO |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| The second and third \f(CW\*(C`FOO\*(C'\fR should be in comments, but often are not |
| in older programs. This warning is on by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-Werror\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Werror" |
| Make all warnings into hard errors. Source code which triggers warnings |
| will be rejected. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wsystem\-headers\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wsystem-headers" |
| Issue warnings for code in system headers. These are normally unhelpful |
| in finding bugs in your own code, therefore suppressed. If you are |
| responsible for the system library, you may want to see them. |
| .IP "\fB\-w\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-w" |
| Suppress all warnings, including those which \s-1GNU\s0 \s-1CPP\s0 issues by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-pedantic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-pedantic" |
| Issue all the mandatory diagnostics listed in the C standard. Some of |
| them are left out by default, since they trigger frequently on harmless |
| code. |
| .IP "\fB\-pedantic\-errors\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-pedantic-errors" |
| Issue all the mandatory diagnostics, and make all mandatory diagnostics |
| into errors. This includes mandatory diagnostics that \s-1GCC\s0 issues |
| without \fB\-pedantic\fR but treats as warnings. |
| .IP "\fB\-M\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-M" |
| Instead of outputting the result of preprocessing, output a rule |
| suitable for \fBmake\fR describing the dependencies of the main |
| source file. The preprocessor outputs one \fBmake\fR rule containing |
| the object file name for that source file, a colon, and the names of all |
| the included files, including those coming from \fB\-include\fR or |
| \&\fB\-imacros\fR command line options. |
| .Sp |
| Unless specified explicitly (with \fB\-MT\fR or \fB\-MQ\fR), the |
| object file name consists of the name of the source file with any |
| suffix replaced with object file suffix and with any leading directory |
| parts removed. If there are many included files then the rule is |
| split into several lines using \fB\e\fR\-newline. The rule has no |
| commands. |
| .Sp |
| This option does not suppress the preprocessor's debug output, such as |
| \&\fB\-dM\fR. To avoid mixing such debug output with the dependency |
| rules you should explicitly specify the dependency output file with |
| \&\fB\-MF\fR, or use an environment variable like |
| \&\fB\s-1DEPENDENCIES_OUTPUT\s0\fR. Debug output |
| will still be sent to the regular output stream as normal. |
| .Sp |
| Passing \fB\-M\fR to the driver implies \fB\-E\fR, and suppresses |
| warnings with an implicit \fB\-w\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-MM\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-MM" |
| Like \fB\-M\fR but do not mention header files that are found in |
| system header directories, nor header files that are included, |
| directly or indirectly, from such a header. |
| .Sp |
| This implies that the choice of angle brackets or double quotes in an |
| \&\fB#include\fR directive does not in itself determine whether that |
| header will appear in \fB\-MM\fR dependency output. This is a |
| slight change in semantics from \s-1GCC\s0 versions 3.0 and earlier. |
| .IP "\fB\-MF\fR \fIfile\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-MF file" |
| When used with \fB\-M\fR or \fB\-MM\fR, specifies a |
| file to write the dependencies to. If no \fB\-MF\fR switch is given |
| the preprocessor sends the rules to the same place it would have sent |
| preprocessed output. |
| .Sp |
| When used with the driver options \fB\-MD\fR or \fB\-MMD\fR, |
| \&\fB\-MF\fR overrides the default dependency output file. |
| .IP "\fB\-MG\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-MG" |
| In conjunction with an option such as \fB\-M\fR requesting |
| dependency generation, \fB\-MG\fR assumes missing header files are |
| generated files and adds them to the dependency list without raising |
| an error. The dependency filename is taken directly from the |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`#include\*(C'\fR directive without prepending any path. \fB\-MG\fR |
| also suppresses preprocessed output, as a missing header file renders |
| this useless. |
| .Sp |
| This feature is used in automatic updating of makefiles. |
| .IP "\fB\-MP\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-MP" |
| This option instructs \s-1CPP\s0 to add a phony target for each dependency |
| other than the main file, causing each to depend on nothing. These |
| dummy rules work around errors \fBmake\fR gives if you remove header |
| files without updating the \fIMakefile\fR to match. |
| .Sp |
| This is typical output: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& test.o: test.c test.h |
| \& |
| \& test.h: |
| .Ve |
| .IP "\fB\-MT\fR \fItarget\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-MT target" |
| Change the target of the rule emitted by dependency generation. By |
| default \s-1CPP\s0 takes the name of the main input file, deletes any |
| directory components and any file suffix such as \fB.c\fR, and |
| appends the platform's usual object suffix. The result is the target. |
| .Sp |
| An \fB\-MT\fR option will set the target to be exactly the string you |
| specify. If you want multiple targets, you can specify them as a single |
| argument to \fB\-MT\fR, or use multiple \fB\-MT\fR options. |
| .Sp |
| For example, \fB\-MT\ '$(objpfx)foo.o'\fR might give |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& $(objpfx)foo.o: foo.c |
| .Ve |
| .IP "\fB\-MQ\fR \fItarget\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-MQ target" |
| Same as \fB\-MT\fR, but it quotes any characters which are special to |
| Make. \fB\-MQ\ '$(objpfx)foo.o'\fR gives |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& $$(objpfx)foo.o: foo.c |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| The default target is automatically quoted, as if it were given with |
| \&\fB\-MQ\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-MD\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-MD" |
| \&\fB\-MD\fR is equivalent to \fB\-M \-MF\fR \fIfile\fR, except that |
| \&\fB\-E\fR is not implied. The driver determines \fIfile\fR based on |
| whether an \fB\-o\fR option is given. If it is, the driver uses its |
| argument but with a suffix of \fI.d\fR, otherwise it takes the name |
| of the input file, removes any directory components and suffix, and |
| applies a \fI.d\fR suffix. |
| .Sp |
| If \fB\-MD\fR is used in conjunction with \fB\-E\fR, any |
| \&\fB\-o\fR switch is understood to specify the dependency output file, but if used without \fB\-E\fR, each \fB\-o\fR |
| is understood to specify a target object file. |
| .Sp |
| Since \fB\-E\fR is not implied, \fB\-MD\fR can be used to generate |
| a dependency output file as a side-effect of the compilation process. |
| .IP "\fB\-MMD\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-MMD" |
| Like \fB\-MD\fR except mention only user header files, not system |
| header files. |
| .IP "\fB\-fpch\-deps\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fpch-deps" |
| When using precompiled headers, this flag |
| will cause the dependency-output flags to also list the files from the |
| precompiled header's dependencies. If not specified only the |
| precompiled header would be listed and not the files that were used to |
| create it because those files are not consulted when a precompiled |
| header is used. |
| .IP "\fB\-fpch\-preprocess\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fpch-preprocess" |
| This option allows use of a precompiled header together with \fB\-E\fR. It inserts a special \f(CW\*(C`#pragma\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`#pragma GCC pch_preprocess "\f(CIfilename\f(CW"\*(C'\fR in the output to mark |
| the place where the precompiled header was found, and its \fIfilename\fR. |
| When \fB\-fpreprocessed\fR is in use, \s-1GCC\s0 recognizes this \f(CW\*(C`#pragma\*(C'\fR |
| and loads the \s-1PCH\s0. |
| .Sp |
| This option is off by default, because the resulting preprocessed output |
| is only really suitable as input to \s-1GCC\s0. It is switched on by |
| \&\fB\-save\-temps\fR. |
| .Sp |
| You should not write this \f(CW\*(C`#pragma\*(C'\fR in your own code, but it is |
| safe to edit the filename if the \s-1PCH\s0 file is available in a different |
| location. The filename may be absolute or it may be relative to \s-1GCC\s0's |
| current directory. |
| .IP "\fB\-x c\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-x c" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-x c++\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-x c++" |
| .IP "\fB\-x objective-c\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-x objective-c" |
| .IP "\fB\-x assembler-with-cpp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-x assembler-with-cpp" |
| .PD |
| Specify the source language: C, \*(C+, Objective-C, or assembly. This has |
| nothing to do with standards conformance or extensions; it merely |
| selects which base syntax to expect. If you give none of these options, |
| cpp will deduce the language from the extension of the source file: |
| \&\fB.c\fR, \fB.cc\fR, \fB.m\fR, or \fB.S\fR. Some other common |
| extensions for \*(C+ and assembly are also recognized. If cpp does not |
| recognize the extension, it will treat the file as C; this is the most |
| generic mode. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fINote:\fR Previous versions of cpp accepted a \fB\-lang\fR option |
| which selected both the language and the standards conformance level. |
| This option has been removed, because it conflicts with the \fB\-l\fR |
| option. |
| .IP "\fB\-std=\fR\fIstandard\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-std=standard" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-ansi\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ansi" |
| .PD |
| Specify the standard to which the code should conform. Currently \s-1CPP\s0 |
| knows about C and \*(C+ standards; others may be added in the future. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIstandard\fR |
| may be one of: |
| .RS 4 |
| .ie n .IP """c90""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWc90\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "c90" |
| .PD 0 |
| .ie n .IP """c89""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWc89\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "c89" |
| .ie n .IP """iso9899:1990""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWiso9899:1990\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "iso9899:1990" |
| .PD |
| The \s-1ISO\s0 C standard from 1990. \fBc90\fR is the customary shorthand for |
| this version of the standard. |
| .Sp |
| The \fB\-ansi\fR option is equivalent to \fB\-std=c90\fR. |
| .ie n .IP """iso9899:199409""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWiso9899:199409\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "iso9899:199409" |
| The 1990 C standard, as amended in 1994. |
| .ie n .IP """iso9899:1999""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWiso9899:1999\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "iso9899:1999" |
| .PD 0 |
| .ie n .IP """c99""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWc99\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "c99" |
| .ie n .IP """iso9899:199x""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWiso9899:199x\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "iso9899:199x" |
| .ie n .IP """c9x""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWc9x\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "c9x" |
| .PD |
| The revised \s-1ISO\s0 C standard, published in December 1999. Before |
| publication, this was known as C9X. |
| .ie n .IP """iso9899:2011""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWiso9899:2011\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "iso9899:2011" |
| .PD 0 |
| .ie n .IP """c11""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWc11\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "c11" |
| .ie n .IP """c1x""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWc1x\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "c1x" |
| .PD |
| The revised \s-1ISO\s0 C standard, published in December 2011. Before |
| publication, this was known as C1X. |
| .ie n .IP """gnu90""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWgnu90\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "gnu90" |
| .PD 0 |
| .ie n .IP """gnu89""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWgnu89\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "gnu89" |
| .PD |
| The 1990 C standard plus \s-1GNU\s0 extensions. This is the default. |
| .ie n .IP """gnu99""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWgnu99\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "gnu99" |
| .PD 0 |
| .ie n .IP """gnu9x""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWgnu9x\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "gnu9x" |
| .PD |
| The 1999 C standard plus \s-1GNU\s0 extensions. |
| .ie n .IP """gnu11""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWgnu11\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "gnu11" |
| .PD 0 |
| .ie n .IP """gnu1x""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWgnu1x\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "gnu1x" |
| .PD |
| The 2011 C standard plus \s-1GNU\s0 extensions. |
| .ie n .IP """c++98""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWc++98\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "c++98" |
| The 1998 \s-1ISO\s0 \*(C+ standard plus amendments. |
| .ie n .IP """gnu++98""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWgnu++98\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "gnu++98" |
| The same as \fB\-std=c++98\fR plus \s-1GNU\s0 extensions. This is the |
| default for \*(C+ code. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-I\-\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-I-" |
| Split the include path. Any directories specified with \fB\-I\fR |
| options before \fB\-I\-\fR are searched only for headers requested with |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`#include\ "\f(CIfile\f(CW"\*(C'\fR; they are not searched for |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`#include\ <\f(CIfile\f(CW>\*(C'\fR. If additional directories are |
| specified with \fB\-I\fR options after the \fB\-I\-\fR, those |
| directories are searched for all \fB#include\fR directives. |
| .Sp |
| In addition, \fB\-I\-\fR inhibits the use of the directory of the current |
| file directory as the first search directory for \f(CW\*(C`#include\ "\f(CIfile\f(CW"\*(C'\fR. |
| This option has been deprecated. |
| .IP "\fB\-nostdinc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-nostdinc" |
| Do not search the standard system directories for header files. |
| Only the directories you have specified with \fB\-I\fR options |
| (and the directory of the current file, if appropriate) are searched. |
| .IP "\fB\-nostdinc++\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-nostdinc++" |
| Do not search for header files in the \*(C+\-specific standard directories, |
| but do still search the other standard directories. (This option is |
| used when building the \*(C+ library.) |
| .IP "\fB\-include\fR \fIfile\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-include file" |
| Process \fIfile\fR as if \f(CW\*(C`#include "file"\*(C'\fR appeared as the first |
| line of the primary source file. However, the first directory searched |
| for \fIfile\fR is the preprocessor's working directory \fIinstead of\fR |
| the directory containing the main source file. If not found there, it |
| is searched for in the remainder of the \f(CW\*(C`#include "..."\*(C'\fR search |
| chain as normal. |
| .Sp |
| If multiple \fB\-include\fR options are given, the files are included |
| in the order they appear on the command line. |
| .IP "\fB\-imacros\fR \fIfile\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-imacros file" |
| Exactly like \fB\-include\fR, except that any output produced by |
| scanning \fIfile\fR is thrown away. Macros it defines remain defined. |
| This allows you to acquire all the macros from a header without also |
| processing its declarations. |
| .Sp |
| All files specified by \fB\-imacros\fR are processed before all files |
| specified by \fB\-include\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-idirafter\fR \fIdir\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-idirafter dir" |
| Search \fIdir\fR for header files, but do it \fIafter\fR all |
| directories specified with \fB\-I\fR and the standard system directories |
| have been exhausted. \fIdir\fR is treated as a system include directory. |
| If \fIdir\fR begins with \f(CW\*(C`=\*(C'\fR, then the \f(CW\*(C`=\*(C'\fR will be replaced |
| by the sysroot prefix; see \fB\-\-sysroot\fR and \fB\-isysroot\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-iprefix\fR \fIprefix\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-iprefix prefix" |
| Specify \fIprefix\fR as the prefix for subsequent \fB\-iwithprefix\fR |
| options. If the prefix represents a directory, you should include the |
| final \fB/\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-iwithprefix\fR \fIdir\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-iwithprefix dir" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-iwithprefixbefore\fR \fIdir\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-iwithprefixbefore dir" |
| .PD |
| Append \fIdir\fR to the prefix specified previously with |
| \&\fB\-iprefix\fR, and add the resulting directory to the include search |
| path. \fB\-iwithprefixbefore\fR puts it in the same place \fB\-I\fR |
| would; \fB\-iwithprefix\fR puts it where \fB\-idirafter\fR would. |
| .IP "\fB\-isysroot\fR \fIdir\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-isysroot dir" |
| This option is like the \fB\-\-sysroot\fR option, but applies only to |
| header files (except for Darwin targets, where it applies to both header |
| files and libraries). See the \fB\-\-sysroot\fR option for more |
| information. |
| .IP "\fB\-imultilib\fR \fIdir\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-imultilib dir" |
| Use \fIdir\fR as a subdirectory of the directory containing |
| target-specific \*(C+ headers. |
| .IP "\fB\-isystem\fR \fIdir\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-isystem dir" |
| Search \fIdir\fR for header files, after all directories specified by |
| \&\fB\-I\fR but before the standard system directories. Mark it |
| as a system directory, so that it gets the same special treatment as |
| is applied to the standard system directories. |
| If \fIdir\fR begins with \f(CW\*(C`=\*(C'\fR, then the \f(CW\*(C`=\*(C'\fR will be replaced |
| by the sysroot prefix; see \fB\-\-sysroot\fR and \fB\-isysroot\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-iquote\fR \fIdir\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-iquote dir" |
| Search \fIdir\fR only for header files requested with |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`#include\ "\f(CIfile\f(CW"\*(C'\fR; they are not searched for |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`#include\ <\f(CIfile\f(CW>\*(C'\fR, before all directories specified by |
| \&\fB\-I\fR and before the standard system directories. |
| If \fIdir\fR begins with \f(CW\*(C`=\*(C'\fR, then the \f(CW\*(C`=\*(C'\fR will be replaced |
| by the sysroot prefix; see \fB\-\-sysroot\fR and \fB\-isysroot\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdirectives\-only\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdirectives-only" |
| When preprocessing, handle directives, but do not expand macros. |
| .Sp |
| The option's behavior depends on the \fB\-E\fR and \fB\-fpreprocessed\fR |
| options. |
| .Sp |
| With \fB\-E\fR, preprocessing is limited to the handling of directives |
| such as \f(CW\*(C`#define\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`#ifdef\*(C'\fR, and \f(CW\*(C`#error\*(C'\fR. Other |
| preprocessor operations, such as macro expansion and trigraph |
| conversion are not performed. In addition, the \fB\-dD\fR option is |
| implicitly enabled. |
| .Sp |
| With \fB\-fpreprocessed\fR, predefinition of command line and most |
| builtin macros is disabled. Macros such as \f(CW\*(C`_\|_LINE_\|_\*(C'\fR, which are |
| contextually dependent, are handled normally. This enables compilation of |
| files previously preprocessed with \f(CW\*(C`\-E \-fdirectives\-only\*(C'\fR. |
| .Sp |
| With both \fB\-E\fR and \fB\-fpreprocessed\fR, the rules for |
| \&\fB\-fpreprocessed\fR take precedence. This enables full preprocessing of |
| files previously preprocessed with \f(CW\*(C`\-E \-fdirectives\-only\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdollars\-in\-identifiers\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdollars-in-identifiers" |
| Accept \fB$\fR in identifiers. |
| .IP "\fB\-fextended\-identifiers\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fextended-identifiers" |
| Accept universal character names in identifiers. This option is |
| experimental; in a future version of \s-1GCC\s0, it will be enabled by |
| default for C99 and \*(C+. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-canonical\-system\-headers\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-canonical-system-headers" |
| When preprocessing, do not shorten system header paths with canonicalization. |
| .IP "\fB\-fpreprocessed\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fpreprocessed" |
| Indicate to the preprocessor that the input file has already been |
| preprocessed. This suppresses things like macro expansion, trigraph |
| conversion, escaped newline splicing, and processing of most directives. |
| The preprocessor still recognizes and removes comments, so that you can |
| pass a file preprocessed with \fB\-C\fR to the compiler without |
| problems. In this mode the integrated preprocessor is little more than |
| a tokenizer for the front ends. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-fpreprocessed\fR is implicit if the input file has one of the |
| extensions \fB.i\fR, \fB.ii\fR or \fB.mi\fR. These are the |
| extensions that \s-1GCC\s0 uses for preprocessed files created by |
| \&\fB\-save\-temps\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftabstop=\fR\fIwidth\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftabstop=width" |
| Set the distance between tab stops. This helps the preprocessor report |
| correct column numbers in warnings or errors, even if tabs appear on the |
| line. If the value is less than 1 or greater than 100, the option is |
| ignored. The default is 8. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdebug\-cpp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdebug-cpp" |
| This option is only useful for debugging \s-1GCC\s0. When used with |
| \&\fB\-E\fR, dumps debugging information about location maps. Every |
| token in the output is preceded by the dump of the map its location |
| belongs to. The dump of the map holding the location of a token would |
| be: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& {"P":F</file/path>;"F":F</includer/path>;"L":<line_num>;"C":<col_num>;"S":<system_header_p>;"M":<map_address>;"E":<macro_expansion_p>,"loc":<location>} |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| When used without \fB\-E\fR, this option has no effect. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftrack\-macro\-expansion\fR[\fB=\fR\fIlevel\fR]" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftrack-macro-expansion[=level]" |
| Track locations of tokens across macro expansions. This allows the |
| compiler to emit diagnostic about the current macro expansion stack |
| when a compilation error occurs in a macro expansion. Using this |
| option makes the preprocessor and the compiler consume more |
| memory. The \fIlevel\fR parameter can be used to choose the level of |
| precision of token location tracking thus decreasing the memory |
| consumption if necessary. Value \fB0\fR of \fIlevel\fR de-activates |
| this option just as if no \fB\-ftrack\-macro\-expansion\fR was present |
| on the command line. Value \fB1\fR tracks tokens locations in a |
| degraded mode for the sake of minimal memory overhead. In this mode |
| all tokens resulting from the expansion of an argument of a |
| function-like macro have the same location. Value \fB2\fR tracks |
| tokens locations completely. This value is the most memory hungry. |
| When this option is given no argument, the default parameter value is |
| \&\fB2\fR. |
| .Sp |
| Note that \-ftrack\-macro\-expansion=2 is activated by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-fexec\-charset=\fR\fIcharset\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fexec-charset=charset" |
| Set the execution character set, used for string and character |
| constants. The default is \s-1UTF\-8\s0. \fIcharset\fR can be any encoding |
| supported by the system's \f(CW\*(C`iconv\*(C'\fR library routine. |
| .IP "\fB\-fwide\-exec\-charset=\fR\fIcharset\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fwide-exec-charset=charset" |
| Set the wide execution character set, used for wide string and |
| character constants. The default is \s-1UTF\-32\s0 or \s-1UTF\-16\s0, whichever |
| corresponds to the width of \f(CW\*(C`wchar_t\*(C'\fR. As with |
| \&\fB\-fexec\-charset\fR, \fIcharset\fR can be any encoding supported |
| by the system's \f(CW\*(C`iconv\*(C'\fR library routine; however, you will have |
| problems with encodings that do not fit exactly in \f(CW\*(C`wchar_t\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-finput\-charset=\fR\fIcharset\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-finput-charset=charset" |
| Set the input character set, used for translation from the character |
| set of the input file to the source character set used by \s-1GCC\s0. If the |
| locale does not specify, or \s-1GCC\s0 cannot get this information from the |
| locale, the default is \s-1UTF\-8\s0. This can be overridden by either the locale |
| or this command line option. Currently the command line option takes |
| precedence if there's a conflict. \fIcharset\fR can be any encoding |
| supported by the system's \f(CW\*(C`iconv\*(C'\fR library routine. |
| .IP "\fB\-fworking\-directory\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fworking-directory" |
| Enable generation of linemarkers in the preprocessor output that will |
| let the compiler know the current working directory at the time of |
| preprocessing. When this option is enabled, the preprocessor will |
| emit, after the initial linemarker, a second linemarker with the |
| current working directory followed by two slashes. \s-1GCC\s0 will use this |
| directory, when it's present in the preprocessed input, as the |
| directory emitted as the current working directory in some debugging |
| information formats. This option is implicitly enabled if debugging |
| information is enabled, but this can be inhibited with the negated |
| form \fB\-fno\-working\-directory\fR. If the \fB\-P\fR flag is |
| present in the command line, this option has no effect, since no |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`#line\*(C'\fR directives are emitted whatsoever. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-show\-column\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-show-column" |
| Do not print column numbers in diagnostics. This may be necessary if |
| diagnostics are being scanned by a program that does not understand the |
| column numbers, such as \fBdejagnu\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-A\fR \fIpredicate\fR\fB=\fR\fIanswer\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-A predicate=answer" |
| Make an assertion with the predicate \fIpredicate\fR and answer |
| \&\fIanswer\fR. This form is preferred to the older form \fB\-A\fR |
| \&\fIpredicate\fR\fB(\fR\fIanswer\fR\fB)\fR, which is still supported, because |
| it does not use shell special characters. |
| .IP "\fB\-A \-\fR\fIpredicate\fR\fB=\fR\fIanswer\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-A -predicate=answer" |
| Cancel an assertion with the predicate \fIpredicate\fR and answer |
| \&\fIanswer\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-dCHARS\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-dCHARS" |
| \&\fI\s-1CHARS\s0\fR is a sequence of one or more of the following characters, |
| and must not be preceded by a space. Other characters are interpreted |
| by the compiler proper, or reserved for future versions of \s-1GCC\s0, and so |
| are silently ignored. If you specify characters whose behavior |
| conflicts, the result is undefined. |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBM\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "M" |
| Instead of the normal output, generate a list of \fB#define\fR |
| directives for all the macros defined during the execution of the |
| preprocessor, including predefined macros. This gives you a way of |
| finding out what is predefined in your version of the preprocessor. |
| Assuming you have no file \fIfoo.h\fR, the command |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& touch foo.h; cpp \-dM foo.h |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| will show all the predefined macros. |
| .Sp |
| If you use \fB\-dM\fR without the \fB\-E\fR option, \fB\-dM\fR is |
| interpreted as a synonym for \fB\-fdump\-rtl\-mach\fR. |
| .IP "\fBD\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "D" |
| Like \fBM\fR except in two respects: it does \fInot\fR include the |
| predefined macros, and it outputs \fIboth\fR the \fB#define\fR |
| directives and the result of preprocessing. Both kinds of output go to |
| the standard output file. |
| .IP "\fBN\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "N" |
| Like \fBD\fR, but emit only the macro names, not their expansions. |
| .IP "\fBI\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "I" |
| Output \fB#include\fR directives in addition to the result of |
| preprocessing. |
| .IP "\fBU\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "U" |
| Like \fBD\fR except that only macros that are expanded, or whose |
| definedness is tested in preprocessor directives, are output; the |
| output is delayed until the use or test of the macro; and |
| \&\fB#undef\fR directives are also output for macros tested but |
| undefined at the time. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-P\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-P" |
| Inhibit generation of linemarkers in the output from the preprocessor. |
| This might be useful when running the preprocessor on something that is |
| not C code, and will be sent to a program which might be confused by the |
| linemarkers. |
| .IP "\fB\-C\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-C" |
| Do not discard comments. All comments are passed through to the output |
| file, except for comments in processed directives, which are deleted |
| along with the directive. |
| .Sp |
| You should be prepared for side effects when using \fB\-C\fR; it |
| causes the preprocessor to treat comments as tokens in their own right. |
| For example, comments appearing at the start of what would be a |
| directive line have the effect of turning that line into an ordinary |
| source line, since the first token on the line is no longer a \fB#\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-CC\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-CC" |
| Do not discard comments, including during macro expansion. This is |
| like \fB\-C\fR, except that comments contained within macros are |
| also passed through to the output file where the macro is expanded. |
| .Sp |
| In addition to the side-effects of the \fB\-C\fR option, the |
| \&\fB\-CC\fR option causes all \*(C+\-style comments inside a macro |
| to be converted to C\-style comments. This is to prevent later use |
| of that macro from inadvertently commenting out the remainder of |
| the source line. |
| .Sp |
| The \fB\-CC\fR option is generally used to support lint comments. |
| .IP "\fB\-traditional\-cpp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-traditional-cpp" |
| Try to imitate the behavior of old-fashioned C preprocessors, as |
| opposed to \s-1ISO\s0 C preprocessors. |
| .IP "\fB\-trigraphs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-trigraphs" |
| Process trigraph sequences. |
| These are three-character sequences, all starting with \fB??\fR, that |
| are defined by \s-1ISO\s0 C to stand for single characters. For example, |
| \&\fB??/\fR stands for \fB\e\fR, so \fB'??/n'\fR is a character |
| constant for a newline. By default, \s-1GCC\s0 ignores trigraphs, but in |
| standard-conforming modes it converts them. See the \fB\-std\fR and |
| \&\fB\-ansi\fR options. |
| .Sp |
| The nine trigraphs and their replacements are |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 2 |
| \& Trigraph: ??( ??) ??< ??> ??= ??/ ??\*(Aq ??! ??\- |
| \& Replacement: [ ] { } # \e ^ | ~ |
| .Ve |
| .IP "\fB\-remap\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-remap" |
| Enable special code to work around file systems which only permit very |
| short file names, such as MS-DOS. |
| .IP "\fB\-\-help\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "--help" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-\-target\-help\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "--target-help" |
| .PD |
| Print text describing all the command line options instead of |
| preprocessing anything. |
| .IP "\fB\-v\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-v" |
| Verbose mode. Print out \s-1GNU\s0 \s-1CPP\s0's version number at the beginning of |
| execution, and report the final form of the include path. |
| .IP "\fB\-H\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-H" |
| Print the name of each header file used, in addition to other normal |
| activities. Each name is indented to show how deep in the |
| \&\fB#include\fR stack it is. Precompiled header files are also |
| printed, even if they are found to be invalid; an invalid precompiled |
| header file is printed with \fB...x\fR and a valid one with \fB...!\fR . |
| .IP "\fB\-version\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-version" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-\-version\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "--version" |
| .PD |
| Print out \s-1GNU\s0 \s-1CPP\s0's version number. With one dash, proceed to |
| preprocess as normal. With two dashes, exit immediately. |
| .SS "Passing Options to the Assembler" |
| .IX Subsection "Passing Options to the Assembler" |
| You can pass options to the assembler. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wa,\fR\fIoption\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wa,option" |
| Pass \fIoption\fR as an option to the assembler. If \fIoption\fR |
| contains commas, it is split into multiple options at the commas. |
| .IP "\fB\-Xassembler\fR \fIoption\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Xassembler option" |
| Pass \fIoption\fR as an option to the assembler. You can use this to |
| supply system-specific assembler options that \s-1GCC\s0 does not |
| recognize. |
| .Sp |
| If you want to pass an option that takes an argument, you must use |
| \&\fB\-Xassembler\fR twice, once for the option and once for the argument. |
| .SS "Options for Linking" |
| .IX Subsection "Options for Linking" |
| These options come into play when the compiler links object files into |
| an executable output file. They are meaningless if the compiler is |
| not doing a link step. |
| .IP "\fIobject-file-name\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "object-file-name" |
| A file name that does not end in a special recognized suffix is |
| considered to name an object file or library. (Object files are |
| distinguished from libraries by the linker according to the file |
| contents.) If linking is done, these object files are used as input |
| to the linker. |
| .IP "\fB\-c\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-c" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-S\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-S" |
| .IP "\fB\-E\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-E" |
| .PD |
| If any of these options is used, then the linker is not run, and |
| object file names should not be used as arguments. |
| .IP "\fB\-l\fR\fIlibrary\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-llibrary" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-l\fR \fIlibrary\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-l library" |
| .PD |
| Search the library named \fIlibrary\fR when linking. (The second |
| alternative with the library as a separate argument is only for |
| \&\s-1POSIX\s0 compliance and is not recommended.) |
| .Sp |
| It makes a difference where in the command you write this option; the |
| linker searches and processes libraries and object files in the order they |
| are specified. Thus, \fBfoo.o \-lz bar.o\fR searches library \fBz\fR |
| after file \fIfoo.o\fR but before \fIbar.o\fR. If \fIbar.o\fR refers |
| to functions in \fBz\fR, those functions may not be loaded. |
| .Sp |
| The linker searches a standard list of directories for the library, |
| which is actually a file named \fIlib\fIlibrary\fI.a\fR. The linker |
| then uses this file as if it had been specified precisely by name. |
| .Sp |
| The directories searched include several standard system directories |
| plus any that you specify with \fB\-L\fR. |
| .Sp |
| Normally the files found this way are library files\-\-\-archive files |
| whose members are object files. The linker handles an archive file by |
| scanning through it for members which define symbols that have so far |
| been referenced but not defined. But if the file that is found is an |
| ordinary object file, it is linked in the usual fashion. The only |
| difference between using an \fB\-l\fR option and specifying a file name |
| is that \fB\-l\fR surrounds \fIlibrary\fR with \fBlib\fR and \fB.a\fR |
| and searches several directories. |
| .IP "\fB\-lobjc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-lobjc" |
| You need this special case of the \fB\-l\fR option in order to |
| link an Objective-C or Objective\-\*(C+ program. |
| .IP "\fB\-nostartfiles\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-nostartfiles" |
| Do not use the standard system startup files when linking. |
| The standard system libraries are used normally, unless \fB\-nostdlib\fR |
| or \fB\-nodefaultlibs\fR is used. |
| .IP "\fB\-nodefaultlibs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-nodefaultlibs" |
| Do not use the standard system libraries when linking. |
| Only the libraries you specify are passed to the linker, and options |
| specifying linkage of the system libraries, such as \f(CW\*(C`\-static\-libgcc\*(C'\fR |
| or \f(CW\*(C`\-shared\-libgcc\*(C'\fR, are ignored. |
| The standard startup files are used normally, unless \fB\-nostartfiles\fR |
| is used. |
| .Sp |
| The compiler may generate calls to \f(CW\*(C`memcmp\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`memset\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`memcpy\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`memmove\*(C'\fR. |
| These entries are usually resolved by entries in |
| libc. These entry points should be supplied through some other |
| mechanism when this option is specified. |
| .IP "\fB\-nostdlib\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-nostdlib" |
| Do not use the standard system startup files or libraries when linking. |
| No startup files and only the libraries you specify are passed to |
| the linker, and options specifying linkage of the system libraries, such as |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`\-static\-libgcc\*(C'\fR or \f(CW\*(C`\-shared\-libgcc\*(C'\fR, are ignored. |
| .Sp |
| The compiler may generate calls to \f(CW\*(C`memcmp\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`memset\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`memcpy\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`memmove\*(C'\fR. |
| These entries are usually resolved by entries in |
| libc. These entry points should be supplied through some other |
| mechanism when this option is specified. |
| .Sp |
| One of the standard libraries bypassed by \fB\-nostdlib\fR and |
| \&\fB\-nodefaultlibs\fR is \fIlibgcc.a\fR, a library of internal subroutines |
| which \s-1GCC\s0 uses to overcome shortcomings of particular machines, or special |
| needs for some languages. |
| .Sp |
| In most cases, you need \fIlibgcc.a\fR even when you want to avoid |
| other standard libraries. In other words, when you specify \fB\-nostdlib\fR |
| or \fB\-nodefaultlibs\fR you should usually specify \fB\-lgcc\fR as well. |
| This ensures that you have no unresolved references to internal \s-1GCC\s0 |
| library subroutines. |
| (An example of such an internal subroutine is \fB_\|_main\fR, used to ensure \*(C+ |
| constructors are called.) |
| .IP "\fB\-pie\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-pie" |
| Produce a position independent executable on targets that support it. |
| For predictable results, you must also specify the same set of options |
| used for compilation (\fB\-fpie\fR, \fB\-fPIE\fR, |
| or model suboptions) when you specify this linker option. |
| .IP "\fB\-rdynamic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-rdynamic" |
| Pass the flag \fB\-export\-dynamic\fR to the \s-1ELF\s0 linker, on targets |
| that support it. This instructs the linker to add all symbols, not |
| only used ones, to the dynamic symbol table. This option is needed |
| for some uses of \f(CW\*(C`dlopen\*(C'\fR or to allow obtaining backtraces |
| from within a program. |
| .IP "\fB\-s\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-s" |
| Remove all symbol table and relocation information from the executable. |
| .IP "\fB\-static\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-static" |
| On systems that support dynamic linking, this prevents linking with the shared |
| libraries. On other systems, this option has no effect. |
| .IP "\fB\-shared\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-shared" |
| Produce a shared object which can then be linked with other objects to |
| form an executable. Not all systems support this option. For predictable |
| results, you must also specify the same set of options used for compilation |
| (\fB\-fpic\fR, \fB\-fPIC\fR, or model suboptions) when |
| you specify this linker option.[1] |
| .IP "\fB\-shared\-libgcc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-shared-libgcc" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-static\-libgcc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-static-libgcc" |
| .PD |
| On systems that provide \fIlibgcc\fR as a shared library, these options |
| force the use of either the shared or static version, respectively. |
| If no shared version of \fIlibgcc\fR was built when the compiler was |
| configured, these options have no effect. |
| .Sp |
| There are several situations in which an application should use the |
| shared \fIlibgcc\fR instead of the static version. The most common |
| of these is when the application wishes to throw and catch exceptions |
| across different shared libraries. In that case, each of the libraries |
| as well as the application itself should use the shared \fIlibgcc\fR. |
| .Sp |
| Therefore, the G++ and \s-1GCJ\s0 drivers automatically add |
| \&\fB\-shared\-libgcc\fR whenever you build a shared library or a main |
| executable, because \*(C+ and Java programs typically use exceptions, so |
| this is the right thing to do. |
| .Sp |
| If, instead, you use the \s-1GCC\s0 driver to create shared libraries, you may |
| find that they are not always linked with the shared \fIlibgcc\fR. |
| If \s-1GCC\s0 finds, at its configuration time, that you have a non-GNU linker |
| or a \s-1GNU\s0 linker that does not support option \fB\-\-eh\-frame\-hdr\fR, |
| it links the shared version of \fIlibgcc\fR into shared libraries |
| by default. Otherwise, it takes advantage of the linker and optimizes |
| away the linking with the shared version of \fIlibgcc\fR, linking with |
| the static version of libgcc by default. This allows exceptions to |
| propagate through such shared libraries, without incurring relocation |
| costs at library load time. |
| .Sp |
| However, if a library or main executable is supposed to throw or catch |
| exceptions, you must link it using the G++ or \s-1GCJ\s0 driver, as appropriate |
| for the languages used in the program, or using the option |
| \&\fB\-shared\-libgcc\fR, such that it is linked with the shared |
| \&\fIlibgcc\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-static\-libasan\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-static-libasan" |
| When the \fB\-fsanitize=address\fR option is used to link a program, |
| the \s-1GCC\s0 driver automatically links against \fBlibasan\fR. If |
| \&\fIlibasan\fR is available as a shared library, and the \fB\-static\fR |
| option is not used, then this links against the shared version of |
| \&\fIlibasan\fR. The \fB\-static\-libasan\fR option directs the \s-1GCC\s0 |
| driver to link \fIlibasan\fR statically, without necessarily linking |
| other libraries statically. |
| .IP "\fB\-static\-libtsan\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-static-libtsan" |
| When the \fB\-fsanitize=thread\fR option is used to link a program, |
| the \s-1GCC\s0 driver automatically links against \fBlibtsan\fR. If |
| \&\fIlibtsan\fR is available as a shared library, and the \fB\-static\fR |
| option is not used, then this links against the shared version of |
| \&\fIlibtsan\fR. The \fB\-static\-libtsan\fR option directs the \s-1GCC\s0 |
| driver to link \fIlibtsan\fR statically, without necessarily linking |
| other libraries statically. |
| .IP "\fB\-static\-libstdc++\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-static-libstdc++" |
| When the \fBg++\fR program is used to link a \*(C+ program, it |
| normally automatically links against \fBlibstdc++\fR. If |
| \&\fIlibstdc++\fR is available as a shared library, and the |
| \&\fB\-static\fR option is not used, then this links against the |
| shared version of \fIlibstdc++\fR. That is normally fine. However, it |
| is sometimes useful to freeze the version of \fIlibstdc++\fR used by |
| the program without going all the way to a fully static link. The |
| \&\fB\-static\-libstdc++\fR option directs the \fBg++\fR driver to |
| link \fIlibstdc++\fR statically, without necessarily linking other |
| libraries statically. |
| .IP "\fB\-symbolic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-symbolic" |
| Bind references to global symbols when building a shared object. Warn |
| about any unresolved references (unless overridden by the link editor |
| option \fB\-Xlinker \-z \-Xlinker defs\fR). Only a few systems support |
| this option. |
| .IP "\fB\-T\fR \fIscript\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-T script" |
| Use \fIscript\fR as the linker script. This option is supported by most |
| systems using the \s-1GNU\s0 linker. On some targets, such as bare-board |
| targets without an operating system, the \fB\-T\fR option may be required |
| when linking to avoid references to undefined symbols. |
| .IP "\fB\-Xlinker\fR \fIoption\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Xlinker option" |
| Pass \fIoption\fR as an option to the linker. You can use this to |
| supply system-specific linker options that \s-1GCC\s0 does not recognize. |
| .Sp |
| If you want to pass an option that takes a separate argument, you must use |
| \&\fB\-Xlinker\fR twice, once for the option and once for the argument. |
| For example, to pass \fB\-assert definitions\fR, you must write |
| \&\fB\-Xlinker \-assert \-Xlinker definitions\fR. It does not work to write |
| \&\fB\-Xlinker \*(L"\-assert definitions\*(R"\fR, because this passes the entire |
| string as a single argument, which is not what the linker expects. |
| .Sp |
| When using the \s-1GNU\s0 linker, it is usually more convenient to pass |
| arguments to linker options using the \fIoption\fR\fB=\fR\fIvalue\fR |
| syntax than as separate arguments. For example, you can specify |
| \&\fB\-Xlinker \-Map=output.map\fR rather than |
| \&\fB\-Xlinker \-Map \-Xlinker output.map\fR. Other linkers may not support |
| this syntax for command-line options. |
| .IP "\fB\-Wl,\fR\fIoption\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Wl,option" |
| Pass \fIoption\fR as an option to the linker. If \fIoption\fR contains |
| commas, it is split into multiple options at the commas. You can use this |
| syntax to pass an argument to the option. |
| For example, \fB\-Wl,\-Map,output.map\fR passes \fB\-Map output.map\fR to the |
| linker. When using the \s-1GNU\s0 linker, you can also get the same effect with |
| \&\fB\-Wl,\-Map=output.map\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-u\fR \fIsymbol\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-u symbol" |
| Pretend the symbol \fIsymbol\fR is undefined, to force linking of |
| library modules to define it. You can use \fB\-u\fR multiple times with |
| different symbols to force loading of additional library modules. |
| .SS "Options for Directory Search" |
| .IX Subsection "Options for Directory Search" |
| These options specify directories to search for header files, for |
| libraries and for parts of the compiler: |
| .IP "\fB\-I\fR\fIdir\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Idir" |
| Add the directory \fIdir\fR to the head of the list of directories to be |
| searched for header files. This can be used to override a system header |
| file, substituting your own version, since these directories are |
| searched before the system header file directories. However, you should |
| not use this option to add directories that contain vendor-supplied |
| system header files (use \fB\-isystem\fR for that). If you use more than |
| one \fB\-I\fR option, the directories are scanned in left-to-right |
| order; the standard system directories come after. |
| .Sp |
| If a standard system include directory, or a directory specified with |
| \&\fB\-isystem\fR, is also specified with \fB\-I\fR, the \fB\-I\fR |
| option is ignored. The directory is still searched but as a |
| system directory at its normal position in the system include chain. |
| This is to ensure that \s-1GCC\s0's procedure to fix buggy system headers and |
| the ordering for the \f(CW\*(C`include_next\*(C'\fR directive are not inadvertently changed. |
| If you really need to change the search order for system directories, |
| use the \fB\-nostdinc\fR and/or \fB\-isystem\fR options. |
| .IP "\fB\-iplugindir=\fR\fIdir\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-iplugindir=dir" |
| Set the directory to search for plugins that are passed |
| by \fB\-fplugin=\fR\fIname\fR instead of |
| \&\fB\-fplugin=\fR\fIpath\fR\fB/\fR\fIname\fR\fB.so\fR. This option is not meant |
| to be used by the user, but only passed by the driver. |
| .IP "\fB\-iquote\fR\fIdir\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-iquotedir" |
| Add the directory \fIdir\fR to the head of the list of directories to |
| be searched for header files only for the case of \fB#include |
| "\fR\fIfile\fR\fB"\fR; they are not searched for \fB#include <\fR\fIfile\fR\fB>\fR, |
| otherwise just like \fB\-I\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-L\fR\fIdir\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Ldir" |
| Add directory \fIdir\fR to the list of directories to be searched |
| for \fB\-l\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-B\fR\fIprefix\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Bprefix" |
| This option specifies where to find the executables, libraries, |
| include files, and data files of the compiler itself. |
| .Sp |
| The compiler driver program runs one or more of the subprograms |
| \&\fBcpp\fR, \fBcc1\fR, \fBas\fR and \fBld\fR. It tries |
| \&\fIprefix\fR as a prefix for each program it tries to run, both with and |
| without \fImachine\fR\fB/\fR\fIversion\fR\fB/\fR. |
| .Sp |
| For each subprogram to be run, the compiler driver first tries the |
| \&\fB\-B\fR prefix, if any. If that name is not found, or if \fB\-B\fR |
| is not specified, the driver tries two standard prefixes, |
| \&\fI/usr/lib/gcc/\fR and \fI/usr/local/lib/gcc/\fR. If neither of |
| those results in a file name that is found, the unmodified program |
| name is searched for using the directories specified in your |
| \&\fB\s-1PATH\s0\fR environment variable. |
| .Sp |
| The compiler checks to see if the path provided by the \fB\-B\fR |
| refers to a directory, and if necessary it adds a directory |
| separator character at the end of the path. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-B\fR prefixes that effectively specify directory names also apply |
| to libraries in the linker, because the compiler translates these |
| options into \fB\-L\fR options for the linker. They also apply to |
| includes files in the preprocessor, because the compiler translates these |
| options into \fB\-isystem\fR options for the preprocessor. In this case, |
| the compiler appends \fBinclude\fR to the prefix. |
| .Sp |
| The runtime support file \fIlibgcc.a\fR can also be searched for using |
| the \fB\-B\fR prefix, if needed. If it is not found there, the two |
| standard prefixes above are tried, and that is all. The file is left |
| out of the link if it is not found by those means. |
| .Sp |
| Another way to specify a prefix much like the \fB\-B\fR prefix is to use |
| the environment variable \fB\s-1GCC_EXEC_PREFIX\s0\fR. |
| .Sp |
| As a special kludge, if the path provided by \fB\-B\fR is |
| \&\fI[dir/]stage\fIN\fI/\fR, where \fIN\fR is a number in the range 0 to |
| 9, then it is replaced by \fI[dir/]include\fR. This is to help |
| with boot-strapping the compiler. |
| .IP "\fB\-specs=\fR\fIfile\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-specs=file" |
| Process \fIfile\fR after the compiler reads in the standard \fIspecs\fR |
| file, in order to override the defaults which the \fBgcc\fR driver |
| program uses when determining what switches to pass to \fBcc1\fR, |
| \&\fBcc1plus\fR, \fBas\fR, \fBld\fR, etc. More than one |
| \&\fB\-specs=\fR\fIfile\fR can be specified on the command line, and they |
| are processed in order, from left to right. |
| .IP "\fB\-\-sysroot=\fR\fIdir\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "--sysroot=dir" |
| Use \fIdir\fR as the logical root directory for headers and libraries. |
| For example, if the compiler normally searches for headers in |
| \&\fI/usr/include\fR and libraries in \fI/usr/lib\fR, it instead |
| searches \fI\fIdir\fI/usr/include\fR and \fI\fIdir\fI/usr/lib\fR. |
| .Sp |
| If you use both this option and the \fB\-isysroot\fR option, then |
| the \fB\-\-sysroot\fR option applies to libraries, but the |
| \&\fB\-isysroot\fR option applies to header files. |
| .Sp |
| The \s-1GNU\s0 linker (beginning with version 2.16) has the necessary support |
| for this option. If your linker does not support this option, the |
| header file aspect of \fB\-\-sysroot\fR still works, but the |
| library aspect does not. |
| .IP "\fB\-\-no\-sysroot\-suffix\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "--no-sysroot-suffix" |
| For some targets, a suffix is added to the root directory specified |
| with \fB\-\-sysroot\fR, depending on the other options used, so that |
| headers may for example be found in |
| \&\fI\fIdir\fI/\fIsuffix\fI/usr/include\fR instead of |
| \&\fI\fIdir\fI/usr/include\fR. This option disables the addition of |
| such a suffix. |
| .IP "\fB\-I\-\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-I-" |
| This option has been deprecated. Please use \fB\-iquote\fR instead for |
| \&\fB\-I\fR directories before the \fB\-I\-\fR and remove the \fB\-I\-\fR. |
| Any directories you specify with \fB\-I\fR options before the \fB\-I\-\fR |
| option are searched only for the case of \fB#include "\fR\fIfile\fR\fB"\fR; |
| they are not searched for \fB#include <\fR\fIfile\fR\fB>\fR. |
| .Sp |
| If additional directories are specified with \fB\-I\fR options after |
| the \fB\-I\-\fR, these directories are searched for all \fB#include\fR |
| directives. (Ordinarily \fIall\fR \fB\-I\fR directories are used |
| this way.) |
| .Sp |
| In addition, the \fB\-I\-\fR option inhibits the use of the current |
| directory (where the current input file came from) as the first search |
| directory for \fB#include "\fR\fIfile\fR\fB"\fR. There is no way to |
| override this effect of \fB\-I\-\fR. With \fB\-I.\fR you can specify |
| searching the directory that is current when the compiler is |
| invoked. That is not exactly the same as what the preprocessor does |
| by default, but it is often satisfactory. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-I\-\fR does not inhibit the use of the standard system directories |
| for header files. Thus, \fB\-I\-\fR and \fB\-nostdinc\fR are |
| independent. |
| .SS "Specifying Target Machine and Compiler Version" |
| .IX Subsection "Specifying Target Machine and Compiler Version" |
| The usual way to run \s-1GCC\s0 is to run the executable called \fBgcc\fR, or |
| \&\fImachine\fR\fB\-gcc\fR when cross-compiling, or |
| \&\fImachine\fR\fB\-gcc\-\fR\fIversion\fR to run a version other than the |
| one that was installed last. |
| .SS "Hardware Models and Configurations" |
| .IX Subsection "Hardware Models and Configurations" |
| Each target machine types can have its own |
| special options, starting with \fB\-m\fR, to choose among various |
| hardware models or configurations\-\-\-for example, 68010 vs 68020, |
| floating coprocessor or none. A single installed version of the |
| compiler can compile for any model or configuration, according to the |
| options specified. |
| .PP |
| Some configurations of the compiler also support additional special |
| options, usually for compatibility with other compilers on the same |
| platform. |
| .PP |
| \fIAArch64 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "AArch64 Options" |
| .PP |
| These options are defined for AArch64 implementations: |
| .IP "\fB\-mbig\-endian\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbig-endian" |
| Generate big-endian code. This is the default when \s-1GCC\s0 is configured for an |
| \&\fBaarch64_be\-*\-*\fR target. |
| .IP "\fB\-mgeneral\-regs\-only\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mgeneral-regs-only" |
| Generate code which uses only the general registers. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlittle\-endian\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlittle-endian" |
| Generate little-endian code. This is the default when \s-1GCC\s0 is configured for an |
| \&\fBaarch64\-*\-*\fR but not an \fBaarch64_be\-*\-*\fR target. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcmodel=tiny\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcmodel=tiny" |
| Generate code for the tiny code model. The program and its statically defined |
| symbols must be within 1GB of each other. Pointers are 64 bits. Programs can |
| be statically or dynamically linked. This model is not fully implemented and |
| mostly treated as \fBsmall\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcmodel=small\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcmodel=small" |
| Generate code for the small code model. The program and its statically defined |
| symbols must be within 4GB of each other. Pointers are 64 bits. Programs can |
| be statically or dynamically linked. This is the default code model. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcmodel=large\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcmodel=large" |
| Generate code for the large code model. This makes no assumptions about |
| addresses and sizes of sections. Pointers are 64 bits. Programs can be |
| statically linked only. |
| .IP "\fB\-mstrict\-align\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mstrict-align" |
| Do not assume that unaligned memory references will be handled by the system. |
| .IP "\fB\-momit\-leaf\-frame\-pointer\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-momit-leaf-frame-pointer" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-omit\-leaf\-frame\-pointer\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-omit-leaf-frame-pointer" |
| .PD |
| Omit or keep the frame pointer in leaf functions. The former behaviour is the |
| default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtls\-dialect=desc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtls-dialect=desc" |
| Use \s-1TLS\s0 descriptors as the thread-local storage mechanism for dynamic accesses |
| of \s-1TLS\s0 variables. This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtls\-dialect=traditional\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtls-dialect=traditional" |
| Use traditional \s-1TLS\s0 as the thread-local storage mechanism for dynamic accesses |
| of \s-1TLS\s0 variables. |
| .IP "\fB\-march=\fR\fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-march=name" |
| Specify the name of the target architecture, optionally suffixed by one or |
| more feature modifiers. This option has the form |
| \&\fB\-march=\fR\fIarch\fR{\fB+\fR[\fBno\fR]\fIfeature\fR}*, where the |
| only value for \fIarch\fR is \fBarmv8\-a\fR. The possible values for |
| \&\fIfeature\fR are documented in the sub-section below. |
| .Sp |
| Where conflicting feature modifiers are specified, the right-most feature is |
| used. |
| .Sp |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 uses this name to determine what kind of instructions it can emit when |
| generating assembly code. This option can be used in conjunction with or |
| instead of the \fB\-mcpu=\fR option. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcpu=name" |
| Specify the name of the target processor, optionally suffixed by one or more |
| feature modifiers. This option has the form |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu\fR{\fB+\fR[\fBno\fR]\fIfeature\fR}*, where the |
| possible values for \fIcpu\fR are \fBgeneric\fR, \fBlarge\fR. The |
| possible values for \fIfeature\fR are documented in the sub-section |
| below. |
| .Sp |
| Where conflicting feature modifiers are specified, the right-most feature is |
| used. |
| .Sp |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 uses this name to determine what kind of instructions it can emit when |
| generating assembly code. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtune=\fR\fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtune=name" |
| Specify the name of the processor to tune the performance for. The code will |
| be tuned as if the target processor were of the type specified in this option, |
| but still using instructions compatible with the target processor specified |
| by a \fB\-mcpu=\fR option. This option cannot be suffixed by feature |
| modifiers. |
| .PP |
| \fB\-march\fR and \fB\-mcpu\fR feature modifiers |
| .IX Subsection "-march and -mcpu feature modifiers" |
| .PP |
| Feature modifiers used with \fB\-march\fR and \fB\-mcpu\fR can be one |
| the following: |
| .IP "\fBcrc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "crc" |
| Enable \s-1CRC\s0 extension. |
| .IP "\fBcrypto\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "crypto" |
| Enable Crypto extension. This implies Advanced \s-1SIMD\s0 is enabled. |
| .IP "\fBfp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "fp" |
| Enable floating-point instructions. |
| .IP "\fBsimd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "simd" |
| Enable Advanced \s-1SIMD\s0 instructions. This implies floating-point instructions |
| are enabled. This is the default for all current possible values for options |
| \&\fB\-march\fR and \fB\-mcpu=\fR. |
| .PP |
| \fIAdapteva Epiphany Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "Adapteva Epiphany Options" |
| .PP |
| These \fB\-m\fR options are defined for Adapteva Epiphany: |
| .IP "\fB\-mhalf\-reg\-file\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mhalf-reg-file" |
| Don't allocate any register in the range \f(CW\*(C`r32\*(C'\fR...\f(CW\*(C`r63\*(C'\fR. |
| That allows code to run on hardware variants that lack these registers. |
| .IP "\fB\-mprefer\-short\-insn\-regs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mprefer-short-insn-regs" |
| Preferrentially allocate registers that allow short instruction generation. |
| This can result in increased instruction count, so this may either reduce or |
| increase overall code size. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbranch\-cost=\fR\fInum\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbranch-cost=num" |
| Set the cost of branches to roughly \fInum\fR \*(L"simple\*(R" instructions. |
| This cost is only a heuristic and is not guaranteed to produce |
| consistent results across releases. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcmove\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcmove" |
| Enable the generation of conditional moves. |
| .IP "\fB\-mnops=\fR\fInum\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mnops=num" |
| Emit \fInum\fR NOPs before every other generated instruction. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-soft\-cmpsf\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-soft-cmpsf" |
| For single-precision floating-point comparisons, emit an \f(CW\*(C`fsub\*(C'\fR instruction |
| and test the flags. This is faster than a software comparison, but can |
| get incorrect results in the presence of NaNs, or when two different small |
| numbers are compared such that their difference is calculated as zero. |
| The default is \fB\-msoft\-cmpsf\fR, which uses slower, but IEEE-compliant, |
| software comparisons. |
| .IP "\fB\-mstack\-offset=\fR\fInum\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mstack-offset=num" |
| Set the offset between the top of the stack and the stack pointer. |
| E.g., a value of 8 means that the eight bytes in the range \f(CW\*(C`sp+0...sp+7\*(C'\fR |
| can be used by leaf functions without stack allocation. |
| Values other than \fB8\fR or \fB16\fR are untested and unlikely to work. |
| Note also that this option changes the \s-1ABI\s0; compiling a program with a |
| different stack offset than the libraries have been compiled with |
| generally does not work. |
| This option can be useful if you want to evaluate if a different stack |
| offset would give you better code, but to actually use a different stack |
| offset to build working programs, it is recommended to configure the |
| toolchain with the appropriate \fB\-\-with\-stack\-offset=\fR\fInum\fR option. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-round\-nearest\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-round-nearest" |
| Make the scheduler assume that the rounding mode has been set to |
| truncating. The default is \fB\-mround\-nearest\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlong\-calls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlong-calls" |
| If not otherwise specified by an attribute, assume all calls might be beyond |
| the offset range of the \f(CW\*(C`b\*(C'\fR / \f(CW\*(C`bl\*(C'\fR instructions, and therefore load the |
| function address into a register before performing a (otherwise direct) call. |
| This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mshort\-calls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mshort-calls" |
| If not otherwise specified by an attribute, assume all direct calls are |
| in the range of the \f(CW\*(C`b\*(C'\fR / \f(CW\*(C`bl\*(C'\fR instructions, so use these instructions |
| for direct calls. The default is \fB\-mlong\-calls\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-msmall16\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msmall16" |
| Assume addresses can be loaded as 16\-bit unsigned values. This does not |
| apply to function addresses for which \fB\-mlong\-calls\fR semantics |
| are in effect. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfp\-mode=\fR\fImode\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfp-mode=mode" |
| Set the prevailing mode of the floating-point unit. |
| This determines the floating-point mode that is provided and expected |
| at function call and return time. Making this mode match the mode you |
| predominantly need at function start can make your programs smaller and |
| faster by avoiding unnecessary mode switches. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fImode\fR can be set to one the following values: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBcaller\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "caller" |
| Any mode at function entry is valid, and retained or restored when |
| the function returns, and when it calls other functions. |
| This mode is useful for compiling libraries or other compilation units |
| you might want to incorporate into different programs with different |
| prevailing \s-1FPU\s0 modes, and the convenience of being able to use a single |
| object file outweighs the size and speed overhead for any extra |
| mode switching that might be needed, compared with what would be needed |
| with a more specific choice of prevailing \s-1FPU\s0 mode. |
| .IP "\fBtruncate\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "truncate" |
| This is the mode used for floating-point calculations with |
| truncating (i.e. round towards zero) rounding mode. That includes |
| conversion from floating point to integer. |
| .IP "\fBround-nearest\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "round-nearest" |
| This is the mode used for floating-point calculations with |
| round-to-nearest-or-even rounding mode. |
| .IP "\fBint\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "int" |
| This is the mode used to perform integer calculations in the \s-1FPU\s0, e.g. |
| integer multiply, or integer multiply-and-accumulate. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| The default is \fB\-mfp\-mode=caller\fR |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-mnosplit\-lohi\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mnosplit-lohi" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-postinc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-postinc" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-postmodify\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-postmodify" |
| .PD |
| Code generation tweaks that disable, respectively, splitting of 32\-bit |
| loads, generation of post-increment addresses, and generation of |
| post-modify addresses. The defaults are \fBmsplit-lohi\fR, |
| \&\fB\-mpost\-inc\fR, and \fB\-mpost\-modify\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mnovect\-double\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mnovect-double" |
| Change the preferred \s-1SIMD\s0 mode to SImode. The default is |
| \&\fB\-mvect\-double\fR, which uses DImode as preferred \s-1SIMD\s0 mode. |
| .IP "\fB\-max\-vect\-align=\fR\fInum\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-max-vect-align=num" |
| The maximum alignment for \s-1SIMD\s0 vector mode types. |
| \&\fInum\fR may be 4 or 8. The default is 8. |
| Note that this is an \s-1ABI\s0 change, even though many library function |
| interfaces are unaffected if they don't use \s-1SIMD\s0 vector modes |
| in places that affect size and/or alignment of relevant types. |
| .IP "\fB\-msplit\-vecmove\-early\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msplit-vecmove-early" |
| Split vector moves into single word moves before reload. In theory this |
| can give better register allocation, but so far the reverse seems to be |
| generally the case. |
| .IP "\fB\-m1reg\-\fR\fIreg\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m1reg-reg" |
| Specify a register to hold the constant \-1, which makes loading small negative |
| constants and certain bitmasks faster. |
| Allowable values for \fIreg\fR are \fBr43\fR and \fBr63\fR, |
| which specify use of that register as a fixed register, |
| and \fBnone\fR, which means that no register is used for this |
| purpose. The default is \fB\-m1reg\-none\fR. |
| .PP |
| \fI\s-1ARM\s0 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "ARM Options" |
| .PP |
| These \fB\-m\fR options are defined for Advanced \s-1RISC\s0 Machines (\s-1ARM\s0) |
| architectures: |
| .IP "\fB\-mabi=\fR\fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mabi=name" |
| Generate code for the specified \s-1ABI\s0. Permissible values are: \fBapcs-gnu\fR, |
| \&\fBatpcs\fR, \fBaapcs\fR, \fBaapcs-linux\fR and \fBiwmmxt\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mapcs\-frame\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mapcs-frame" |
| Generate a stack frame that is compliant with the \s-1ARM\s0 Procedure Call |
| Standard for all functions, even if this is not strictly necessary for |
| correct execution of the code. Specifying \fB\-fomit\-frame\-pointer\fR |
| with this option causes the stack frames not to be generated for |
| leaf functions. The default is \fB\-mno\-apcs\-frame\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mapcs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mapcs" |
| This is a synonym for \fB\-mapcs\-frame\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mthumb\-interwork\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mthumb-interwork" |
| Generate code that supports calling between the \s-1ARM\s0 and Thumb |
| instruction sets. Without this option, on pre\-v5 architectures, the |
| two instruction sets cannot be reliably used inside one program. The |
| default is \fB\-mno\-thumb\-interwork\fR, since slightly larger code |
| is generated when \fB\-mthumb\-interwork\fR is specified. In \s-1AAPCS\s0 |
| configurations this option is meaningless. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sched\-prolog\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sched-prolog" |
| Prevent the reordering of instructions in the function prologue, or the |
| merging of those instruction with the instructions in the function's |
| body. This means that all functions start with a recognizable set |
| of instructions (or in fact one of a choice from a small set of |
| different function prologues), and this information can be used to |
| locate the start of functions inside an executable piece of code. The |
| default is \fB\-msched\-prolog\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfloat\-abi=\fR\fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfloat-abi=name" |
| Specifies which floating-point \s-1ABI\s0 to use. Permissible values |
| are: \fBsoft\fR, \fBsoftfp\fR and \fBhard\fR. |
| .Sp |
| Specifying \fBsoft\fR causes \s-1GCC\s0 to generate output containing |
| library calls for floating-point operations. |
| \&\fBsoftfp\fR allows the generation of code using hardware floating-point |
| instructions, but still uses the soft-float calling conventions. |
| \&\fBhard\fR allows generation of floating-point instructions |
| and uses FPU-specific calling conventions. |
| .Sp |
| The default depends on the specific target configuration. Note that |
| the hard-float and soft-float ABIs are not link-compatible; you must |
| compile your entire program with the same \s-1ABI\s0, and link with a |
| compatible set of libraries. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlittle\-endian\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlittle-endian" |
| Generate code for a processor running in little-endian mode. This is |
| the default for all standard configurations. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbig\-endian\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbig-endian" |
| Generate code for a processor running in big-endian mode; the default is |
| to compile code for a little-endian processor. |
| .IP "\fB\-mwords\-little\-endian\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mwords-little-endian" |
| This option only applies when generating code for big-endian processors. |
| Generate code for a little-endian word order but a big-endian byte |
| order. That is, a byte order of the form \fB32107654\fR. Note: this |
| option should only be used if you require compatibility with code for |
| big-endian \s-1ARM\s0 processors generated by versions of the compiler prior to |
| 2.8. This option is now deprecated. |
| .IP "\fB\-march=\fR\fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-march=name" |
| This specifies the name of the target \s-1ARM\s0 architecture. \s-1GCC\s0 uses this |
| name to determine what kind of instructions it can emit when generating |
| assembly code. This option can be used in conjunction with or instead |
| of the \fB\-mcpu=\fR option. Permissible names are: \fBarmv2\fR, |
| \&\fBarmv2a\fR, \fBarmv3\fR, \fBarmv3m\fR, \fBarmv4\fR, \fBarmv4t\fR, |
| \&\fBarmv5\fR, \fBarmv5t\fR, \fBarmv5e\fR, \fBarmv5te\fR, |
| \&\fBarmv6\fR, \fBarmv6j\fR, |
| \&\fBarmv6t2\fR, \fBarmv6z\fR, \fBarmv6zk\fR, \fBarmv6\-m\fR, |
| \&\fBarmv7\fR, \fBarmv7\-a\fR, \fBarmv7\-r\fR, \fBarmv7\-m\fR, \fBarmv7e\-m\fR |
| \&\fBarmv7ve\fR, \fBarmv8\-a\fR, |
| \&\fBiwmmxt\fR, \fBiwmmxt2\fR, \fBep9312\fR. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-march=armv7ve\fR is the armv7\-a architecture with virtualization |
| extensions. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-march=armv8\-a+crc\fR enables code generation for the ARMv8\-A |
| architecture together with the optional \s-1CRC32\s0 extensions. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-march=native\fR causes the compiler to auto-detect the architecture |
| of the build computer. At present, this feature is only supported on |
| Linux, and not all architectures are recognized. If the auto-detect is |
| unsuccessful the option has no effect. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtune=\fR\fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtune=name" |
| This option specifies the name of the target \s-1ARM\s0 processor for |
| which \s-1GCC\s0 should tune the performance of the code. |
| For some \s-1ARM\s0 implementations better performance can be obtained by using |
| this option. |
| Permissible names are: \fBarm2\fR, \fBarm250\fR, |
| \&\fBarm3\fR, \fBarm6\fR, \fBarm60\fR, \fBarm600\fR, \fBarm610\fR, |
| \&\fBarm620\fR, \fBarm7\fR, \fBarm7m\fR, \fBarm7d\fR, \fBarm7dm\fR, |
| \&\fBarm7di\fR, \fBarm7dmi\fR, \fBarm70\fR, \fBarm700\fR, |
| \&\fBarm700i\fR, \fBarm710\fR, \fBarm710c\fR, \fBarm7100\fR, |
| \&\fBarm720\fR, |
| \&\fBarm7500\fR, \fBarm7500fe\fR, \fBarm7tdmi\fR, \fBarm7tdmi\-s\fR, |
| \&\fBarm710t\fR, \fBarm720t\fR, \fBarm740t\fR, |
| \&\fBstrongarm\fR, \fBstrongarm110\fR, \fBstrongarm1100\fR, |
| \&\fBstrongarm1110\fR, |
| \&\fBarm8\fR, \fBarm810\fR, \fBarm9\fR, \fBarm9e\fR, \fBarm920\fR, |
| \&\fBarm920t\fR, \fBarm922t\fR, \fBarm946e\-s\fR, \fBarm966e\-s\fR, |
| \&\fBarm968e\-s\fR, \fBarm926ej\-s\fR, \fBarm940t\fR, \fBarm9tdmi\fR, |
| \&\fBarm10tdmi\fR, \fBarm1020t\fR, \fBarm1026ej\-s\fR, |
| \&\fBarm10e\fR, \fBarm1020e\fR, \fBarm1022e\fR, |
| \&\fBarm1136j\-s\fR, \fBarm1136jf\-s\fR, \fBmpcore\fR, \fBmpcorenovfp\fR, |
| \&\fBarm1156t2\-s\fR, \fBarm1156t2f\-s\fR, \fBarm1176jz\-s\fR, \fBarm1176jzf\-s\fR, |
| \&\fBcortex\-a5\fR, \fBcortex\-a7\fR, \fBcortex\-a8\fR, \fBcortex\-a9\fR, |
| \&\fBcortex\-a15\fR, \fBcortex\-a53\fR, \fBcortex\-r4\fR, \fBcortex\-r4f\fR, |
| \&\fBcortex\-r5\fR, \fBcortex\-r7\fR, \fBcortex\-m4\fR, \fBcortex\-m3\fR, |
| \&\fBcortex\-m1\fR, |
| \&\fBcortex\-m0\fR, |
| \&\fBcortex\-m0plus\fR, |
| \&\fBmarvell\-pj4\fR, |
| \&\fBxscale\fR, \fBiwmmxt\fR, \fBiwmmxt2\fR, \fBep9312\fR, |
| \&\fBfa526\fR, \fBfa626\fR, |
| \&\fBfa606te\fR, \fBfa626te\fR, \fBfmp626\fR, \fBfa726te\fR. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-mtune=generic\-\fR\fIarch\fR specifies that \s-1GCC\s0 should tune the |
| performance for a blend of processors within architecture \fIarch\fR. |
| The aim is to generate code that run well on the current most popular |
| processors, balancing between optimizations that benefit some CPUs in the |
| range, and avoiding performance pitfalls of other CPUs. The effects of |
| this option may change in future \s-1GCC\s0 versions as \s-1CPU\s0 models come and go. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-mtune=native\fR causes the compiler to auto-detect the \s-1CPU\s0 |
| of the build computer. At present, this feature is only supported on |
| Linux, and not all architectures are recognized. If the auto-detect is |
| unsuccessful the option has no effect. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcpu=name" |
| This specifies the name of the target \s-1ARM\s0 processor. \s-1GCC\s0 uses this name |
| to derive the name of the target \s-1ARM\s0 architecture (as if specified |
| by \fB\-march\fR) and the \s-1ARM\s0 processor type for which to tune for |
| performance (as if specified by \fB\-mtune\fR). Where this option |
| is used in conjunction with \fB\-march\fR or \fB\-mtune\fR, |
| those options take precedence over the appropriate part of this option. |
| .Sp |
| Permissible names for this option are the same as those for |
| \&\fB\-mtune\fR. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=generic\-\fR\fIarch\fR is also permissible, and is |
| equivalent to \fB\-march=\fR\fIarch\fR \fB\-mtune=generic\-\fR\fIarch\fR. |
| See \fB\-mtune\fR for more information. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=native\fR causes the compiler to auto-detect the \s-1CPU\s0 |
| of the build computer. At present, this feature is only supported on |
| Linux, and not all architectures are recognized. If the auto-detect is |
| unsuccessful the option has no effect. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfpu=\fR\fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfpu=name" |
| This specifies what floating-point hardware (or hardware emulation) is |
| available on the target. Permissible names are: \fBvfp\fR, \fBvfpv3\fR, |
| \&\fBvfpv3\-fp16\fR, \fBvfpv3\-d16\fR, \fBvfpv3\-d16\-fp16\fR, \fBvfpv3xd\fR, |
| \&\fBvfpv3xd\-fp16\fR, \fBneon\fR, \fBneon\-fp16\fR, \fBvfpv4\fR, |
| \&\fBvfpv4\-d16\fR, \fBfpv4\-sp\-d16\fR, \fBneon\-vfpv4\fR, |
| \&\fBfp\-armv8\fR, \fBneon\-fp\-armv8\fR, and \fBcrypto\-neon\-fp\-armv8\fR. |
| .Sp |
| If \fB\-msoft\-float\fR is specified this specifies the format of |
| floating-point values. |
| .Sp |
| If the selected floating-point hardware includes the \s-1NEON\s0 extension |
| (e.g. \fB\-mfpu\fR=\fBneon\fR), note that floating-point |
| operations are not generated by \s-1GCC\s0's auto-vectorization pass unless |
| \&\fB\-funsafe\-math\-optimizations\fR is also specified. This is |
| because \s-1NEON\s0 hardware does not fully implement the \s-1IEEE\s0 754 standard for |
| floating-point arithmetic (in particular denormal values are treated as |
| zero), so the use of \s-1NEON\s0 instructions may lead to a loss of precision. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfp16\-format=\fR\fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfp16-format=name" |
| Specify the format of the \f(CW\*(C`_\|_fp16\*(C'\fR half-precision floating-point type. |
| Permissible names are \fBnone\fR, \fBieee\fR, and \fBalternative\fR; |
| the default is \fBnone\fR, in which case the \f(CW\*(C`_\|_fp16\*(C'\fR type is not |
| defined. |
| .IP "\fB\-mstructure\-size\-boundary=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mstructure-size-boundary=n" |
| The sizes of all structures and unions are rounded up to a multiple |
| of the number of bits set by this option. Permissible values are 8, 32 |
| and 64. The default value varies for different toolchains. For the \s-1COFF\s0 |
| targeted toolchain the default value is 8. A value of 64 is only allowed |
| if the underlying \s-1ABI\s0 supports it. |
| .Sp |
| Specifying a larger number can produce faster, more efficient code, but |
| can also increase the size of the program. Different values are potentially |
| incompatible. Code compiled with one value cannot necessarily expect to |
| work with code or libraries compiled with another value, if they exchange |
| information using structures or unions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mabort\-on\-noreturn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mabort-on-noreturn" |
| Generate a call to the function \f(CW\*(C`abort\*(C'\fR at the end of a |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`noreturn\*(C'\fR function. It is executed if the function tries to |
| return. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlong\-calls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlong-calls" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-long\-calls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-long-calls" |
| .PD |
| Tells the compiler to perform function calls by first loading the |
| address of the function into a register and then performing a subroutine |
| call on this register. This switch is needed if the target function |
| lies outside of the 64\-megabyte addressing range of the offset-based |
| version of subroutine call instruction. |
| .Sp |
| Even if this switch is enabled, not all function calls are turned |
| into long calls. The heuristic is that static functions, functions |
| that have the \fBshort-call\fR attribute, functions that are inside |
| the scope of a \fB#pragma no_long_calls\fR directive, and functions whose |
| definitions have already been compiled within the current compilation |
| unit are not turned into long calls. The exceptions to this rule are |
| that weak function definitions, functions with the \fBlong-call\fR |
| attribute or the \fBsection\fR attribute, and functions that are within |
| the scope of a \fB#pragma long_calls\fR directive are always |
| turned into long calls. |
| .Sp |
| This feature is not enabled by default. Specifying |
| \&\fB\-mno\-long\-calls\fR restores the default behavior, as does |
| placing the function calls within the scope of a \fB#pragma |
| long_calls_off\fR directive. Note these switches have no effect on how |
| the compiler generates code to handle function calls via function |
| pointers. |
| .IP "\fB\-msingle\-pic\-base\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msingle-pic-base" |
| Treat the register used for \s-1PIC\s0 addressing as read-only, rather than |
| loading it in the prologue for each function. The runtime system is |
| responsible for initializing this register with an appropriate value |
| before execution begins. |
| .IP "\fB\-mpic\-register=\fR\fIreg\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpic-register=reg" |
| Specify the register to be used for \s-1PIC\s0 addressing. |
| For standard \s-1PIC\s0 base case, the default will be any suitable register |
| determined by compiler. For single \s-1PIC\s0 base case, the default is |
| \&\fBR9\fR if target is \s-1EABI\s0 based or stack-checking is enabled, |
| otherwise the default is \fBR10\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mpoke\-function\-name\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpoke-function-name" |
| Write the name of each function into the text section, directly |
| preceding the function prologue. The generated code is similar to this: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 9 |
| \& t0 |
| \& .ascii "arm_poke_function_name", 0 |
| \& .align |
| \& t1 |
| \& .word 0xff000000 + (t1 \- t0) |
| \& arm_poke_function_name |
| \& mov ip, sp |
| \& stmfd sp!, {fp, ip, lr, pc} |
| \& sub fp, ip, #4 |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| When performing a stack backtrace, code can inspect the value of |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`pc\*(C'\fR stored at \f(CW\*(C`fp + 0\*(C'\fR. If the trace function then looks at |
| location \f(CW\*(C`pc \- 12\*(C'\fR and the top 8 bits are set, then we know that |
| there is a function name embedded immediately preceding this location |
| and has length \f(CW\*(C`((pc[\-3]) & 0xff000000)\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mthumb\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mthumb" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-marm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-marm" |
| .PD |
| Select between generating code that executes in \s-1ARM\s0 and Thumb |
| states. The default for most configurations is to generate code |
| that executes in \s-1ARM\s0 state, but the default can be changed by |
| configuring \s-1GCC\s0 with the \fB\-\-with\-mode=\fR\fIstate\fR |
| configure option. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtpcs\-frame\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtpcs-frame" |
| Generate a stack frame that is compliant with the Thumb Procedure Call |
| Standard for all non-leaf functions. (A leaf function is one that does |
| not call any other functions.) The default is \fB\-mno\-tpcs\-frame\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtpcs\-leaf\-frame\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtpcs-leaf-frame" |
| Generate a stack frame that is compliant with the Thumb Procedure Call |
| Standard for all leaf functions. (A leaf function is one that does |
| not call any other functions.) The default is \fB\-mno\-apcs\-leaf\-frame\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcallee\-super\-interworking\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcallee-super-interworking" |
| Gives all externally visible functions in the file being compiled an \s-1ARM\s0 |
| instruction set header which switches to Thumb mode before executing the |
| rest of the function. This allows these functions to be called from |
| non-interworking code. This option is not valid in \s-1AAPCS\s0 configurations |
| because interworking is enabled by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcaller\-super\-interworking\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcaller-super-interworking" |
| Allows calls via function pointers (including virtual functions) to |
| execute correctly regardless of whether the target code has been |
| compiled for interworking or not. There is a small overhead in the cost |
| of executing a function pointer if this option is enabled. This option |
| is not valid in \s-1AAPCS\s0 configurations because interworking is enabled |
| by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtp=\fR\fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtp=name" |
| Specify the access model for the thread local storage pointer. The valid |
| models are \fBsoft\fR, which generates calls to \f(CW\*(C`_\|_aeabi_read_tp\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\fBcp15\fR, which fetches the thread pointer from \f(CW\*(C`cp15\*(C'\fR directly |
| (supported in the arm6k architecture), and \fBauto\fR, which uses the |
| best available method for the selected processor. The default setting is |
| \&\fBauto\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtls\-dialect=\fR\fIdialect\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtls-dialect=dialect" |
| Specify the dialect to use for accessing thread local storage. Two |
| \&\fIdialect\fRs are supported\-\-\-\fBgnu\fR and \fBgnu2\fR. The |
| \&\fBgnu\fR dialect selects the original \s-1GNU\s0 scheme for supporting |
| local and global dynamic \s-1TLS\s0 models. The \fBgnu2\fR dialect |
| selects the \s-1GNU\s0 descriptor scheme, which provides better performance |
| for shared libraries. The \s-1GNU\s0 descriptor scheme is compatible with |
| the original scheme, but does require new assembler, linker and |
| library support. Initial and local exec \s-1TLS\s0 models are unaffected by |
| this option and always use the original scheme. |
| .IP "\fB\-mword\-relocations\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mword-relocations" |
| Only generate absolute relocations on word-sized values (i.e. R_ARM_ABS32). |
| This is enabled by default on targets (uClinux, SymbianOS) where the runtime |
| loader imposes this restriction, and when \fB\-fpic\fR or \fB\-fPIC\fR |
| is specified. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfix\-cortex\-m3\-ldrd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfix-cortex-m3-ldrd" |
| Some Cortex\-M3 cores can cause data corruption when \f(CW\*(C`ldrd\*(C'\fR instructions |
| with overlapping destination and base registers are used. This option avoids |
| generating these instructions. This option is enabled by default when |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=cortex\-m3\fR is specified. |
| .IP "\fB\-munaligned\-access\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-munaligned-access" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-unaligned\-access\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-unaligned-access" |
| .PD |
| Enables (or disables) reading and writing of 16\- and 32\- bit values |
| from addresses that are not 16\- or 32\- bit aligned. By default |
| unaligned access is disabled for all pre\-ARMv6 and all ARMv6\-M |
| architectures, and enabled for all other architectures. If unaligned |
| access is not enabled then words in packed data structures will be |
| accessed a byte at a time. |
| .Sp |
| The \s-1ARM\s0 attribute \f(CW\*(C`Tag_CPU_unaligned_access\*(C'\fR will be set in the |
| generated object file to either true or false, depending upon the |
| setting of this option. If unaligned access is enabled then the |
| preprocessor symbol \f(CW\*(C`_\|_ARM_FEATURE_UNALIGNED\*(C'\fR will also be |
| defined. |
| .IP "\fB\-mneon\-for\-64bits\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mneon-for-64bits" |
| Enables using Neon to handle scalar 64\-bits operations. This is |
| disabled by default since the cost of moving data from core registers |
| to Neon is high. |
| .IP "\fB\-mrestrict\-it\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrestrict-it" |
| Restricts generation of \s-1IT\s0 blocks to conform to the rules of ARMv8. |
| \&\s-1IT\s0 blocks can only contain a single 16\-bit instruction from a select |
| set of instructions. This option is on by default for ARMv8 Thumb mode. |
| .PP |
| \fI\s-1AVR\s0 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "AVR Options" |
| .PP |
| These options are defined for \s-1AVR\s0 implementations: |
| .IP "\fB\-mmcu=\fR\fImcu\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmcu=mcu" |
| Specify Atmel \s-1AVR\s0 instruction set architectures (\s-1ISA\s0) or \s-1MCU\s0 type. |
| .Sp |
| The default for this option is@tie{}\f(CW\*(C`avr2\*(C'\fR. |
| .Sp |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 supports the following \s-1AVR\s0 devices and ISAs: |
| .RS 4 |
| .ie n .IP """avr2""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWavr2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "avr2" |
| \&\*(L"Classic\*(R" devices with up to 8@tie{}KiB of program memory. |
| \&\fImcu\fR\f(CW@tie\fR{}= \f(CW\*(C`attiny22\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny26\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90c8534\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90s2313\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90s2323\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90s2333\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90s2343\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90s4414\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90s4433\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90s4434\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90s8515\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90s8535\*(C'\fR. |
| .ie n .IP """avr25""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWavr25\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "avr25" |
| \&\*(L"Classic\*(R" devices with up to 8@tie{}KiB of program memory and with the \f(CW\*(C`MOVW\*(C'\fR instruction. |
| \&\fImcu\fR\f(CW@tie\fR{}= \f(CW\*(C`ata5272\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`ata6289\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny13\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny13a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny2313\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny2313a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny24\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny24a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny25\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny261\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny261a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny43u\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny4313\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny44\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny44a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny45\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny461\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny461a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny48\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny84\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny84a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny85\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny861\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny861a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny87\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny88\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at86rf401\*(C'\fR. |
| .ie n .IP """avr3""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWavr3\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "avr3" |
| \&\*(L"Classic\*(R" devices with 16@tie{}KiB up to 64@tie{}KiB of program memory. |
| \&\fImcu\fR\f(CW@tie\fR{}= \f(CW\*(C`at43usb355\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at76c711\*(C'\fR. |
| .ie n .IP """avr31""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWavr31\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "avr31" |
| \&\*(L"Classic\*(R" devices with 128@tie{}KiB of program memory. |
| \&\fImcu\fR\f(CW@tie\fR{}= \f(CW\*(C`atmega103\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at43usb320\*(C'\fR. |
| .ie n .IP """avr35""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWavr35\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "avr35" |
| \&\*(L"Classic\*(R" devices with 16@tie{}KiB up to 64@tie{}KiB of program memory and with the \f(CW\*(C`MOVW\*(C'\fR instruction. |
| \&\fImcu\fR\f(CW@tie\fR{}= \f(CW\*(C`ata5505\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega16u2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega32u2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega8u2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny1634\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny167\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90usb162\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90usb82\*(C'\fR. |
| .ie n .IP """avr4""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWavr4\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "avr4" |
| \&\*(L"Enhanced\*(R" devices with up to 8@tie{}KiB of program memory. |
| \&\fImcu\fR\f(CW@tie\fR{}= \f(CW\*(C`ata6285\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`ata6286\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega48\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega48a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega48p\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega48pa\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega8\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega8a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega8hva\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega8515\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega8535\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega88\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega88a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega88p\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega88pa\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90pwm1\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90pwm2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90pwm2b\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90pwm3\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90pwm3b\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90pwm81\*(C'\fR. |
| .ie n .IP """avr5""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWavr5\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "avr5" |
| \&\*(L"Enhanced\*(R" devices with 16@tie{}KiB up to 64@tie{}KiB of program memory. |
| \&\fImcu\fR\f(CW@tie\fR{}= \f(CW\*(C`ata5790\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`ata5790n\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`ata5795\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega16\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega16a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega16hva\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega16hva2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega16hvb\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega16hvbrevb\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega16m1\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega16u4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega161\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega162\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega163\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega164a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega164p\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega164pa\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega165\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega165a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega165p\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega165pa\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega168\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega168a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega168p\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega168pa\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega169\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega169a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega169p\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega169pa\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega26hvg\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega32\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega32a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega32c1\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega32hvb\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega32hvbrevb\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega32m1\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega32u4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega32u6\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega323\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega324a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega324p\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega324pa\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega325\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega325a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega325p\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega3250\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega3250a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega3250p\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega3250pa\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega328\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega328p\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega329\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega329a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega329p\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega329pa\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega3290\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega3290a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega3290p\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega3290pa\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega406\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega48hvf\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega64\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega64a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega64c1\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega64hve\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega64m1\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega64rfa2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega64rfr2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega640\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega644\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega644a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega644p\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega644pa\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega645\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega645a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega645p\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega6450\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega6450a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega6450p\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega649\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega649a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega649p\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega6490\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega6490a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega6490p\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90can32\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90can64\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90pwm161\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90pwm216\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90pwm316\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90scr100\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90usb646\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90usb647\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at94k\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`m3000\*(C'\fR. |
| .ie n .IP """avr51""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWavr51\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "avr51" |
| \&\*(L"Enhanced\*(R" devices with 128@tie{}KiB of program memory. |
| \&\fImcu\fR\f(CW@tie\fR{}= \f(CW\*(C`atmega128\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega128a\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega128rfa1\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega1280\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega1281\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega1284\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega1284p\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90can128\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90usb1286\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90usb1287\*(C'\fR. |
| .ie n .IP """avr6""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWavr6\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "avr6" |
| \&\*(L"Enhanced\*(R" devices with 3\-byte \s-1PC\s0, i.e. with more than 128@tie{}KiB of program memory. |
| \&\fImcu\fR\f(CW@tie\fR{}= \f(CW\*(C`atmega2560\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmega2561\*(C'\fR. |
| .ie n .IP """avrxmega2""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWavrxmega2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "avrxmega2" |
| \&\*(L"\s-1XMEGA\s0\*(R" devices with more than 8@tie{}KiB and up to 64@tie{}KiB of program memory. |
| \&\fImcu\fR\f(CW@tie\fR{}= \f(CW\*(C`atmxt112sl\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmxt224\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmxt224e\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmxt336s\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega16a4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega16a4u\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega16c4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega16d4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega16x1\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega32a4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega32a4u\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega32c4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega32d4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega32e5\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega32x1\*(C'\fR. |
| .ie n .IP """avrxmega4""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWavrxmega4\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "avrxmega4" |
| \&\*(L"\s-1XMEGA\s0\*(R" devices with more than 64@tie{}KiB and up to 128@tie{}KiB of program memory. |
| \&\fImcu\fR\f(CW@tie\fR{}= \f(CW\*(C`atxmega64a3\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega64a3u\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega64a4u\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega64b1\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega64b3\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega64c3\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega64d3\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega64d4\*(C'\fR. |
| .ie n .IP """avrxmega5""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWavrxmega5\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "avrxmega5" |
| \&\*(L"\s-1XMEGA\s0\*(R" devices with more than 64@tie{}KiB and up to 128@tie{}KiB of program memory and more than 64@tie{}KiB of \s-1RAM\s0. |
| \&\fImcu\fR\f(CW@tie\fR{}= \f(CW\*(C`atxmega64a1\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega64a1u\*(C'\fR. |
| .ie n .IP """avrxmega6""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWavrxmega6\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "avrxmega6" |
| \&\*(L"\s-1XMEGA\s0\*(R" devices with more than 128@tie{}KiB of program memory. |
| \&\fImcu\fR\f(CW@tie\fR{}= \f(CW\*(C`atmxt540s\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atmxt540sreva\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega128a3\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega128a3u\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega128b1\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega128b3\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega128c3\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega128d3\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega128d4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega192a3\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega192a3u\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega192c3\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega192d3\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega256a3\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega256a3b\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega256a3bu\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega256a3u\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega256c3\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega256d3\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega384c3\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega384d3\*(C'\fR. |
| .ie n .IP """avrxmega7""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWavrxmega7\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "avrxmega7" |
| \&\*(L"\s-1XMEGA\s0\*(R" devices with more than 128@tie{}KiB of program memory and more than 64@tie{}KiB of \s-1RAM\s0. |
| \&\fImcu\fR\f(CW@tie\fR{}= \f(CW\*(C`atxmega128a1\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega128a1u\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atxmega128a4u\*(C'\fR. |
| .ie n .IP """avr1""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CWavr1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "avr1" |
| This \s-1ISA\s0 is implemented by the minimal \s-1AVR\s0 core and supported for assembler only. |
| \&\fImcu\fR\f(CW@tie\fR{}= \f(CW\*(C`attiny11\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny12\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny15\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`attiny28\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`at90s1200\*(C'\fR. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-maccumulate\-args\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-maccumulate-args" |
| Accumulate outgoing function arguments and acquire/release the needed |
| stack space for outgoing function arguments once in function |
| prologue/epilogue. Without this option, outgoing arguments are pushed |
| before calling a function and popped afterwards. |
| .Sp |
| Popping the arguments after the function call can be expensive on |
| \&\s-1AVR\s0 so that accumulating the stack space might lead to smaller |
| executables because arguments need not to be removed from the |
| stack after such a function call. |
| .Sp |
| This option can lead to reduced code size for functions that perform |
| several calls to functions that get their arguments on the stack like |
| calls to printf-like functions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbranch\-cost=\fR\fIcost\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbranch-cost=cost" |
| Set the branch costs for conditional branch instructions to |
| \&\fIcost\fR. Reasonable values for \fIcost\fR are small, non-negative |
| integers. The default branch cost is 0. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcall\-prologues\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcall-prologues" |
| Functions prologues/epilogues are expanded as calls to appropriate |
| subroutines. Code size is smaller. |
| .IP "\fB\-mint8\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mint8" |
| Assume \f(CW\*(C`int\*(C'\fR to be 8\-bit integer. This affects the sizes of all types: a |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`char\*(C'\fR is 1 byte, an \f(CW\*(C`int\*(C'\fR is 1 byte, a \f(CW\*(C`long\*(C'\fR is 2 bytes, |
| and \f(CW\*(C`long long\*(C'\fR is 4 bytes. Please note that this option does not |
| conform to the C standards, but it results in smaller code |
| size. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-interrupts\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-interrupts" |
| Generated code is not compatible with hardware interrupts. |
| Code size is smaller. |
| .IP "\fB\-mrelax\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrelax" |
| Try to replace \f(CW\*(C`CALL\*(C'\fR resp. \f(CW\*(C`JMP\*(C'\fR instruction by the shorter |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`RCALL\*(C'\fR resp. \f(CW\*(C`RJMP\*(C'\fR instruction if applicable. |
| Setting \f(CW\*(C`\-mrelax\*(C'\fR just adds the \f(CW\*(C`\-\-relax\*(C'\fR option to the |
| linker command line when the linker is called. |
| .Sp |
| Jump relaxing is performed by the linker because jump offsets are not |
| known before code is located. Therefore, the assembler code generated by the |
| compiler is the same, but the instructions in the executable may |
| differ from instructions in the assembler code. |
| .Sp |
| Relaxing must be turned on if linker stubs are needed, see the |
| section on \f(CW\*(C`EIND\*(C'\fR and linker stubs below. |
| .IP "\fB\-msp8\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msp8" |
| Treat the stack pointer register as an 8\-bit register, |
| i.e. assume the high byte of the stack pointer is zero. |
| In general, you don't need to set this option by hand. |
| .Sp |
| This option is used internally by the compiler to select and |
| build multilibs for architectures \f(CW\*(C`avr2\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`avr25\*(C'\fR. |
| These architectures mix devices with and without \f(CW\*(C`SPH\*(C'\fR. |
| For any setting other than \f(CW\*(C`\-mmcu=avr2\*(C'\fR or \f(CW\*(C`\-mmcu=avr25\*(C'\fR |
| the compiler driver will add or remove this option from the compiler |
| proper's command line, because the compiler then knows if the device |
| or architecture has an 8\-bit stack pointer and thus no \f(CW\*(C`SPH\*(C'\fR |
| register or not. |
| .IP "\fB\-mstrict\-X\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mstrict-X" |
| Use address register \f(CW\*(C`X\*(C'\fR in a way proposed by the hardware. This means |
| that \f(CW\*(C`X\*(C'\fR is only used in indirect, post-increment or |
| pre-decrement addressing. |
| .Sp |
| Without this option, the \f(CW\*(C`X\*(C'\fR register may be used in the same way |
| as \f(CW\*(C`Y\*(C'\fR or \f(CW\*(C`Z\*(C'\fR which then is emulated by additional |
| instructions. |
| For example, loading a value with \f(CW\*(C`X+const\*(C'\fR addressing with a |
| small non-negative \f(CW\*(C`const < 64\*(C'\fR to a register \fIRn\fR is |
| performed as |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 3 |
| \& adiw r26, const ; X += const |
| \& ld <Rn>, X ; <Rn> = *X |
| \& sbiw r26, const ; X \-= const |
| .Ve |
| .IP "\fB\-mtiny\-stack\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtiny-stack" |
| Only change the lower 8@tie{}bits of the stack pointer. |
| .IP "\fB\-Waddr\-space\-convert\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Waddr-space-convert" |
| Warn about conversions between address spaces in the case where the |
| resulting address space is not contained in the incoming address space. |
| .PP |
| \f(CW\*(C`EIND\*(C'\fR and Devices with more than 128 Ki Bytes of Flash |
| .IX Subsection "EIND and Devices with more than 128 Ki Bytes of Flash" |
| .PP |
| Pointers in the implementation are 16@tie{}bits wide. |
| The address of a function or label is represented as word address so |
| that indirect jumps and calls can target any code address in the |
| range of 64@tie{}Ki words. |
| .PP |
| In order to facilitate indirect jump on devices with more than 128@tie{}Ki |
| bytes of program memory space, there is a special function register called |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`EIND\*(C'\fR that serves as most significant part of the target address |
| when \f(CW\*(C`EICALL\*(C'\fR or \f(CW\*(C`EIJMP\*(C'\fR instructions are used. |
| .PP |
| Indirect jumps and calls on these devices are handled as follows by |
| the compiler and are subject to some limitations: |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| The compiler never sets \f(CW\*(C`EIND\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| The compiler uses \f(CW\*(C`EIND\*(C'\fR implicitely in \f(CW\*(C`EICALL\*(C'\fR/\f(CW\*(C`EIJMP\*(C'\fR |
| instructions or might read \f(CW\*(C`EIND\*(C'\fR directly in order to emulate an |
| indirect call/jump by means of a \f(CW\*(C`RET\*(C'\fR instruction. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| The compiler assumes that \f(CW\*(C`EIND\*(C'\fR never changes during the startup |
| code or during the application. In particular, \f(CW\*(C`EIND\*(C'\fR is not |
| saved/restored in function or interrupt service routine |
| prologue/epilogue. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| For indirect calls to functions and computed goto, the linker |
| generates \fIstubs\fR. Stubs are jump pads sometimes also called |
| \&\fItrampolines\fR. Thus, the indirect call/jump jumps to such a stub. |
| The stub contains a direct jump to the desired address. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Linker relaxation must be turned on so that the linker will generate |
| the stubs correctly an all situaltion. See the compiler option |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`\-mrelax\*(C'\fR and the linler option \f(CW\*(C`\-\-relax\*(C'\fR. |
| There are corner cases where the linker is supposed to generate stubs |
| but aborts without relaxation and without a helpful error message. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| The default linker script is arranged for code with \f(CW\*(C`EIND = 0\*(C'\fR. |
| If code is supposed to work for a setup with \f(CW\*(C`EIND != 0\*(C'\fR, a custom |
| linker script has to be used in order to place the sections whose |
| name start with \f(CW\*(C`.trampolines\*(C'\fR into the segment where \f(CW\*(C`EIND\*(C'\fR |
| points to. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| The startup code from libgcc never sets \f(CW\*(C`EIND\*(C'\fR. |
| Notice that startup code is a blend of code from libgcc and AVR-LibC. |
| For the impact of AVR-LibC on \f(CW\*(C`EIND\*(C'\fR, see the |
| AVR-LibC\ user\ manual (\f(CW\*(C`http://nongnu.org/avr\-libc/user\-manual/\*(C'\fR). |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| It is legitimate for user-specific startup code to set up \f(CW\*(C`EIND\*(C'\fR |
| early, for example by means of initialization code located in |
| section \f(CW\*(C`.init3\*(C'\fR. Such code runs prior to general startup code |
| that initializes \s-1RAM\s0 and calls constructors, but after the bit |
| of startup code from AVR-LibC that sets \f(CW\*(C`EIND\*(C'\fR to the segment |
| where the vector table is located. |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& #include <avr/io.h> |
| \& |
| \& static void |
| \& _\|_attribute_\|_((section(".init3"),naked,used,no_instrument_function)) |
| \& init3_set_eind (void) |
| \& { |
| \& _\|_asm volatile ("ldi r24,pm_hh8(_\|_trampolines_start)\en\et" |
| \& "out %i0,r24" :: "n" (&EIND) : "r24","memory"); |
| \& } |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| The \f(CW\*(C`_\|_trampolines_start\*(C'\fR symbol is defined in the linker script. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Stubs are generated automatically by the linker if |
| the following two conditions are met: |
| .RS 4 |
| .ie n .IP "\-<The address of a label is taken by means of the ""gs"" modifier>" 4 |
| .el .IP "\-<The address of a label is taken by means of the \f(CWgs\fR modifier>" 4 |
| .IX Item "-<The address of a label is taken by means of the gs modifier>" |
| (short for \fIgenerate stubs\fR) like so: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 2 |
| \& LDI r24, lo8(gs(<func>)) |
| \& LDI r25, hi8(gs(<func>)) |
| .Ve |
| .IP "\-<The final location of that label is in a code segment>" 4 |
| .IX Item "-<The final location of that label is in a code segment>" |
| \&\fIoutside\fR the segment where the stubs are located. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| The compiler emits such \f(CW\*(C`gs\*(C'\fR modifiers for code labels in the |
| following situations: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\-<Taking address of a function or code label.>" 4 |
| .IX Item "-<Taking address of a function or code label.>" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\-<Computed goto.>" 4 |
| .IX Item "-<Computed goto.>" |
| .IP "\-<If prologue-save function is used, see \fB\-mcall\-prologues\fR>" 4 |
| .IX Item "-<If prologue-save function is used, see -mcall-prologues>" |
| .PD |
| command-line option. |
| .IP "\-<Switch/case dispatch tables. If you do not want such dispatch>" 4 |
| .IX Item "-<Switch/case dispatch tables. If you do not want such dispatch>" |
| tables you can specify the \fB\-fno\-jump\-tables\fR command-line option. |
| .IP "\-<C and \*(C+ constructors/destructors called during startup/shutdown.>" 4 |
| .IX Item "-<C and constructors/destructors called during startup/shutdown.>" |
| .PD 0 |
| .ie n .IP "\-<If the tools hit a ""gs()"" modifier explained above.>" 4 |
| .el .IP "\-<If the tools hit a \f(CWgs()\fR modifier explained above.>" 4 |
| .IX Item "-<If the tools hit a gs() modifier explained above.>" |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| .PD |
| Jumping to non-symbolic addresses like so is \fInot\fR supported: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 5 |
| \& int main (void) |
| \& { |
| \& /* Call function at word address 0x2 */ |
| \& return ((int(*)(void)) 0x2)(); |
| \& } |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| Instead, a stub has to be set up, i.e. the function has to be called |
| through a symbol (\f(CW\*(C`func_4\*(C'\fR in the example): |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 3 |
| \& int main (void) |
| \& { |
| \& extern int func_4 (void); |
| \& |
| \& /* Call function at byte address 0x4 */ |
| \& return func_4(); |
| \& } |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| and the application be linked with \f(CW\*(C`\-Wl,\-\-defsym,func_4=0x4\*(C'\fR. |
| Alternatively, \f(CW\*(C`func_4\*(C'\fR can be defined in the linker script. |
| .PP |
| Handling of the \f(CW\*(C`RAMPD\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`RAMPX\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`RAMPY\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`RAMPZ\*(C'\fR Special Function Registers |
| .IX Subsection "Handling of the RAMPD, RAMPX, RAMPY and RAMPZ Special Function Registers" |
| .PP |
| Some \s-1AVR\s0 devices support memories larger than the 64@tie{}KiB range |
| that can be accessed with 16\-bit pointers. To access memory locations |
| outside this 64@tie{}KiB range, the contentent of a \f(CW\*(C`RAMP\*(C'\fR |
| register is used as high part of the address: |
| The \f(CW\*(C`X\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`Y\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`Z\*(C'\fR address register is concatenated |
| with the \f(CW\*(C`RAMPX\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`RAMPY\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`RAMPZ\*(C'\fR special function |
| register, respectively, to get a wide address. Similarly, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`RAMPD\*(C'\fR is used together with direct addressing. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| The startup code initializes the \f(CW\*(C`RAMP\*(C'\fR special function |
| registers with zero. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| If a \fB\s-1AVR\s0 Named Address Spaces,named address space\fR other than |
| generic or \f(CW\*(C`_\|_flash\*(C'\fR is used, then \f(CW\*(C`RAMPZ\*(C'\fR is set |
| as needed before the operation. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| If the device supports \s-1RAM\s0 larger than 64@tie{KiB} and the compiler |
| needs to change \f(CW\*(C`RAMPZ\*(C'\fR to accomplish an operation, \f(CW\*(C`RAMPZ\*(C'\fR |
| is reset to zero after the operation. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| If the device comes with a specific \f(CW\*(C`RAMP\*(C'\fR register, the \s-1ISR\s0 |
| prologue/epilogue saves/restores that \s-1SFR\s0 and initializes it with |
| zero in case the \s-1ISR\s0 code might (implicitly) use it. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| \&\s-1RAM\s0 larger than 64@tie{KiB} is not supported by \s-1GCC\s0 for \s-1AVR\s0 targets. |
| If you use inline assembler to read from locations outside the |
| 16\-bit address range and change one of the \f(CW\*(C`RAMP\*(C'\fR registers, |
| you must reset it to zero after the access. |
| .PP |
| \s-1AVR\s0 Built-in Macros |
| .IX Subsection "AVR Built-in Macros" |
| .PP |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 defines several built-in macros so that the user code can test |
| for the presence or absence of features. Almost any of the following |
| built-in macros are deduced from device capabilities and thus |
| triggered by the \f(CW\*(C`\-mmcu=\*(C'\fR command-line option. |
| .PP |
| For even more AVR-specific built-in macros see |
| \&\fB\s-1AVR\s0 Named Address Spaces\fR and \fB\s-1AVR\s0 Built-in Functions\fR. |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_AVR_ARCH_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_AVR_ARCH_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__AVR_ARCH__" |
| Build-in macro that resolves to a decimal number that identifies the |
| architecture and depends on the \f(CW\*(C`\-mmcu=\f(CImcu\f(CW\*(C'\fR option. |
| Possible values are: |
| .Sp |
| \&\f(CW2\fR, \f(CW25\fR, \f(CW3\fR, \f(CW31\fR, \f(CW35\fR, |
| \&\f(CW4\fR, \f(CW5\fR, \f(CW51\fR, \f(CW6\fR, \f(CW102\fR, \f(CW104\fR, |
| \&\f(CW105\fR, \f(CW106\fR, \f(CW107\fR |
| .Sp |
| for \fImcu\fR=\f(CW\*(C`avr2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`avr25\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`avr3\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`avr31\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`avr35\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`avr4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`avr5\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`avr51\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`avr6\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`avrxmega2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`avrxmega4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`avrxmega5\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`avrxmega6\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`avrxmega7\*(C'\fR, respectively. |
| If \fImcu\fR specifies a device, this built-in macro is set |
| accordingly. For example, with \f(CW\*(C`\-mmcu=atmega8\*(C'\fR the macro will be |
| defined to \f(CW4\fR. |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_AVR_\f(CIDevice\f(CW_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_AVR_\f(CIDevice\f(CW_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__AVR_Device__" |
| Setting \f(CW\*(C`\-mmcu=\f(CIdevice\f(CW\*(C'\fR defines this built-in macro which reflects |
| the device's name. For example, \f(CW\*(C`\-mmcu=atmega8\*(C'\fR defines the |
| built-in macro \f(CW\*(C`_\|_AVR_ATmega8_\|_\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`\-mmcu=attiny261a\*(C'\fR defines |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_AVR_ATtiny261A_\|_\*(C'\fR, etc. |
| .Sp |
| The built-in macros' names follow |
| the scheme \f(CW\*(C`_\|_AVR_\f(CIDevice\f(CW_\|_\*(C'\fR where \fIDevice\fR is |
| the device name as from the \s-1AVR\s0 user manual. The difference between |
| \&\fIDevice\fR in the built-in macro and \fIdevice\fR in |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`\-mmcu=\f(CIdevice\f(CW\*(C'\fR is that the latter is always lowercase. |
| .Sp |
| If \fIdevice\fR is not a device but only a core architecture like |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`avr51\*(C'\fR, this macro will not be defined. |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_AVR_XMEGA_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_AVR_XMEGA_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__AVR_XMEGA__" |
| The device / architecture belongs to the \s-1XMEGA\s0 family of devices. |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_AVR_HAVE_ELPM_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_AVR_HAVE_ELPM_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__AVR_HAVE_ELPM__" |
| The device has the the \f(CW\*(C`ELPM\*(C'\fR instruction. |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_AVR_HAVE_ELPMX_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_AVR_HAVE_ELPMX_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__AVR_HAVE_ELPMX__" |
| The device has the \f(CW\*(C`ELPM R\f(CIn\f(CW,Z\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`ELPM |
| R\f(CIn\f(CW,Z+\*(C'\fR instructions. |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_AVR_HAVE_MOVW_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_AVR_HAVE_MOVW_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__AVR_HAVE_MOVW__" |
| The device has the \f(CW\*(C`MOVW\*(C'\fR instruction to perform 16\-bit |
| register-register moves. |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_AVR_HAVE_LPMX_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_AVR_HAVE_LPMX_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__AVR_HAVE_LPMX__" |
| The device has the \f(CW\*(C`LPM R\f(CIn\f(CW,Z\*(C'\fR and |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`LPM R\f(CIn\f(CW,Z+\*(C'\fR instructions. |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_AVR_HAVE_MUL_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_AVR_HAVE_MUL_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__AVR_HAVE_MUL__" |
| The device has a hardware multiplier. |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_AVR_HAVE_JMP_CALL_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_AVR_HAVE_JMP_CALL_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__AVR_HAVE_JMP_CALL__" |
| The device has the \f(CW\*(C`JMP\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`CALL\*(C'\fR instructions. |
| This is the case for devices with at least 16@tie{}KiB of program |
| memory. |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_AVR_HAVE_EIJMP_EICALL_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_AVR_HAVE_EIJMP_EICALL_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__AVR_HAVE_EIJMP_EICALL__" |
| .PD 0 |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_AVR_3_BYTE_PC_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_AVR_3_BYTE_PC_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__AVR_3_BYTE_PC__" |
| .PD |
| The device has the \f(CW\*(C`EIJMP\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`EICALL\*(C'\fR instructions. |
| This is the case for devices with more than 128@tie{}KiB of program memory. |
| This also means that the program counter |
| (\s-1PC\s0) is 3@tie{}bytes wide. |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_AVR_2_BYTE_PC_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_AVR_2_BYTE_PC_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__AVR_2_BYTE_PC__" |
| The program counter (\s-1PC\s0) is 2@tie{}bytes wide. This is the case for devices |
| with up to 128@tie{}KiB of program memory. |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_AVR_HAVE_8BIT_SP_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_AVR_HAVE_8BIT_SP_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__AVR_HAVE_8BIT_SP__" |
| .PD 0 |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_AVR_HAVE_16BIT_SP_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_AVR_HAVE_16BIT_SP_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__AVR_HAVE_16BIT_SP__" |
| .PD |
| The stack pointer (\s-1SP\s0) register is treated as 8\-bit respectively |
| 16\-bit register by the compiler. |
| The definition of these macros is affected by \f(CW\*(C`\-mtiny\-stack\*(C'\fR. |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_AVR_HAVE_SPH_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_AVR_HAVE_SPH_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__AVR_HAVE_SPH__" |
| .PD 0 |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_AVR_SP8_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_AVR_SP8_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__AVR_SP8__" |
| .PD |
| The device has the \s-1SPH\s0 (high part of stack pointer) special function |
| register or has an 8\-bit stack pointer, respectively. |
| The definition of these macros is affected by \f(CW\*(C`\-mmcu=\*(C'\fR and |
| in the cases of \f(CW\*(C`\-mmcu=avr2\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`\-mmcu=avr25\*(C'\fR also |
| by \f(CW\*(C`\-msp8\*(C'\fR. |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_AVR_HAVE_RAMPD_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_AVR_HAVE_RAMPD_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__AVR_HAVE_RAMPD__" |
| .PD 0 |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_AVR_HAVE_RAMPX_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_AVR_HAVE_RAMPX_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__AVR_HAVE_RAMPX__" |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_AVR_HAVE_RAMPY_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_AVR_HAVE_RAMPY_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__AVR_HAVE_RAMPY__" |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_AVR_HAVE_RAMPZ_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_AVR_HAVE_RAMPZ_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__AVR_HAVE_RAMPZ__" |
| .PD |
| The device has the \f(CW\*(C`RAMPD\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`RAMPX\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`RAMPY\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`RAMPZ\*(C'\fR special function register, respectively. |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_NO_INTERRUPTS_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_NO_INTERRUPTS_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__NO_INTERRUPTS__" |
| This macro reflects the \f(CW\*(C`\-mno\-interrupts\*(C'\fR command line option. |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_AVR_ERRATA_SKIP_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_AVR_ERRATA_SKIP_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__AVR_ERRATA_SKIP__" |
| .PD 0 |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_AVR_ERRATA_SKIP_JMP_CALL_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_AVR_ERRATA_SKIP_JMP_CALL_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__AVR_ERRATA_SKIP_JMP_CALL__" |
| .PD |
| Some \s-1AVR\s0 devices (\s-1AT90S8515\s0, ATmega103) must not skip 32\-bit |
| instructions because of a hardware erratum. Skip instructions are |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`SBRS\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`SBRC\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`SBIS\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`SBIC\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`CPSE\*(C'\fR. |
| The second macro is only defined if \f(CW\*(C`_\|_AVR_HAVE_JMP_CALL_\|_\*(C'\fR is also |
| set. |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_AVR_SFR_OFFSET_\|_=\f(CIoffset\f(CW""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_AVR_SFR_OFFSET_\|_=\f(CIoffset\f(CW\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__AVR_SFR_OFFSET__=offset" |
| Instructions that can address I/O special function registers directly |
| like \f(CW\*(C`IN\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`OUT\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`SBI\*(C'\fR, etc. may use a different |
| address as if addressed by an instruction to access \s-1RAM\s0 like \f(CW\*(C`LD\*(C'\fR |
| or \f(CW\*(C`STS\*(C'\fR. This offset depends on the device architecture and has |
| to be subtracted from the \s-1RAM\s0 address in order to get the |
| respective I/O@tie{}address. |
| .ie n .IP """_\|_WITH_AVRLIBC_\|_""" 4 |
| .el .IP "\f(CW_\|_WITH_AVRLIBC_\|_\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "__WITH_AVRLIBC__" |
| The compiler is configured to be used together with AVR-Libc. |
| See the \f(CW\*(C`\-\-with\-avrlibc\*(C'\fR configure option. |
| .PP |
| \fIBlackfin Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "Blackfin Options" |
| .IP "\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu\fR[\fB\-\fR\fIsirevision\fR]" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcpu=cpu[-sirevision]" |
| Specifies the name of the target Blackfin processor. Currently, \fIcpu\fR |
| can be one of \fBbf512\fR, \fBbf514\fR, \fBbf516\fR, \fBbf518\fR, |
| \&\fBbf522\fR, \fBbf523\fR, \fBbf524\fR, \fBbf525\fR, \fBbf526\fR, |
| \&\fBbf527\fR, \fBbf531\fR, \fBbf532\fR, \fBbf533\fR, |
| \&\fBbf534\fR, \fBbf536\fR, \fBbf537\fR, \fBbf538\fR, \fBbf539\fR, |
| \&\fBbf542\fR, \fBbf544\fR, \fBbf547\fR, \fBbf548\fR, \fBbf549\fR, |
| \&\fBbf542m\fR, \fBbf544m\fR, \fBbf547m\fR, \fBbf548m\fR, \fBbf549m\fR, |
| \&\fBbf561\fR, \fBbf592\fR. |
| .Sp |
| The optional \fIsirevision\fR specifies the silicon revision of the target |
| Blackfin processor. Any workarounds available for the targeted silicon revision |
| are enabled. If \fIsirevision\fR is \fBnone\fR, no workarounds are enabled. |
| If \fIsirevision\fR is \fBany\fR, all workarounds for the targeted processor |
| are enabled. The \f(CW\*(C`_\|_SILICON_REVISION_\|_\*(C'\fR macro is defined to two |
| hexadecimal digits representing the major and minor numbers in the silicon |
| revision. If \fIsirevision\fR is \fBnone\fR, the \f(CW\*(C`_\|_SILICON_REVISION_\|_\*(C'\fR |
| is not defined. If \fIsirevision\fR is \fBany\fR, the |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_SILICON_REVISION_\|_\*(C'\fR is defined to be \f(CW0xffff\fR. |
| If this optional \fIsirevision\fR is not used, \s-1GCC\s0 assumes the latest known |
| silicon revision of the targeted Blackfin processor. |
| .Sp |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 defines a preprocessor macro for the specified \fIcpu\fR. |
| For the \fBbfin-elf\fR toolchain, this option causes the hardware \s-1BSP\s0 |
| provided by libgloss to be linked in if \fB\-msim\fR is not given. |
| .Sp |
| Without this option, \fBbf532\fR is used as the processor by default. |
| .Sp |
| Note that support for \fBbf561\fR is incomplete. For \fBbf561\fR, |
| only the preprocessor macro is defined. |
| .IP "\fB\-msim\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msim" |
| Specifies that the program will be run on the simulator. This causes |
| the simulator \s-1BSP\s0 provided by libgloss to be linked in. This option |
| has effect only for \fBbfin-elf\fR toolchain. |
| Certain other options, such as \fB\-mid\-shared\-library\fR and |
| \&\fB\-mfdpic\fR, imply \fB\-msim\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-momit\-leaf\-frame\-pointer\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-momit-leaf-frame-pointer" |
| Don't keep the frame pointer in a register for leaf functions. This |
| avoids the instructions to save, set up and restore frame pointers and |
| makes an extra register available in leaf functions. The option |
| \&\fB\-fomit\-frame\-pointer\fR removes the frame pointer for all functions, |
| which might make debugging harder. |
| .IP "\fB\-mspecld\-anomaly\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mspecld-anomaly" |
| When enabled, the compiler ensures that the generated code does not |
| contain speculative loads after jump instructions. If this option is used, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_WORKAROUND_SPECULATIVE_LOADS\*(C'\fR is defined. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-specld\-anomaly\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-specld-anomaly" |
| Don't generate extra code to prevent speculative loads from occurring. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcsync\-anomaly\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcsync-anomaly" |
| When enabled, the compiler ensures that the generated code does not |
| contain \s-1CSYNC\s0 or \s-1SSYNC\s0 instructions too soon after conditional branches. |
| If this option is used, \f(CW\*(C`_\|_WORKAROUND_SPECULATIVE_SYNCS\*(C'\fR is defined. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-csync\-anomaly\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-csync-anomaly" |
| Don't generate extra code to prevent \s-1CSYNC\s0 or \s-1SSYNC\s0 instructions from |
| occurring too soon after a conditional branch. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlow\-64k\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlow-64k" |
| When enabled, the compiler is free to take advantage of the knowledge that |
| the entire program fits into the low 64k of memory. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-low\-64k\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-low-64k" |
| Assume that the program is arbitrarily large. This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mstack\-check\-l1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mstack-check-l1" |
| Do stack checking using information placed into L1 scratchpad memory by the |
| uClinux kernel. |
| .IP "\fB\-mid\-shared\-library\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mid-shared-library" |
| Generate code that supports shared libraries via the library \s-1ID\s0 method. |
| This allows for execute in place and shared libraries in an environment |
| without virtual memory management. This option implies \fB\-fPIC\fR. |
| With a \fBbfin-elf\fR target, this option implies \fB\-msim\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-id\-shared\-library\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-id-shared-library" |
| Generate code that doesn't assume ID-based shared libraries are being used. |
| This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mleaf\-id\-shared\-library\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mleaf-id-shared-library" |
| Generate code that supports shared libraries via the library \s-1ID\s0 method, |
| but assumes that this library or executable won't link against any other |
| \&\s-1ID\s0 shared libraries. That allows the compiler to use faster code for jumps |
| and calls. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-leaf\-id\-shared\-library\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-leaf-id-shared-library" |
| Do not assume that the code being compiled won't link against any \s-1ID\s0 shared |
| libraries. Slower code is generated for jump and call insns. |
| .IP "\fB\-mshared\-library\-id=n\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mshared-library-id=n" |
| Specifies the identification number of the ID-based shared library being |
| compiled. Specifying a value of 0 generates more compact code; specifying |
| other values forces the allocation of that number to the current |
| library but is no more space\- or time-efficient than omitting this option. |
| .IP "\fB\-msep\-data\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msep-data" |
| Generate code that allows the data segment to be located in a different |
| area of memory from the text segment. This allows for execute in place in |
| an environment without virtual memory management by eliminating relocations |
| against the text section. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sep\-data\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sep-data" |
| Generate code that assumes that the data segment follows the text segment. |
| This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlong\-calls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlong-calls" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-long\-calls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-long-calls" |
| .PD |
| Tells the compiler to perform function calls by first loading the |
| address of the function into a register and then performing a subroutine |
| call on this register. This switch is needed if the target function |
| lies outside of the 24\-bit addressing range of the offset-based |
| version of subroutine call instruction. |
| .Sp |
| This feature is not enabled by default. Specifying |
| \&\fB\-mno\-long\-calls\fR restores the default behavior. Note these |
| switches have no effect on how the compiler generates code to handle |
| function calls via function pointers. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfast\-fp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfast-fp" |
| Link with the fast floating-point library. This library relaxes some of |
| the \s-1IEEE\s0 floating-point standard's rules for checking inputs against |
| Not-a-Number (\s-1NAN\s0), in the interest of performance. |
| .IP "\fB\-minline\-plt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-minline-plt" |
| Enable inlining of \s-1PLT\s0 entries in function calls to functions that are |
| not known to bind locally. It has no effect without \fB\-mfdpic\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmulticore\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmulticore" |
| Build a standalone application for multicore Blackfin processors. |
| This option causes proper start files and link scripts supporting |
| multicore to be used, and defines the macro \f(CW\*(C`_\|_BFIN_MULTICORE\*(C'\fR. |
| It can only be used with \fB\-mcpu=bf561\fR[\fB\-\fR\fIsirevision\fR]. |
| .Sp |
| This option can be used with \fB\-mcorea\fR or \fB\-mcoreb\fR, which |
| selects the one-application-per-core programming model. Without |
| \&\fB\-mcorea\fR or \fB\-mcoreb\fR, the single\-application/dual\-core |
| programming model is used. In this model, the main function of Core B |
| should be named as \f(CW\*(C`coreb_main\*(C'\fR. |
| .Sp |
| If this option is not used, the single-core application programming |
| model is used. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcorea\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcorea" |
| Build a standalone application for Core A of \s-1BF561\s0 when using |
| the one-application-per-core programming model. Proper start files |
| and link scripts are used to support Core A, and the macro |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_BFIN_COREA\*(C'\fR is defined. |
| This option can only be used in conjunction with \fB\-mmulticore\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcoreb\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcoreb" |
| Build a standalone application for Core B of \s-1BF561\s0 when using |
| the one-application-per-core programming model. Proper start files |
| and link scripts are used to support Core B, and the macro |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_BFIN_COREB\*(C'\fR is defined. When this option is used, \f(CW\*(C`coreb_main\*(C'\fR |
| should be used instead of \f(CW\*(C`main\*(C'\fR. |
| This option can only be used in conjunction with \fB\-mmulticore\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-msdram\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msdram" |
| Build a standalone application for \s-1SDRAM\s0. Proper start files and |
| link scripts are used to put the application into \s-1SDRAM\s0, and the macro |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_BFIN_SDRAM\*(C'\fR is defined. |
| The loader should initialize \s-1SDRAM\s0 before loading the application. |
| .IP "\fB\-micplb\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-micplb" |
| Assume that ICPLBs are enabled at run time. This has an effect on certain |
| anomaly workarounds. For Linux targets, the default is to assume ICPLBs |
| are enabled; for standalone applications the default is off. |
| .PP |
| \fIC6X Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "C6X Options" |
| .IP "\fB\-march=\fR\fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-march=name" |
| This specifies the name of the target architecture. \s-1GCC\s0 uses this |
| name to determine what kind of instructions it can emit when generating |
| assembly code. Permissible names are: \fBc62x\fR, |
| \&\fBc64x\fR, \fBc64x+\fR, \fBc67x\fR, \fBc67x+\fR, \fBc674x\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbig\-endian\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbig-endian" |
| Generate code for a big-endian target. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlittle\-endian\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlittle-endian" |
| Generate code for a little-endian target. This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-msim\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msim" |
| Choose startup files and linker script suitable for the simulator. |
| .IP "\fB\-msdata=default\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msdata=default" |
| Put small global and static data in the \fB.neardata\fR section, |
| which is pointed to by register \f(CW\*(C`B14\*(C'\fR. Put small uninitialized |
| global and static data in the \fB.bss\fR section, which is adjacent |
| to the \fB.neardata\fR section. Put small read-only data into the |
| \&\fB.rodata\fR section. The corresponding sections used for large |
| pieces of data are \fB.fardata\fR, \fB.far\fR and \fB.const\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-msdata=all\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msdata=all" |
| Put all data, not just small objects, into the sections reserved for |
| small data, and use addressing relative to the \f(CW\*(C`B14\*(C'\fR register to |
| access them. |
| .IP "\fB\-msdata=none\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msdata=none" |
| Make no use of the sections reserved for small data, and use absolute |
| addresses to access all data. Put all initialized global and static |
| data in the \fB.fardata\fR section, and all uninitialized data in the |
| \&\fB.far\fR section. Put all constant data into the \fB.const\fR |
| section. |
| .PP |
| \fI\s-1CRIS\s0 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "CRIS Options" |
| .PP |
| These options are defined specifically for the \s-1CRIS\s0 ports. |
| .IP "\fB\-march=\fR\fIarchitecture-type\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-march=architecture-type" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIarchitecture-type\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcpu=architecture-type" |
| .PD |
| Generate code for the specified architecture. The choices for |
| \&\fIarchitecture-type\fR are \fBv3\fR, \fBv8\fR and \fBv10\fR for |
| respectively \s-1ETRAX\s0\ 4, \s-1ETRAX\s0\ 100, and \s-1ETRAX\s0\ 100\ \s-1LX\s0. |
| Default is \fBv0\fR except for cris-axis-linux-gnu, where the default is |
| \&\fBv10\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtune=\fR\fIarchitecture-type\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtune=architecture-type" |
| Tune to \fIarchitecture-type\fR everything applicable about the generated |
| code, except for the \s-1ABI\s0 and the set of available instructions. The |
| choices for \fIarchitecture-type\fR are the same as for |
| \&\fB\-march=\fR\fIarchitecture-type\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmax\-stack\-frame=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmax-stack-frame=n" |
| Warn when the stack frame of a function exceeds \fIn\fR bytes. |
| .IP "\fB\-metrax4\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-metrax4" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-metrax100\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-metrax100" |
| .PD |
| The options \fB\-metrax4\fR and \fB\-metrax100\fR are synonyms for |
| \&\fB\-march=v3\fR and \fB\-march=v8\fR respectively. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmul\-bug\-workaround\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmul-bug-workaround" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-mul\-bug\-workaround\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-mul-bug-workaround" |
| .PD |
| Work around a bug in the \f(CW\*(C`muls\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`mulu\*(C'\fR instructions for \s-1CPU\s0 |
| models where it applies. This option is active by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mpdebug\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpdebug" |
| Enable CRIS-specific verbose debug-related information in the assembly |
| code. This option also has the effect of turning off the \fB#NO_APP\fR |
| formatted-code indicator to the assembler at the beginning of the |
| assembly file. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcc\-init\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcc-init" |
| Do not use condition-code results from previous instruction; always emit |
| compare and test instructions before use of condition codes. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-side\-effects\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-side-effects" |
| Do not emit instructions with side effects in addressing modes other than |
| post-increment. |
| .IP "\fB\-mstack\-align\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mstack-align" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-stack\-align\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-stack-align" |
| .IP "\fB\-mdata\-align\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdata-align" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-data\-align\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-data-align" |
| .IP "\fB\-mconst\-align\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mconst-align" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-const\-align\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-const-align" |
| .PD |
| These options (\fBno\-\fR options) arrange (eliminate arrangements) for the |
| stack frame, individual data and constants to be aligned for the maximum |
| single data access size for the chosen \s-1CPU\s0 model. The default is to |
| arrange for 32\-bit alignment. \s-1ABI\s0 details such as structure layout are |
| not affected by these options. |
| .IP "\fB\-m32\-bit\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m32-bit" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-m16\-bit\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m16-bit" |
| .IP "\fB\-m8\-bit\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m8-bit" |
| .PD |
| Similar to the stack\- data\- and const-align options above, these options |
| arrange for stack frame, writable data and constants to all be 32\-bit, |
| 16\-bit or 8\-bit aligned. The default is 32\-bit alignment. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-prologue\-epilogue\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-prologue-epilogue" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mprologue\-epilogue\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mprologue-epilogue" |
| .PD |
| With \fB\-mno\-prologue\-epilogue\fR, the normal function prologue and |
| epilogue which set up the stack frame are omitted and no return |
| instructions or return sequences are generated in the code. Use this |
| option only together with visual inspection of the compiled code: no |
| warnings or errors are generated when call-saved registers must be saved, |
| or storage for local variables needs to be allocated. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-gotplt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-gotplt" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mgotplt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mgotplt" |
| .PD |
| With \fB\-fpic\fR and \fB\-fPIC\fR, don't generate (do generate) |
| instruction sequences that load addresses for functions from the \s-1PLT\s0 part |
| of the \s-1GOT\s0 rather than (traditional on other architectures) calls to the |
| \&\s-1PLT\s0. The default is \fB\-mgotplt\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-melf\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-melf" |
| Legacy no-op option only recognized with the cris-axis-elf and |
| cris-axis-linux-gnu targets. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlinux\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlinux" |
| Legacy no-op option only recognized with the cris-axis-linux-gnu target. |
| .IP "\fB\-sim\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-sim" |
| This option, recognized for the cris-axis-elf, arranges |
| to link with input-output functions from a simulator library. Code, |
| initialized data and zero-initialized data are allocated consecutively. |
| .IP "\fB\-sim2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-sim2" |
| Like \fB\-sim\fR, but pass linker options to locate initialized data at |
| 0x40000000 and zero-initialized data at 0x80000000. |
| .PP |
| \fI\s-1CR16\s0 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "CR16 Options" |
| .PP |
| These options are defined specifically for the \s-1CR16\s0 ports. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmac\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmac" |
| Enable the use of multiply-accumulate instructions. Disabled by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcr16cplus\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcr16cplus" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mcr16c\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcr16c" |
| .PD |
| Generate code for \s-1CR16C\s0 or \s-1CR16C+\s0 architecture. \s-1CR16C+\s0 architecture |
| is default. |
| .IP "\fB\-msim\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msim" |
| Links the library libsim.a which is in compatible with simulator. Applicable |
| to \s-1ELF\s0 compiler only. |
| .IP "\fB\-mint32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mint32" |
| Choose integer type as 32\-bit wide. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbit\-ops\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbit-ops" |
| Generates \f(CW\*(C`sbit\*(C'\fR/\f(CW\*(C`cbit\*(C'\fR instructions for bit manipulations. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdata\-model=\fR\fImodel\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdata-model=model" |
| Choose a data model. The choices for \fImodel\fR are \fBnear\fR, |
| \&\fBfar\fR or \fBmedium\fR. \fBmedium\fR is default. |
| However, \fBfar\fR is not valid with \fB\-mcr16c\fR, as the |
| \&\s-1CR16C\s0 architecture does not support the far data model. |
| .PP |
| \fIDarwin Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "Darwin Options" |
| .PP |
| These options are defined for all architectures running the Darwin operating |
| system. |
| .PP |
| \&\s-1FSF\s0 \s-1GCC\s0 on Darwin does not create \*(L"fat\*(R" object files; it creates |
| an object file for the single architecture that \s-1GCC\s0 was built to |
| target. Apple's \s-1GCC\s0 on Darwin does create \*(L"fat\*(R" files if multiple |
| \&\fB\-arch\fR options are used; it does so by running the compiler or |
| linker multiple times and joining the results together with |
| \&\fIlipo\fR. |
| .PP |
| The subtype of the file created (like \fBppc7400\fR or \fBppc970\fR or |
| \&\fBi686\fR) is determined by the flags that specify the \s-1ISA\s0 |
| that \s-1GCC\s0 is targeting, like \fB\-mcpu\fR or \fB\-march\fR. The |
| \&\fB\-force_cpusubtype_ALL\fR option can be used to override this. |
| .PP |
| The Darwin tools vary in their behavior when presented with an \s-1ISA\s0 |
| mismatch. The assembler, \fIas\fR, only permits instructions to |
| be used that are valid for the subtype of the file it is generating, |
| so you cannot put 64\-bit instructions in a \fBppc750\fR object file. |
| The linker for shared libraries, \fI/usr/bin/libtool\fR, fails |
| and prints an error if asked to create a shared library with a less |
| restrictive subtype than its input files (for instance, trying to put |
| a \fBppc970\fR object file in a \fBppc7400\fR library). The linker |
| for executables, \fBld\fR, quietly gives the executable the most |
| restrictive subtype of any of its input files. |
| .IP "\fB\-F\fR\fIdir\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Fdir" |
| Add the framework directory \fIdir\fR to the head of the list of |
| directories to be searched for header files. These directories are |
| interleaved with those specified by \fB\-I\fR options and are |
| scanned in a left-to-right order. |
| .Sp |
| A framework directory is a directory with frameworks in it. A |
| framework is a directory with a \fIHeaders\fR and/or |
| \&\fIPrivateHeaders\fR directory contained directly in it that ends |
| in \fI.framework\fR. The name of a framework is the name of this |
| directory excluding the \fI.framework\fR. Headers associated with |
| the framework are found in one of those two directories, with |
| \&\fIHeaders\fR being searched first. A subframework is a framework |
| directory that is in a framework's \fIFrameworks\fR directory. |
| Includes of subframework headers can only appear in a header of a |
| framework that contains the subframework, or in a sibling subframework |
| header. Two subframeworks are siblings if they occur in the same |
| framework. A subframework should not have the same name as a |
| framework; a warning is issued if this is violated. Currently a |
| subframework cannot have subframeworks; in the future, the mechanism |
| may be extended to support this. The standard frameworks can be found |
| in \fI/System/Library/Frameworks\fR and |
| \&\fI/Library/Frameworks\fR. An example include looks like |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`#include <Framework/header.h>\*(C'\fR, where \fIFramework\fR denotes |
| the name of the framework and \fIheader.h\fR is found in the |
| \&\fIPrivateHeaders\fR or \fIHeaders\fR directory. |
| .IP "\fB\-iframework\fR\fIdir\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-iframeworkdir" |
| Like \fB\-F\fR except the directory is a treated as a system |
| directory. The main difference between this \fB\-iframework\fR and |
| \&\fB\-F\fR is that with \fB\-iframework\fR the compiler does not |
| warn about constructs contained within header files found via |
| \&\fIdir\fR. This option is valid only for the C family of languages. |
| .IP "\fB\-gused\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-gused" |
| Emit debugging information for symbols that are used. For stabs |
| debugging format, this enables \fB\-feliminate\-unused\-debug\-symbols\fR. |
| This is by default \s-1ON\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-gfull\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-gfull" |
| Emit debugging information for all symbols and types. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmacosx\-version\-min=\fR\fIversion\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmacosx-version-min=version" |
| The earliest version of MacOS X that this executable will run on |
| is \fIversion\fR. Typical values of \fIversion\fR include \f(CW10.1\fR, |
| \&\f(CW10.2\fR, and \f(CW10.3.9\fR. |
| .Sp |
| If the compiler was built to use the system's headers by default, |
| then the default for this option is the system version on which the |
| compiler is running, otherwise the default is to make choices that |
| are compatible with as many systems and code bases as possible. |
| .IP "\fB\-mkernel\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mkernel" |
| Enable kernel development mode. The \fB\-mkernel\fR option sets |
| \&\fB\-static\fR, \fB\-fno\-common\fR, \fB\-fno\-cxa\-atexit\fR, |
| \&\fB\-fno\-exceptions\fR, \fB\-fno\-non\-call\-exceptions\fR, |
| \&\fB\-fapple\-kext\fR, \fB\-fno\-weak\fR and \fB\-fno\-rtti\fR where |
| applicable. This mode also sets \fB\-mno\-altivec\fR, |
| \&\fB\-msoft\-float\fR, \fB\-fno\-builtin\fR and |
| \&\fB\-mlong\-branch\fR for PowerPC targets. |
| .IP "\fB\-mone\-byte\-bool\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mone-byte-bool" |
| Override the defaults for \fBbool\fR so that \fBsizeof(bool)==1\fR. |
| By default \fBsizeof(bool)\fR is \fB4\fR when compiling for |
| Darwin/PowerPC and \fB1\fR when compiling for Darwin/x86, so this |
| option has no effect on x86. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fBWarning:\fR The \fB\-mone\-byte\-bool\fR switch causes \s-1GCC\s0 |
| to generate code that is not binary compatible with code generated |
| without that switch. Using this switch may require recompiling all |
| other modules in a program, including system libraries. Use this |
| switch to conform to a non-default data model. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfix\-and\-continue\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfix-and-continue" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-ffix\-and\-continue\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ffix-and-continue" |
| .IP "\fB\-findirect\-data\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-findirect-data" |
| .PD |
| Generate code suitable for fast turnaround development, such as to |
| allow \s-1GDB\s0 to dynamically load \f(CW\*(C`.o\*(C'\fR files into already-running |
| programs. \fB\-findirect\-data\fR and \fB\-ffix\-and\-continue\fR |
| are provided for backwards compatibility. |
| .IP "\fB\-all_load\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-all_load" |
| Loads all members of static archive libraries. |
| See man \fIld\fR\|(1) for more information. |
| .IP "\fB\-arch_errors_fatal\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-arch_errors_fatal" |
| Cause the errors having to do with files that have the wrong architecture |
| to be fatal. |
| .IP "\fB\-bind_at_load\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-bind_at_load" |
| Causes the output file to be marked such that the dynamic linker will |
| bind all undefined references when the file is loaded or launched. |
| .IP "\fB\-bundle\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-bundle" |
| Produce a Mach-o bundle format file. |
| See man \fIld\fR\|(1) for more information. |
| .IP "\fB\-bundle_loader\fR \fIexecutable\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-bundle_loader executable" |
| This option specifies the \fIexecutable\fR that will load the build |
| output file being linked. See man \fIld\fR\|(1) for more information. |
| .IP "\fB\-dynamiclib\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-dynamiclib" |
| When passed this option, \s-1GCC\s0 produces a dynamic library instead of |
| an executable when linking, using the Darwin \fIlibtool\fR command. |
| .IP "\fB\-force_cpusubtype_ALL\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-force_cpusubtype_ALL" |
| This causes \s-1GCC\s0's output file to have the \fI\s-1ALL\s0\fR subtype, instead of |
| one controlled by the \fB\-mcpu\fR or \fB\-march\fR option. |
| .IP "\fB\-allowable_client\fR \fIclient_name\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-allowable_client client_name" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-client_name\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-client_name" |
| .IP "\fB\-compatibility_version\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-compatibility_version" |
| .IP "\fB\-current_version\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-current_version" |
| .IP "\fB\-dead_strip\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-dead_strip" |
| .IP "\fB\-dependency\-file\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-dependency-file" |
| .IP "\fB\-dylib_file\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-dylib_file" |
| .IP "\fB\-dylinker_install_name\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-dylinker_install_name" |
| .IP "\fB\-dynamic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-dynamic" |
| .IP "\fB\-exported_symbols_list\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-exported_symbols_list" |
| .IP "\fB\-filelist\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-filelist" |
| .IP "\fB\-flat_namespace\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-flat_namespace" |
| .IP "\fB\-force_flat_namespace\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-force_flat_namespace" |
| .IP "\fB\-headerpad_max_install_names\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-headerpad_max_install_names" |
| .IP "\fB\-image_base\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-image_base" |
| .IP "\fB\-init\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-init" |
| .IP "\fB\-install_name\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-install_name" |
| .IP "\fB\-keep_private_externs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-keep_private_externs" |
| .IP "\fB\-multi_module\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-multi_module" |
| .IP "\fB\-multiply_defined\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-multiply_defined" |
| .IP "\fB\-multiply_defined_unused\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-multiply_defined_unused" |
| .IP "\fB\-noall_load\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-noall_load" |
| .IP "\fB\-no_dead_strip_inits_and_terms\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-no_dead_strip_inits_and_terms" |
| .IP "\fB\-nofixprebinding\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-nofixprebinding" |
| .IP "\fB\-nomultidefs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-nomultidefs" |
| .IP "\fB\-noprebind\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-noprebind" |
| .IP "\fB\-noseglinkedit\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-noseglinkedit" |
| .IP "\fB\-pagezero_size\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-pagezero_size" |
| .IP "\fB\-prebind\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-prebind" |
| .IP "\fB\-prebind_all_twolevel_modules\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-prebind_all_twolevel_modules" |
| .IP "\fB\-private_bundle\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-private_bundle" |
| .IP "\fB\-read_only_relocs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-read_only_relocs" |
| .IP "\fB\-sectalign\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-sectalign" |
| .IP "\fB\-sectobjectsymbols\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-sectobjectsymbols" |
| .IP "\fB\-whyload\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-whyload" |
| .IP "\fB\-seg1addr\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-seg1addr" |
| .IP "\fB\-sectcreate\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-sectcreate" |
| .IP "\fB\-sectobjectsymbols\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-sectobjectsymbols" |
| .IP "\fB\-sectorder\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-sectorder" |
| .IP "\fB\-segaddr\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-segaddr" |
| .IP "\fB\-segs_read_only_addr\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-segs_read_only_addr" |
| .IP "\fB\-segs_read_write_addr\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-segs_read_write_addr" |
| .IP "\fB\-seg_addr_table\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-seg_addr_table" |
| .IP "\fB\-seg_addr_table_filename\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-seg_addr_table_filename" |
| .IP "\fB\-seglinkedit\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-seglinkedit" |
| .IP "\fB\-segprot\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-segprot" |
| .IP "\fB\-segs_read_only_addr\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-segs_read_only_addr" |
| .IP "\fB\-segs_read_write_addr\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-segs_read_write_addr" |
| .IP "\fB\-single_module\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-single_module" |
| .IP "\fB\-static\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-static" |
| .IP "\fB\-sub_library\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-sub_library" |
| .IP "\fB\-sub_umbrella\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-sub_umbrella" |
| .IP "\fB\-twolevel_namespace\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-twolevel_namespace" |
| .IP "\fB\-umbrella\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-umbrella" |
| .IP "\fB\-undefined\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-undefined" |
| .IP "\fB\-unexported_symbols_list\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-unexported_symbols_list" |
| .IP "\fB\-weak_reference_mismatches\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-weak_reference_mismatches" |
| .IP "\fB\-whatsloaded\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-whatsloaded" |
| .PD |
| These options are passed to the Darwin linker. The Darwin linker man page |
| describes them in detail. |
| .PP |
| \fI\s-1DEC\s0 Alpha Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "DEC Alpha Options" |
| .PP |
| These \fB\-m\fR options are defined for the \s-1DEC\s0 Alpha implementations: |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-soft\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-soft-float" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-msoft\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msoft-float" |
| .PD |
| Use (do not use) the hardware floating-point instructions for |
| floating-point operations. When \fB\-msoft\-float\fR is specified, |
| functions in \fIlibgcc.a\fR are used to perform floating-point |
| operations. Unless they are replaced by routines that emulate the |
| floating-point operations, or compiled in such a way as to call such |
| emulations routines, these routines issue floating-point |
| operations. If you are compiling for an Alpha without floating-point |
| operations, you must ensure that the library is built so as not to call |
| them. |
| .Sp |
| Note that Alpha implementations without floating-point operations are |
| required to have floating-point registers. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfp\-reg\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfp-reg" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fp\-regs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fp-regs" |
| .PD |
| Generate code that uses (does not use) the floating-point register set. |
| \&\fB\-mno\-fp\-regs\fR implies \fB\-msoft\-float\fR. If the floating-point |
| register set is not used, floating-point operands are passed in integer |
| registers as if they were integers and floating-point results are passed |
| in \f(CW$0\fR instead of \f(CW$f0\fR. This is a non-standard calling sequence, |
| so any function with a floating-point argument or return value called by code |
| compiled with \fB\-mno\-fp\-regs\fR must also be compiled with that |
| option. |
| .Sp |
| A typical use of this option is building a kernel that does not use, |
| and hence need not save and restore, any floating-point registers. |
| .IP "\fB\-mieee\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mieee" |
| The Alpha architecture implements floating-point hardware optimized for |
| maximum performance. It is mostly compliant with the \s-1IEEE\s0 floating-point |
| standard. However, for full compliance, software assistance is |
| required. This option generates code fully IEEE-compliant code |
| \&\fIexcept\fR that the \fIinexact-flag\fR is not maintained (see below). |
| If this option is turned on, the preprocessor macro \f(CW\*(C`_IEEE_FP\*(C'\fR is |
| defined during compilation. The resulting code is less efficient but is |
| able to correctly support denormalized numbers and exceptional \s-1IEEE\s0 |
| values such as not-a-number and plus/minus infinity. Other Alpha |
| compilers call this option \fB\-ieee_with_no_inexact\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mieee\-with\-inexact\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mieee-with-inexact" |
| This is like \fB\-mieee\fR except the generated code also maintains |
| the \s-1IEEE\s0 \fIinexact-flag\fR. Turning on this option causes the |
| generated code to implement fully-compliant \s-1IEEE\s0 math. In addition to |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_IEEE_FP\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`_IEEE_FP_EXACT\*(C'\fR is defined as a preprocessor |
| macro. On some Alpha implementations the resulting code may execute |
| significantly slower than the code generated by default. Since there is |
| very little code that depends on the \fIinexact-flag\fR, you should |
| normally not specify this option. Other Alpha compilers call this |
| option \fB\-ieee_with_inexact\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfp\-trap\-mode=\fR\fItrap-mode\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfp-trap-mode=trap-mode" |
| This option controls what floating-point related traps are enabled. |
| Other Alpha compilers call this option \fB\-fptm\fR \fItrap-mode\fR. |
| The trap mode can be set to one of four values: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "n" |
| This is the default (normal) setting. The only traps that are enabled |
| are the ones that cannot be disabled in software (e.g., division by zero |
| trap). |
| .IP "\fBu\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "u" |
| In addition to the traps enabled by \fBn\fR, underflow traps are enabled |
| as well. |
| .IP "\fBsu\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "su" |
| Like \fBu\fR, but the instructions are marked to be safe for software |
| completion (see Alpha architecture manual for details). |
| .IP "\fBsui\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "sui" |
| Like \fBsu\fR, but inexact traps are enabled as well. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-mfp\-rounding\-mode=\fR\fIrounding-mode\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfp-rounding-mode=rounding-mode" |
| Selects the \s-1IEEE\s0 rounding mode. Other Alpha compilers call this option |
| \&\fB\-fprm\fR \fIrounding-mode\fR. The \fIrounding-mode\fR can be one |
| of: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "n" |
| Normal \s-1IEEE\s0 rounding mode. Floating-point numbers are rounded towards |
| the nearest machine number or towards the even machine number in case |
| of a tie. |
| .IP "\fBm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "m" |
| Round towards minus infinity. |
| .IP "\fBc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "c" |
| Chopped rounding mode. Floating-point numbers are rounded towards zero. |
| .IP "\fBd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "d" |
| Dynamic rounding mode. A field in the floating-point control register |
| (\fIfpcr\fR, see Alpha architecture reference manual) controls the |
| rounding mode in effect. The C library initializes this register for |
| rounding towards plus infinity. Thus, unless your program modifies the |
| \&\fIfpcr\fR, \fBd\fR corresponds to round towards plus infinity. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-mtrap\-precision=\fR\fItrap-precision\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtrap-precision=trap-precision" |
| In the Alpha architecture, floating-point traps are imprecise. This |
| means without software assistance it is impossible to recover from a |
| floating trap and program execution normally needs to be terminated. |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 can generate code that can assist operating system trap handlers |
| in determining the exact location that caused a floating-point trap. |
| Depending on the requirements of an application, different levels of |
| precisions can be selected: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "p" |
| Program precision. This option is the default and means a trap handler |
| can only identify which program caused a floating-point exception. |
| .IP "\fBf\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "f" |
| Function precision. The trap handler can determine the function that |
| caused a floating-point exception. |
| .IP "\fBi\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "i" |
| Instruction precision. The trap handler can determine the exact |
| instruction that caused a floating-point exception. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| Other Alpha compilers provide the equivalent options called |
| \&\fB\-scope_safe\fR and \fB\-resumption_safe\fR. |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-mieee\-conformant\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mieee-conformant" |
| This option marks the generated code as \s-1IEEE\s0 conformant. You must not |
| use this option unless you also specify \fB\-mtrap\-precision=i\fR and either |
| \&\fB\-mfp\-trap\-mode=su\fR or \fB\-mfp\-trap\-mode=sui\fR. Its only effect |
| is to emit the line \fB.eflag 48\fR in the function prologue of the |
| generated assembly file. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbuild\-constants\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbuild-constants" |
| Normally \s-1GCC\s0 examines a 32\- or 64\-bit integer constant to |
| see if it can construct it from smaller constants in two or three |
| instructions. If it cannot, it outputs the constant as a literal and |
| generates code to load it from the data segment at run time. |
| .Sp |
| Use this option to require \s-1GCC\s0 to construct \fIall\fR integer constants |
| using code, even if it takes more instructions (the maximum is six). |
| .Sp |
| You typically use this option to build a shared library dynamic |
| loader. Itself a shared library, it must relocate itself in memory |
| before it can find the variables and constants in its own data segment. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbwx\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbwx" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-bwx\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-bwx" |
| .IP "\fB\-mcix\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcix" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-cix\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-cix" |
| .IP "\fB\-mfix\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfix" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fix\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fix" |
| .IP "\fB\-mmax\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmax" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-max\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-max" |
| .PD |
| Indicate whether \s-1GCC\s0 should generate code to use the optional \s-1BWX\s0, |
| \&\s-1CIX\s0, \s-1FIX\s0 and \s-1MAX\s0 instruction sets. The default is to use the instruction |
| sets supported by the \s-1CPU\s0 type specified via \fB\-mcpu=\fR option or that |
| of the \s-1CPU\s0 on which \s-1GCC\s0 was built if none is specified. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfloat\-vax\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfloat-vax" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mfloat\-ieee\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfloat-ieee" |
| .PD |
| Generate code that uses (does not use) \s-1VAX\s0 F and G floating-point |
| arithmetic instead of \s-1IEEE\s0 single and double precision. |
| .IP "\fB\-mexplicit\-relocs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mexplicit-relocs" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-explicit\-relocs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-explicit-relocs" |
| .PD |
| Older Alpha assemblers provided no way to generate symbol relocations |
| except via assembler macros. Use of these macros does not allow |
| optimal instruction scheduling. \s-1GNU\s0 binutils as of version 2.12 |
| supports a new syntax that allows the compiler to explicitly mark |
| which relocations should apply to which instructions. This option |
| is mostly useful for debugging, as \s-1GCC\s0 detects the capabilities of |
| the assembler when it is built and sets the default accordingly. |
| .IP "\fB\-msmall\-data\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msmall-data" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mlarge\-data\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlarge-data" |
| .PD |
| When \fB\-mexplicit\-relocs\fR is in effect, static data is |
| accessed via \fIgp-relative\fR relocations. When \fB\-msmall\-data\fR |
| is used, objects 8 bytes long or smaller are placed in a \fIsmall data area\fR |
| (the \f(CW\*(C`.sdata\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`.sbss\*(C'\fR sections) and are accessed via |
| 16\-bit relocations off of the \f(CW$gp\fR register. This limits the |
| size of the small data area to 64KB, but allows the variables to be |
| directly accessed via a single instruction. |
| .Sp |
| The default is \fB\-mlarge\-data\fR. With this option the data area |
| is limited to just below 2GB. Programs that require more than 2GB of |
| data must use \f(CW\*(C`malloc\*(C'\fR or \f(CW\*(C`mmap\*(C'\fR to allocate the data in the |
| heap instead of in the program's data segment. |
| .Sp |
| When generating code for shared libraries, \fB\-fpic\fR implies |
| \&\fB\-msmall\-data\fR and \fB\-fPIC\fR implies \fB\-mlarge\-data\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-msmall\-text\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msmall-text" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mlarge\-text\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlarge-text" |
| .PD |
| When \fB\-msmall\-text\fR is used, the compiler assumes that the |
| code of the entire program (or shared library) fits in 4MB, and is |
| thus reachable with a branch instruction. When \fB\-msmall\-data\fR |
| is used, the compiler can assume that all local symbols share the |
| same \f(CW$gp\fR value, and thus reduce the number of instructions |
| required for a function call from 4 to 1. |
| .Sp |
| The default is \fB\-mlarge\-text\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu_type\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcpu=cpu_type" |
| Set the instruction set and instruction scheduling parameters for |
| machine type \fIcpu_type\fR. You can specify either the \fB\s-1EV\s0\fR |
| style name or the corresponding chip number. \s-1GCC\s0 supports scheduling |
| parameters for the \s-1EV4\s0, \s-1EV5\s0 and \s-1EV6\s0 family of processors and |
| chooses the default values for the instruction set from the processor |
| you specify. If you do not specify a processor type, \s-1GCC\s0 defaults |
| to the processor on which the compiler was built. |
| .Sp |
| Supported values for \fIcpu_type\fR are |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBev4\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "ev4" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBev45\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "ev45" |
| .IP "\fB21064\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "21064" |
| .PD |
| Schedules as an \s-1EV4\s0 and has no instruction set extensions. |
| .IP "\fBev5\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "ev5" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB21164\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "21164" |
| .PD |
| Schedules as an \s-1EV5\s0 and has no instruction set extensions. |
| .IP "\fBev56\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "ev56" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB21164a\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "21164a" |
| .PD |
| Schedules as an \s-1EV5\s0 and supports the \s-1BWX\s0 extension. |
| .IP "\fBpca56\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "pca56" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB21164pc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "21164pc" |
| .IP "\fB21164PC\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "21164PC" |
| .PD |
| Schedules as an \s-1EV5\s0 and supports the \s-1BWX\s0 and \s-1MAX\s0 extensions. |
| .IP "\fBev6\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "ev6" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB21264\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "21264" |
| .PD |
| Schedules as an \s-1EV6\s0 and supports the \s-1BWX\s0, \s-1FIX\s0, and \s-1MAX\s0 extensions. |
| .IP "\fBev67\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "ev67" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB21264a\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "21264a" |
| .PD |
| Schedules as an \s-1EV6\s0 and supports the \s-1BWX\s0, \s-1CIX\s0, \s-1FIX\s0, and \s-1MAX\s0 extensions. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| Native toolchains also support the value \fBnative\fR, |
| which selects the best architecture option for the host processor. |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=native\fR has no effect if \s-1GCC\s0 does not recognize |
| the processor. |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-mtune=\fR\fIcpu_type\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtune=cpu_type" |
| Set only the instruction scheduling parameters for machine type |
| \&\fIcpu_type\fR. The instruction set is not changed. |
| .Sp |
| Native toolchains also support the value \fBnative\fR, |
| which selects the best architecture option for the host processor. |
| \&\fB\-mtune=native\fR has no effect if \s-1GCC\s0 does not recognize |
| the processor. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmemory\-latency=\fR\fItime\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmemory-latency=time" |
| Sets the latency the scheduler should assume for typical memory |
| references as seen by the application. This number is highly |
| dependent on the memory access patterns used by the application |
| and the size of the external cache on the machine. |
| .Sp |
| Valid options for \fItime\fR are |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fInumber\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "number" |
| A decimal number representing clock cycles. |
| .IP "\fBL1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "L1" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBL2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "L2" |
| .IP "\fBL3\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "L3" |
| .IP "\fBmain\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "main" |
| .PD |
| The compiler contains estimates of the number of clock cycles for |
| \&\*(L"typical\*(R" \s-1EV4\s0 & \s-1EV5\s0 hardware for the Level 1, 2 & 3 caches |
| (also called Dcache, Scache, and Bcache), as well as to main memory. |
| Note that L3 is only valid for \s-1EV5\s0. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .PP |
| \fI\s-1FR30\s0 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "FR30 Options" |
| .PP |
| These options are defined specifically for the \s-1FR30\s0 port. |
| .IP "\fB\-msmall\-model\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msmall-model" |
| Use the small address space model. This can produce smaller code, but |
| it does assume that all symbolic values and addresses fit into a |
| 20\-bit range. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-lsim\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-lsim" |
| Assume that runtime support has been provided and so there is no need |
| to include the simulator library (\fIlibsim.a\fR) on the linker |
| command line. |
| .PP |
| \fI\s-1FRV\s0 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "FRV Options" |
| .IP "\fB\-mgpr\-32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mgpr-32" |
| Only use the first 32 general-purpose registers. |
| .IP "\fB\-mgpr\-64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mgpr-64" |
| Use all 64 general-purpose registers. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfpr\-32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfpr-32" |
| Use only the first 32 floating-point registers. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfpr\-64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfpr-64" |
| Use all 64 floating-point registers. |
| .IP "\fB\-mhard\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mhard-float" |
| Use hardware instructions for floating-point operations. |
| .IP "\fB\-msoft\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msoft-float" |
| Use library routines for floating-point operations. |
| .IP "\fB\-malloc\-cc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-malloc-cc" |
| Dynamically allocate condition code registers. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfixed\-cc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfixed-cc" |
| Do not try to dynamically allocate condition code registers, only |
| use \f(CW\*(C`icc0\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`fcc0\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdword\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdword" |
| Change \s-1ABI\s0 to use double word insns. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-dword\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-dword" |
| Do not use double word instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdouble\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdouble" |
| Use floating-point double instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-double\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-double" |
| Do not use floating-point double instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmedia\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmedia" |
| Use media instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-media\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-media" |
| Do not use media instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmuladd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmuladd" |
| Use multiply and add/subtract instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-muladd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-muladd" |
| Do not use multiply and add/subtract instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfdpic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfdpic" |
| Select the \s-1FDPIC\s0 \s-1ABI\s0, which uses function descriptors to represent |
| pointers to functions. Without any PIC/PIE\-related options, it |
| implies \fB\-fPIE\fR. With \fB\-fpic\fR or \fB\-fpie\fR, it |
| assumes \s-1GOT\s0 entries and small data are within a 12\-bit range from the |
| \&\s-1GOT\s0 base address; with \fB\-fPIC\fR or \fB\-fPIE\fR, \s-1GOT\s0 offsets |
| are computed with 32 bits. |
| With a \fBbfin-elf\fR target, this option implies \fB\-msim\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-minline\-plt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-minline-plt" |
| Enable inlining of \s-1PLT\s0 entries in function calls to functions that are |
| not known to bind locally. It has no effect without \fB\-mfdpic\fR. |
| It's enabled by default if optimizing for speed and compiling for |
| shared libraries (i.e., \fB\-fPIC\fR or \fB\-fpic\fR), or when an |
| optimization option such as \fB\-O3\fR or above is present in the |
| command line. |
| .IP "\fB\-mTLS\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mTLS" |
| Assume a large \s-1TLS\s0 segment when generating thread-local code. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtls" |
| Do not assume a large \s-1TLS\s0 segment when generating thread-local code. |
| .IP "\fB\-mgprel\-ro\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mgprel-ro" |
| Enable the use of \f(CW\*(C`GPREL\*(C'\fR relocations in the \s-1FDPIC\s0 \s-1ABI\s0 for data |
| that is known to be in read-only sections. It's enabled by default, |
| except for \fB\-fpic\fR or \fB\-fpie\fR: even though it may help |
| make the global offset table smaller, it trades 1 instruction for 4. |
| With \fB\-fPIC\fR or \fB\-fPIE\fR, it trades 3 instructions for 4, |
| one of which may be shared by multiple symbols, and it avoids the need |
| for a \s-1GOT\s0 entry for the referenced symbol, so it's more likely to be a |
| win. If it is not, \fB\-mno\-gprel\-ro\fR can be used to disable it. |
| .IP "\fB\-multilib\-library\-pic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-multilib-library-pic" |
| Link with the (library, not \s-1FD\s0) pic libraries. It's implied by |
| \&\fB\-mlibrary\-pic\fR, as well as by \fB\-fPIC\fR and |
| \&\fB\-fpic\fR without \fB\-mfdpic\fR. You should never have to use |
| it explicitly. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlinked\-fp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlinked-fp" |
| Follow the \s-1EABI\s0 requirement of always creating a frame pointer whenever |
| a stack frame is allocated. This option is enabled by default and can |
| be disabled with \fB\-mno\-linked\-fp\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlong\-calls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlong-calls" |
| Use indirect addressing to call functions outside the current |
| compilation unit. This allows the functions to be placed anywhere |
| within the 32\-bit address space. |
| .IP "\fB\-malign\-labels\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-malign-labels" |
| Try to align labels to an 8\-byte boundary by inserting NOPs into the |
| previous packet. This option only has an effect when \s-1VLIW\s0 packing |
| is enabled. It doesn't create new packets; it merely adds NOPs to |
| existing ones. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlibrary\-pic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlibrary-pic" |
| Generate position-independent \s-1EABI\s0 code. |
| .IP "\fB\-macc\-4\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-macc-4" |
| Use only the first four media accumulator registers. |
| .IP "\fB\-macc\-8\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-macc-8" |
| Use all eight media accumulator registers. |
| .IP "\fB\-mpack\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpack" |
| Pack \s-1VLIW\s0 instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-pack\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-pack" |
| Do not pack \s-1VLIW\s0 instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-eflags\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-eflags" |
| Do not mark \s-1ABI\s0 switches in e_flags. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcond\-move\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcond-move" |
| Enable the use of conditional-move instructions (default). |
| .Sp |
| This switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and will likely be removed |
| in a future version. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-cond\-move\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-cond-move" |
| Disable the use of conditional-move instructions. |
| .Sp |
| This switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and will likely be removed |
| in a future version. |
| .IP "\fB\-mscc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mscc" |
| Enable the use of conditional set instructions (default). |
| .Sp |
| This switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and will likely be removed |
| in a future version. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-scc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-scc" |
| Disable the use of conditional set instructions. |
| .Sp |
| This switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and will likely be removed |
| in a future version. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcond\-exec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcond-exec" |
| Enable the use of conditional execution (default). |
| .Sp |
| This switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and will likely be removed |
| in a future version. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-cond\-exec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-cond-exec" |
| Disable the use of conditional execution. |
| .Sp |
| This switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and will likely be removed |
| in a future version. |
| .IP "\fB\-mvliw\-branch\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mvliw-branch" |
| Run a pass to pack branches into \s-1VLIW\s0 instructions (default). |
| .Sp |
| This switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and will likely be removed |
| in a future version. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-vliw\-branch\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-vliw-branch" |
| Do not run a pass to pack branches into \s-1VLIW\s0 instructions. |
| .Sp |
| This switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and will likely be removed |
| in a future version. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmulti\-cond\-exec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmulti-cond-exec" |
| Enable optimization of \f(CW\*(C`&&\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`||\*(C'\fR in conditional execution |
| (default). |
| .Sp |
| This switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and will likely be removed |
| in a future version. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-multi\-cond\-exec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-multi-cond-exec" |
| Disable optimization of \f(CW\*(C`&&\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`||\*(C'\fR in conditional execution. |
| .Sp |
| This switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and will likely be removed |
| in a future version. |
| .IP "\fB\-mnested\-cond\-exec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mnested-cond-exec" |
| Enable nested conditional execution optimizations (default). |
| .Sp |
| This switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and will likely be removed |
| in a future version. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-nested\-cond\-exec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-nested-cond-exec" |
| Disable nested conditional execution optimizations. |
| .Sp |
| This switch is mainly for debugging the compiler and will likely be removed |
| in a future version. |
| .IP "\fB\-moptimize\-membar\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-moptimize-membar" |
| This switch removes redundant \f(CW\*(C`membar\*(C'\fR instructions from the |
| compiler-generated code. It is enabled by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-optimize\-membar\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-optimize-membar" |
| This switch disables the automatic removal of redundant \f(CW\*(C`membar\*(C'\fR |
| instructions from the generated code. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtomcat\-stats\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtomcat-stats" |
| Cause gas to print out tomcat statistics. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcpu=cpu" |
| Select the processor type for which to generate code. Possible values are |
| \&\fBfrv\fR, \fBfr550\fR, \fBtomcat\fR, \fBfr500\fR, \fBfr450\fR, |
| \&\fBfr405\fR, \fBfr400\fR, \fBfr300\fR and \fBsimple\fR. |
| .PP |
| \fIGNU/Linux Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "GNU/Linux Options" |
| .PP |
| These \fB\-m\fR options are defined for GNU/Linux targets: |
| .IP "\fB\-mglibc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mglibc" |
| Use the \s-1GNU\s0 C library. This is the default except |
| on \fB*\-*\-linux\-*uclibc*\fR and \fB*\-*\-linux\-*android*\fR targets. |
| .IP "\fB\-muclibc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-muclibc" |
| Use uClibc C library. This is the default on |
| \&\fB*\-*\-linux\-*uclibc*\fR targets. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbionic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbionic" |
| Use Bionic C library. This is the default on |
| \&\fB*\-*\-linux\-*android*\fR targets. |
| .IP "\fB\-mandroid\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mandroid" |
| Compile code compatible with Android platform. This is the default on |
| \&\fB*\-*\-linux\-*android*\fR targets. |
| .Sp |
| When compiling, this option enables \fB\-mbionic\fR, \fB\-fPIC\fR, |
| \&\fB\-fno\-exceptions\fR and \fB\-fno\-rtti\fR by default. When linking, |
| this option makes the \s-1GCC\s0 driver pass Android-specific options to the linker. |
| Finally, this option causes the preprocessor macro \f(CW\*(C`_\|_ANDROID_\|_\*(C'\fR |
| to be defined. |
| .IP "\fB\-tno\-android\-cc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-tno-android-cc" |
| Disable compilation effects of \fB\-mandroid\fR, i.e., do not enable |
| \&\fB\-mbionic\fR, \fB\-fPIC\fR, \fB\-fno\-exceptions\fR and |
| \&\fB\-fno\-rtti\fR by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-tno\-android\-ld\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-tno-android-ld" |
| Disable linking effects of \fB\-mandroid\fR, i.e., pass standard Linux |
| linking options to the linker. |
| .PP |
| \fIH8/300 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "H8/300 Options" |
| .PP |
| These \fB\-m\fR options are defined for the H8/300 implementations: |
| .IP "\fB\-mrelax\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrelax" |
| Shorten some address references at link time, when possible; uses the |
| linker option \fB\-relax\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mh\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mh" |
| Generate code for the H8/300H. |
| .IP "\fB\-ms\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ms" |
| Generate code for the H8S. |
| .IP "\fB\-mn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mn" |
| Generate code for the H8S and H8/300H in the normal mode. This switch |
| must be used either with \fB\-mh\fR or \fB\-ms\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-ms2600\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ms2600" |
| Generate code for the H8S/2600. This switch must be used with \fB\-ms\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mexr\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mexr" |
| Extended registers are stored on stack before execution of function |
| with monitor attribute. Default option is \fB\-mexr\fR. |
| This option is valid only for H8S targets. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-exr\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-exr" |
| Extended registers are not stored on stack before execution of function |
| with monitor attribute. Default option is \fB\-mno\-exr\fR. |
| This option is valid only for H8S targets. |
| .IP "\fB\-mint32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mint32" |
| Make \f(CW\*(C`int\*(C'\fR data 32 bits by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-malign\-300\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-malign-300" |
| On the H8/300H and H8S, use the same alignment rules as for the H8/300. |
| The default for the H8/300H and H8S is to align longs and floats on |
| 4\-byte boundaries. |
| \&\fB\-malign\-300\fR causes them to be aligned on 2\-byte boundaries. |
| This option has no effect on the H8/300. |
| .PP |
| \fI\s-1HPPA\s0 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "HPPA Options" |
| .PP |
| These \fB\-m\fR options are defined for the \s-1HPPA\s0 family of computers: |
| .IP "\fB\-march=\fR\fIarchitecture-type\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-march=architecture-type" |
| Generate code for the specified architecture. The choices for |
| \&\fIarchitecture-type\fR are \fB1.0\fR for \s-1PA\s0 1.0, \fB1.1\fR for \s-1PA\s0 |
| 1.1, and \fB2.0\fR for \s-1PA\s0 2.0 processors. Refer to |
| \&\fI/usr/lib/sched.models\fR on an HP-UX system to determine the proper |
| architecture option for your machine. Code compiled for lower numbered |
| architectures runs on higher numbered architectures, but not the |
| other way around. |
| .IP "\fB\-mpa\-risc\-1\-0\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpa-risc-1-0" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mpa\-risc\-1\-1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpa-risc-1-1" |
| .IP "\fB\-mpa\-risc\-2\-0\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpa-risc-2-0" |
| .PD |
| Synonyms for \fB\-march=1.0\fR, \fB\-march=1.1\fR, and \fB\-march=2.0\fR respectively. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbig\-switch\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbig-switch" |
| Generate code suitable for big switch tables. Use this option only if |
| the assembler/linker complain about out-of-range branches within a switch |
| table. |
| .IP "\fB\-mjump\-in\-delay\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mjump-in-delay" |
| Fill delay slots of function calls with unconditional jump instructions |
| by modifying the return pointer for the function call to be the target |
| of the conditional jump. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdisable\-fpregs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdisable-fpregs" |
| Prevent floating-point registers from being used in any manner. This is |
| necessary for compiling kernels that perform lazy context switching of |
| floating-point registers. If you use this option and attempt to perform |
| floating-point operations, the compiler aborts. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdisable\-indexing\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdisable-indexing" |
| Prevent the compiler from using indexing address modes. This avoids some |
| rather obscure problems when compiling \s-1MIG\s0 generated code under \s-1MACH\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-space\-regs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-space-regs" |
| Generate code that assumes the target has no space registers. This allows |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 to generate faster indirect calls and use unscaled index address modes. |
| .Sp |
| Such code is suitable for level 0 \s-1PA\s0 systems and kernels. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfast\-indirect\-calls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfast-indirect-calls" |
| Generate code that assumes calls never cross space boundaries. This |
| allows \s-1GCC\s0 to emit code that performs faster indirect calls. |
| .Sp |
| This option does not work in the presence of shared libraries or nested |
| functions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfixed\-range=\fR\fIregister-range\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfixed-range=register-range" |
| Generate code treating the given register range as fixed registers. |
| A fixed register is one that the register allocator cannot use. This is |
| useful when compiling kernel code. A register range is specified as |
| two registers separated by a dash. Multiple register ranges can be |
| specified separated by a comma. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlong\-load\-store\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlong-load-store" |
| Generate 3\-instruction load and store sequences as sometimes required by |
| the HP-UX 10 linker. This is equivalent to the \fB+k\fR option to |
| the \s-1HP\s0 compilers. |
| .IP "\fB\-mportable\-runtime\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mportable-runtime" |
| Use the portable calling conventions proposed by \s-1HP\s0 for \s-1ELF\s0 systems. |
| .IP "\fB\-mgas\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mgas" |
| Enable the use of assembler directives only \s-1GAS\s0 understands. |
| .IP "\fB\-mschedule=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mschedule=cpu-type" |
| Schedule code according to the constraints for the machine type |
| \&\fIcpu-type\fR. The choices for \fIcpu-type\fR are \fB700\fR |
| \&\fB7100\fR, \fB7100LC\fR, \fB7200\fR, \fB7300\fR and \fB8000\fR. Refer |
| to \fI/usr/lib/sched.models\fR on an HP-UX system to determine the |
| proper scheduling option for your machine. The default scheduling is |
| \&\fB8000\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlinker\-opt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlinker-opt" |
| Enable the optimization pass in the HP-UX linker. Note this makes symbolic |
| debugging impossible. It also triggers a bug in the HP-UX 8 and HP-UX 9 |
| linkers in which they give bogus error messages when linking some programs. |
| .IP "\fB\-msoft\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msoft-float" |
| Generate output containing library calls for floating point. |
| \&\fBWarning:\fR the requisite libraries are not available for all \s-1HPPA\s0 |
| targets. Normally the facilities of the machine's usual C compiler are |
| used, but this cannot be done directly in cross-compilation. You must make |
| your own arrangements to provide suitable library functions for |
| cross-compilation. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-msoft\-float\fR changes the calling convention in the output file; |
| therefore, it is only useful if you compile \fIall\fR of a program with |
| this option. In particular, you need to compile \fIlibgcc.a\fR, the |
| library that comes with \s-1GCC\s0, with \fB\-msoft\-float\fR in order for |
| this to work. |
| .IP "\fB\-msio\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msio" |
| Generate the predefine, \f(CW\*(C`_SIO\*(C'\fR, for server \s-1IO\s0. The default is |
| \&\fB\-mwsio\fR. This generates the predefines, \f(CW\*(C`_\|_hp9000s700\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_hp9000s700_\|_\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`_WSIO\*(C'\fR, for workstation \s-1IO\s0. These |
| options are available under HP-UX and HI-UX. |
| .IP "\fB\-mgnu\-ld\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mgnu-ld" |
| Use options specific to \s-1GNU\s0 \fBld\fR. |
| This passes \fB\-shared\fR to \fBld\fR when |
| building a shared library. It is the default when \s-1GCC\s0 is configured, |
| explicitly or implicitly, with the \s-1GNU\s0 linker. This option does not |
| affect which \fBld\fR is called; it only changes what parameters |
| are passed to that \fBld\fR. |
| The \fBld\fR that is called is determined by the |
| \&\fB\-\-with\-ld\fR configure option, \s-1GCC\s0's program search path, and |
| finally by the user's \fB\s-1PATH\s0\fR. The linker used by \s-1GCC\s0 can be printed |
| using \fBwhich `gcc \-print\-prog\-name=ld`\fR. This option is only available |
| on the 64\-bit HP-UX \s-1GCC\s0, i.e. configured with \fBhppa*64*\-*\-hpux*\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mhp\-ld\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mhp-ld" |
| Use options specific to \s-1HP\s0 \fBld\fR. |
| This passes \fB\-b\fR to \fBld\fR when building |
| a shared library and passes \fB+Accept TypeMismatch\fR to \fBld\fR on all |
| links. It is the default when \s-1GCC\s0 is configured, explicitly or |
| implicitly, with the \s-1HP\s0 linker. This option does not affect |
| which \fBld\fR is called; it only changes what parameters are passed to that |
| \&\fBld\fR. |
| The \fBld\fR that is called is determined by the \fB\-\-with\-ld\fR |
| configure option, \s-1GCC\s0's program search path, and finally by the user's |
| \&\fB\s-1PATH\s0\fR. The linker used by \s-1GCC\s0 can be printed using \fBwhich |
| `gcc \-print\-prog\-name=ld`\fR. This option is only available on the 64\-bit |
| HP-UX \s-1GCC\s0, i.e. configured with \fBhppa*64*\-*\-hpux*\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlong\-calls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlong-calls" |
| Generate code that uses long call sequences. This ensures that a call |
| is always able to reach linker generated stubs. The default is to generate |
| long calls only when the distance from the call site to the beginning |
| of the function or translation unit, as the case may be, exceeds a |
| predefined limit set by the branch type being used. The limits for |
| normal calls are 7,600,000 and 240,000 bytes, respectively for the |
| \&\s-1PA\s0 2.0 and \s-1PA\s0 1.X architectures. Sibcalls are always limited at |
| 240,000 bytes. |
| .Sp |
| Distances are measured from the beginning of functions when using the |
| \&\fB\-ffunction\-sections\fR option, or when using the \fB\-mgas\fR |
| and \fB\-mno\-portable\-runtime\fR options together under HP-UX with |
| the \s-1SOM\s0 linker. |
| .Sp |
| It is normally not desirable to use this option as it degrades |
| performance. However, it may be useful in large applications, |
| particularly when partial linking is used to build the application. |
| .Sp |
| The types of long calls used depends on the capabilities of the |
| assembler and linker, and the type of code being generated. The |
| impact on systems that support long absolute calls, and long pic |
| symbol-difference or pc-relative calls should be relatively small. |
| However, an indirect call is used on 32\-bit \s-1ELF\s0 systems in pic code |
| and it is quite long. |
| .IP "\fB\-munix=\fR\fIunix-std\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-munix=unix-std" |
| Generate compiler predefines and select a startfile for the specified |
| \&\s-1UNIX\s0 standard. The choices for \fIunix-std\fR are \fB93\fR, \fB95\fR |
| and \fB98\fR. \fB93\fR is supported on all HP-UX versions. \fB95\fR |
| is available on HP-UX 10.10 and later. \fB98\fR is available on HP-UX |
| 11.11 and later. The default values are \fB93\fR for HP-UX 10.00, |
| \&\fB95\fR for HP-UX 10.10 though to 11.00, and \fB98\fR for HP-UX 11.11 |
| and later. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-munix=93\fR provides the same predefines as \s-1GCC\s0 3.3 and 3.4. |
| \&\fB\-munix=95\fR provides additional predefines for \f(CW\*(C`XOPEN_UNIX\*(C'\fR |
| and \f(CW\*(C`_XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED\*(C'\fR, and the startfile \fIunix95.o\fR. |
| \&\fB\-munix=98\fR provides additional predefines for \f(CW\*(C`_XOPEN_UNIX\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_XOPEN_SOURCE_EXTENDED\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`_INCLUDE_\|_STDC_A1_SOURCE\*(C'\fR and |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_INCLUDE_XOPEN_SOURCE_500\*(C'\fR, and the startfile \fIunix98.o\fR. |
| .Sp |
| It is \fIimportant\fR to note that this option changes the interfaces |
| for various library routines. It also affects the operational behavior |
| of the C library. Thus, \fIextreme\fR care is needed in using this |
| option. |
| .Sp |
| Library code that is intended to operate with more than one \s-1UNIX\s0 |
| standard must test, set and restore the variable \fI_\|_xpg4_extended_mask\fR |
| as appropriate. Most \s-1GNU\s0 software doesn't provide this capability. |
| .IP "\fB\-nolibdld\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-nolibdld" |
| Suppress the generation of link options to search libdld.sl when the |
| \&\fB\-static\fR option is specified on HP-UX 10 and later. |
| .IP "\fB\-static\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-static" |
| The HP-UX implementation of setlocale in libc has a dependency on |
| libdld.sl. There isn't an archive version of libdld.sl. Thus, |
| when the \fB\-static\fR option is specified, special link options |
| are needed to resolve this dependency. |
| .Sp |
| On HP-UX 10 and later, the \s-1GCC\s0 driver adds the necessary options to |
| link with libdld.sl when the \fB\-static\fR option is specified. |
| This causes the resulting binary to be dynamic. On the 64\-bit port, |
| the linkers generate dynamic binaries by default in any case. The |
| \&\fB\-nolibdld\fR option can be used to prevent the \s-1GCC\s0 driver from |
| adding these link options. |
| .IP "\fB\-threads\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-threads" |
| Add support for multithreading with the \fIdce thread\fR library |
| under HP-UX. This option sets flags for both the preprocessor and |
| linker. |
| .PP |
| \fIIntel 386 and \s-1AMD\s0 x86\-64 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "Intel 386 and AMD x86-64 Options" |
| .PP |
| These \fB\-m\fR options are defined for the i386 and x86\-64 family of |
| computers: |
| .IP "\fB\-march=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-march=cpu-type" |
| Generate instructions for the machine type \fIcpu-type\fR. In contrast to |
| \&\fB\-mtune=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR, which merely tunes the generated code |
| for the specified \fIcpu-type\fR, \fB\-march=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR allows \s-1GCC\s0 |
| to generate code that may not run at all on processors other than the one |
| indicated. Specifying \fB\-march=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR implies |
| \&\fB\-mtune=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR. |
| .Sp |
| The choices for \fIcpu-type\fR are: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBnative\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "native" |
| This selects the \s-1CPU\s0 to generate code for at compilation time by determining |
| the processor type of the compiling machine. Using \fB\-march=native\fR |
| enables all instruction subsets supported by the local machine (hence |
| the result might not run on different machines). Using \fB\-mtune=native\fR |
| produces code optimized for the local machine under the constraints |
| of the selected instruction set. |
| .IP "\fBi386\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "i386" |
| Original Intel i386 \s-1CPU\s0. |
| .IP "\fBi486\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "i486" |
| Intel i486 \s-1CPU\s0. (No scheduling is implemented for this chip.) |
| .IP "\fBi586\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "i586" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBpentium\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "pentium" |
| .PD |
| Intel Pentium \s-1CPU\s0 with no \s-1MMX\s0 support. |
| .IP "\fBpentium-mmx\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "pentium-mmx" |
| Intel Pentium \s-1MMX\s0 \s-1CPU\s0, based on Pentium core with \s-1MMX\s0 instruction set support. |
| .IP "\fBpentiumpro\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "pentiumpro" |
| Intel Pentium Pro \s-1CPU\s0. |
| .IP "\fBi686\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "i686" |
| When used with \fB\-march\fR, the Pentium Pro |
| instruction set is used, so the code runs on all i686 family chips. |
| When used with \fB\-mtune\fR, it has the same meaning as \fBgeneric\fR. |
| .IP "\fBpentium2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "pentium2" |
| Intel Pentium \s-1II\s0 \s-1CPU\s0, based on Pentium Pro core with \s-1MMX\s0 instruction set |
| support. |
| .IP "\fBpentium3\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "pentium3" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBpentium3m\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "pentium3m" |
| .PD |
| Intel Pentium \s-1III\s0 \s-1CPU\s0, based on Pentium Pro core with \s-1MMX\s0 and \s-1SSE\s0 instruction |
| set support. |
| .IP "\fBpentium-m\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "pentium-m" |
| Intel Pentium M; low-power version of Intel Pentium \s-1III\s0 \s-1CPU\s0 |
| with \s-1MMX\s0, \s-1SSE\s0 and \s-1SSE2\s0 instruction set support. Used by Centrino notebooks. |
| .IP "\fBpentium4\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "pentium4" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBpentium4m\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "pentium4m" |
| .PD |
| Intel Pentium 4 \s-1CPU\s0 with \s-1MMX\s0, \s-1SSE\s0 and \s-1SSE2\s0 instruction set support. |
| .IP "\fBprescott\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "prescott" |
| Improved version of Intel Pentium 4 \s-1CPU\s0 with \s-1MMX\s0, \s-1SSE\s0, \s-1SSE2\s0 and \s-1SSE3\s0 instruction |
| set support. |
| .IP "\fBnocona\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "nocona" |
| Improved version of Intel Pentium 4 \s-1CPU\s0 with 64\-bit extensions, \s-1MMX\s0, \s-1SSE\s0, |
| \&\s-1SSE2\s0 and \s-1SSE3\s0 instruction set support. |
| .IP "\fBcore2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "core2" |
| Intel Core 2 \s-1CPU\s0 with 64\-bit extensions, \s-1MMX\s0, \s-1SSE\s0, \s-1SSE2\s0, \s-1SSE3\s0 and \s-1SSSE3\s0 |
| instruction set support. |
| .IP "\fBcorei7\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "corei7" |
| Intel Core i7 \s-1CPU\s0 with 64\-bit extensions, \s-1MMX\s0, \s-1SSE\s0, \s-1SSE2\s0, \s-1SSE3\s0, \s-1SSSE3\s0, \s-1SSE4\s0.1 |
| and \s-1SSE4\s0.2 instruction set support. |
| .IP "\fBcorei7\-avx\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "corei7-avx" |
| Intel Core i7 \s-1CPU\s0 with 64\-bit extensions, \s-1MMX\s0, \s-1SSE\s0, \s-1SSE2\s0, \s-1SSE3\s0, \s-1SSSE3\s0, |
| \&\s-1SSE4\s0.1, \s-1SSE4\s0.2, \s-1AVX\s0, \s-1AES\s0 and \s-1PCLMUL\s0 instruction set support. |
| .IP "\fBcore-avx-i\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "core-avx-i" |
| Intel Core \s-1CPU\s0 with 64\-bit extensions, \s-1MMX\s0, \s-1SSE\s0, \s-1SSE2\s0, \s-1SSE3\s0, \s-1SSSE3\s0, |
| \&\s-1SSE4\s0.1, \s-1SSE4\s0.2, \s-1AVX\s0, \s-1AES\s0, \s-1PCLMUL\s0, \s-1FSGSBASE\s0, \s-1RDRND\s0 and F16C instruction |
| set support. |
| .IP "\fBcore\-avx2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "core-avx2" |
| Intel Core \s-1CPU\s0 with 64\-bit extensions, \s-1MOVBE\s0, \s-1MMX\s0, \s-1SSE\s0, \s-1SSE2\s0, \s-1SSE3\s0, \s-1SSSE3\s0, |
| \&\s-1SSE4\s0.1, \s-1SSE4\s0.2, \s-1AVX\s0, \s-1AVX2\s0, \s-1AES\s0, \s-1PCLMUL\s0, \s-1FSGSBASE\s0, \s-1RDRND\s0, \s-1FMA\s0, \s-1BMI\s0, \s-1BMI2\s0 |
| and F16C instruction set support. |
| .IP "\fBatom\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "atom" |
| Intel Atom \s-1CPU\s0 with 64\-bit extensions, \s-1MOVBE\s0, \s-1MMX\s0, \s-1SSE\s0, \s-1SSE2\s0, \s-1SSE3\s0 and \s-1SSSE3\s0 |
| instruction set support. |
| .IP "\fBk6\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "k6" |
| \&\s-1AMD\s0 K6 \s-1CPU\s0 with \s-1MMX\s0 instruction set support. |
| .IP "\fBk6\-2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "k6-2" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBk6\-3\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "k6-3" |
| .PD |
| Improved versions of \s-1AMD\s0 K6 \s-1CPU\s0 with \s-1MMX\s0 and 3DNow! instruction set support. |
| .IP "\fBathlon\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "athlon" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBathlon-tbird\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "athlon-tbird" |
| .PD |
| \&\s-1AMD\s0 Athlon \s-1CPU\s0 with \s-1MMX\s0, 3dNOW!, enhanced 3DNow! and \s-1SSE\s0 prefetch instructions |
| support. |
| .IP "\fBathlon\-4\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "athlon-4" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBathlon-xp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "athlon-xp" |
| .IP "\fBathlon-mp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "athlon-mp" |
| .PD |
| Improved \s-1AMD\s0 Athlon \s-1CPU\s0 with \s-1MMX\s0, 3DNow!, enhanced 3DNow! and full \s-1SSE\s0 |
| instruction set support. |
| .IP "\fBk8\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "k8" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBopteron\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "opteron" |
| .IP "\fBathlon64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "athlon64" |
| .IP "\fBathlon-fx\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "athlon-fx" |
| .PD |
| Processors based on the \s-1AMD\s0 K8 core with x86\-64 instruction set support, |
| including the \s-1AMD\s0 Opteron, Athlon 64, and Athlon 64 \s-1FX\s0 processors. |
| (This supersets \s-1MMX\s0, \s-1SSE\s0, \s-1SSE2\s0, 3DNow!, enhanced 3DNow! and 64\-bit |
| instruction set extensions.) |
| .IP "\fBk8\-sse3\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "k8-sse3" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBopteron\-sse3\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "opteron-sse3" |
| .IP "\fBathlon64\-sse3\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "athlon64-sse3" |
| .PD |
| Improved versions of \s-1AMD\s0 K8 cores with \s-1SSE3\s0 instruction set support. |
| .IP "\fBamdfam10\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "amdfam10" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBbarcelona\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "barcelona" |
| .PD |
| CPUs based on \s-1AMD\s0 Family 10h cores with x86\-64 instruction set support. (This |
| supersets \s-1MMX\s0, \s-1SSE\s0, \s-1SSE2\s0, \s-1SSE3\s0, \s-1SSE4A\s0, 3DNow!, enhanced 3DNow!, \s-1ABM\s0 and 64\-bit |
| instruction set extensions.) |
| .IP "\fBbdver1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "bdver1" |
| CPUs based on \s-1AMD\s0 Family 15h cores with x86\-64 instruction set support. (This |
| supersets \s-1FMA4\s0, \s-1AVX\s0, \s-1XOP\s0, \s-1LWP\s0, \s-1AES\s0, \s-1PCL_MUL\s0, \s-1CX16\s0, \s-1MMX\s0, \s-1SSE\s0, \s-1SSE2\s0, \s-1SSE3\s0, \s-1SSE4A\s0, |
| \&\s-1SSSE3\s0, \s-1SSE4\s0.1, \s-1SSE4\s0.2, \s-1ABM\s0 and 64\-bit instruction set extensions.) |
| .IP "\fBbdver2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "bdver2" |
| \&\s-1AMD\s0 Family 15h core based CPUs with x86\-64 instruction set support. (This |
| supersets \s-1BMI\s0, \s-1TBM\s0, F16C, \s-1FMA\s0, \s-1AVX\s0, \s-1XOP\s0, \s-1LWP\s0, \s-1AES\s0, \s-1PCL_MUL\s0, \s-1CX16\s0, \s-1MMX\s0, \s-1SSE\s0, |
| \&\s-1SSE2\s0, \s-1SSE3\s0, \s-1SSE4A\s0, \s-1SSSE3\s0, \s-1SSE4\s0.1, \s-1SSE4\s0.2, \s-1ABM\s0 and 64\-bit instruction set |
| extensions.) |
| .IP "\fBbdver3\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "bdver3" |
| \&\s-1AMD\s0 Family 15h core based CPUs with x86\-64 instruction set support. (This |
| supersets \s-1BMI\s0, \s-1TBM\s0, F16C, \s-1FMA\s0, \s-1AVX\s0, \s-1XOP\s0, \s-1LWP\s0, \s-1AES\s0, \s-1PCL_MUL\s0, \s-1CX16\s0, \s-1MMX\s0, \s-1SSE\s0, |
| \&\s-1SSE2\s0, \s-1SSE3\s0, \s-1SSE4A\s0, \s-1SSSE3\s0, \s-1SSE4\s0.1, \s-1SSE4\s0.2, \s-1ABM\s0 and 64\-bit instruction set |
| extensions. |
| .IP "\fBbtver1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "btver1" |
| CPUs based on \s-1AMD\s0 Family 14h cores with x86\-64 instruction set support. (This |
| supersets \s-1MMX\s0, \s-1SSE\s0, \s-1SSE2\s0, \s-1SSE3\s0, \s-1SSSE3\s0, \s-1SSE4A\s0, \s-1CX16\s0, \s-1ABM\s0 and 64\-bit |
| instruction set extensions.) |
| .IP "\fBbtver2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "btver2" |
| CPUs based on \s-1AMD\s0 Family 16h cores with x86\-64 instruction set support. This |
| includes \s-1MOVBE\s0, F16C, \s-1BMI\s0, \s-1AVX\s0, \s-1PCL_MUL\s0, \s-1AES\s0, \s-1SSE4\s0.2, \s-1SSE4\s0.1, \s-1CX16\s0, \s-1ABM\s0, |
| \&\s-1SSE4A\s0, \s-1SSSE3\s0, \s-1SSE3\s0, \s-1SSE2\s0, \s-1SSE\s0, \s-1MMX\s0 and 64\-bit instruction set extensions. |
| .IP "\fBwinchip\-c6\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "winchip-c6" |
| \&\s-1IDT\s0 WinChip C6 \s-1CPU\s0, dealt in same way as i486 with additional \s-1MMX\s0 instruction |
| set support. |
| .IP "\fBwinchip2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "winchip2" |
| \&\s-1IDT\s0 WinChip 2 \s-1CPU\s0, dealt in same way as i486 with additional \s-1MMX\s0 and 3DNow! |
| instruction set support. |
| .IP "\fBc3\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "c3" |
| \&\s-1VIA\s0 C3 \s-1CPU\s0 with \s-1MMX\s0 and 3DNow! instruction set support. (No scheduling is |
| implemented for this chip.) |
| .IP "\fBc3\-2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "c3-2" |
| \&\s-1VIA\s0 C3\-2 (Nehemiah/C5XL) \s-1CPU\s0 with \s-1MMX\s0 and \s-1SSE\s0 instruction set support. |
| (No scheduling is |
| implemented for this chip.) |
| .IP "\fBgeode\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "geode" |
| \&\s-1AMD\s0 Geode embedded processor with \s-1MMX\s0 and 3DNow! instruction set support. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-mtune=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtune=cpu-type" |
| Tune to \fIcpu-type\fR everything applicable about the generated code, except |
| for the \s-1ABI\s0 and the set of available instructions. |
| While picking a specific \fIcpu-type\fR schedules things appropriately |
| for that particular chip, the compiler does not generate any code that |
| cannot run on the default machine type unless you use a |
| \&\fB\-march=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR option. |
| For example, if \s-1GCC\s0 is configured for i686\-pc\-linux\-gnu |
| then \fB\-mtune=pentium4\fR generates code that is tuned for Pentium 4 |
| but still runs on i686 machines. |
| .Sp |
| The choices for \fIcpu-type\fR are the same as for \fB\-march\fR. |
| In addition, \fB\-mtune\fR supports an extra choice for \fIcpu-type\fR: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBgeneric\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "generic" |
| Produce code optimized for the most common \s-1IA32/AMD64/EM64T\s0 processors. |
| If you know the \s-1CPU\s0 on which your code will run, then you should use |
| the corresponding \fB\-mtune\fR or \fB\-march\fR option instead of |
| \&\fB\-mtune=generic\fR. But, if you do not know exactly what \s-1CPU\s0 users |
| of your application will have, then you should use this option. |
| .Sp |
| As new processors are deployed in the marketplace, the behavior of this |
| option will change. Therefore, if you upgrade to a newer version of |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0, code generation controlled by this option will change to reflect |
| the processors |
| that are most common at the time that version of \s-1GCC\s0 is released. |
| .Sp |
| There is no \fB\-march=generic\fR option because \fB\-march\fR |
| indicates the instruction set the compiler can use, and there is no |
| generic instruction set applicable to all processors. In contrast, |
| \&\fB\-mtune\fR indicates the processor (or, in this case, collection of |
| processors) for which the code is optimized. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcpu=cpu-type" |
| A deprecated synonym for \fB\-mtune\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfpmath=\fR\fIunit\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfpmath=unit" |
| Generate floating-point arithmetic for selected unit \fIunit\fR. The choices |
| for \fIunit\fR are: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fB387\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "387" |
| Use the standard 387 floating-point coprocessor present on the majority of chips and |
| emulated otherwise. Code compiled with this option runs almost everywhere. |
| The temporary results are computed in 80\-bit precision instead of the precision |
| specified by the type, resulting in slightly different results compared to most |
| of other chips. See \fB\-ffloat\-store\fR for more detailed description. |
| .Sp |
| This is the default choice for i386 compiler. |
| .IP "\fBsse\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "sse" |
| Use scalar floating-point instructions present in the \s-1SSE\s0 instruction set. |
| This instruction set is supported by Pentium \s-1III\s0 and newer chips, |
| and in the \s-1AMD\s0 line |
| by Athlon\-4, Athlon \s-1XP\s0 and Athlon \s-1MP\s0 chips. The earlier version of the \s-1SSE\s0 |
| instruction set supports only single-precision arithmetic, thus the double and |
| extended-precision arithmetic are still done using 387. A later version, present |
| only in Pentium 4 and \s-1AMD\s0 x86\-64 chips, supports double-precision |
| arithmetic too. |
| .Sp |
| For the i386 compiler, you must use \fB\-march=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR, \fB\-msse\fR |
| or \fB\-msse2\fR switches to enable \s-1SSE\s0 extensions and make this option |
| effective. For the x86\-64 compiler, these extensions are enabled by default. |
| .Sp |
| The resulting code should be considerably faster in the majority of cases and avoid |
| the numerical instability problems of 387 code, but may break some existing |
| code that expects temporaries to be 80 bits. |
| .Sp |
| This is the default choice for the x86\-64 compiler. |
| .IP "\fBsse,387\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "sse,387" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBsse+387\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "sse+387" |
| .IP "\fBboth\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "both" |
| .PD |
| Attempt to utilize both instruction sets at once. This effectively doubles the |
| amount of available registers, and on chips with separate execution units for |
| 387 and \s-1SSE\s0 the execution resources too. Use this option with care, as it is |
| still experimental, because the \s-1GCC\s0 register allocator does not model separate |
| functional units well, resulting in unstable performance. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-masm=\fR\fIdialect\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-masm=dialect" |
| Output assembly instructions using selected \fIdialect\fR. Supported |
| choices are \fBintel\fR or \fBatt\fR (the default). Darwin does |
| not support \fBintel\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mieee\-fp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mieee-fp" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-ieee\-fp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-ieee-fp" |
| .PD |
| Control whether or not the compiler uses \s-1IEEE\s0 floating-point |
| comparisons. These correctly handle the case where the result of a |
| comparison is unordered. |
| .IP "\fB\-msoft\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msoft-float" |
| Generate output containing library calls for floating point. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fBWarning:\fR the requisite libraries are not part of \s-1GCC\s0. |
| Normally the facilities of the machine's usual C compiler are used, but |
| this can't be done directly in cross-compilation. You must make your |
| own arrangements to provide suitable library functions for |
| cross-compilation. |
| .Sp |
| On machines where a function returns floating-point results in the 80387 |
| register stack, some floating-point opcodes may be emitted even if |
| \&\fB\-msoft\-float\fR is used. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fp\-ret\-in\-387\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fp-ret-in-387" |
| Do not use the \s-1FPU\s0 registers for return values of functions. |
| .Sp |
| The usual calling convention has functions return values of types |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`float\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`double\*(C'\fR in an \s-1FPU\s0 register, even if there |
| is no \s-1FPU\s0. The idea is that the operating system should emulate |
| an \s-1FPU\s0. |
| .Sp |
| The option \fB\-mno\-fp\-ret\-in\-387\fR causes such values to be returned |
| in ordinary \s-1CPU\s0 registers instead. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fancy\-math\-387\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fancy-math-387" |
| Some 387 emulators do not support the \f(CW\*(C`sin\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`cos\*(C'\fR and |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`sqrt\*(C'\fR instructions for the 387. Specify this option to avoid |
| generating those instructions. This option is the default on FreeBSD, |
| OpenBSD and NetBSD. This option is overridden when \fB\-march\fR |
| indicates that the target \s-1CPU\s0 always has an \s-1FPU\s0 and so the |
| instruction does not need emulation. These |
| instructions are not generated unless you also use the |
| \&\fB\-funsafe\-math\-optimizations\fR switch. |
| .IP "\fB\-malign\-double\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-malign-double" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-align\-double\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-align-double" |
| .PD |
| Control whether \s-1GCC\s0 aligns \f(CW\*(C`double\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`long double\*(C'\fR, and |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`long long\*(C'\fR variables on a two-word boundary or a one-word |
| boundary. Aligning \f(CW\*(C`double\*(C'\fR variables on a two-word boundary |
| produces code that runs somewhat faster on a Pentium at the |
| expense of more memory. |
| .Sp |
| On x86\-64, \fB\-malign\-double\fR is enabled by default. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fBWarning:\fR if you use the \fB\-malign\-double\fR switch, |
| structures containing the above types are aligned differently than |
| the published application binary interface specifications for the 386 |
| and are not binary compatible with structures in code compiled |
| without that switch. |
| .IP "\fB\-m96bit\-long\-double\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m96bit-long-double" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-m128bit\-long\-double\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m128bit-long-double" |
| .PD |
| These switches control the size of \f(CW\*(C`long double\*(C'\fR type. The i386 |
| application binary interface specifies the size to be 96 bits, |
| so \fB\-m96bit\-long\-double\fR is the default in 32\-bit mode. |
| .Sp |
| Modern architectures (Pentium and newer) prefer \f(CW\*(C`long double\*(C'\fR |
| to be aligned to an 8\- or 16\-byte boundary. In arrays or structures |
| conforming to the \s-1ABI\s0, this is not possible. So specifying |
| \&\fB\-m128bit\-long\-double\fR aligns \f(CW\*(C`long double\*(C'\fR |
| to a 16\-byte boundary by padding the \f(CW\*(C`long double\*(C'\fR with an additional |
| 32\-bit zero. |
| .Sp |
| In the x86\-64 compiler, \fB\-m128bit\-long\-double\fR is the default choice as |
| its \s-1ABI\s0 specifies that \f(CW\*(C`long double\*(C'\fR is aligned on 16\-byte boundary. |
| .Sp |
| Notice that neither of these options enable any extra precision over the x87 |
| standard of 80 bits for a \f(CW\*(C`long double\*(C'\fR. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fBWarning:\fR if you override the default value for your target \s-1ABI\s0, this |
| changes the size of |
| structures and arrays containing \f(CW\*(C`long double\*(C'\fR variables, |
| as well as modifying the function calling convention for functions taking |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`long double\*(C'\fR. Hence they are not binary-compatible |
| with code compiled without that switch. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlong\-double\-64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlong-double-64" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mlong\-double\-80\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlong-double-80" |
| .PD |
| These switches control the size of \f(CW\*(C`long double\*(C'\fR type. A size |
| of 64 bits makes the \f(CW\*(C`long double\*(C'\fR type equivalent to the \f(CW\*(C`double\*(C'\fR |
| type. This is the default for Bionic C library. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fBWarning:\fR if you override the default value for your target \s-1ABI\s0, this |
| changes the size of |
| structures and arrays containing \f(CW\*(C`long double\*(C'\fR variables, |
| as well as modifying the function calling convention for functions taking |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`long double\*(C'\fR. Hence they are not binary-compatible |
| with code compiled without that switch. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlarge\-data\-threshold=\fR\fIthreshold\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlarge-data-threshold=threshold" |
| When \fB\-mcmodel=medium\fR is specified, data objects larger than |
| \&\fIthreshold\fR are placed in the large data section. This value must be the |
| same across all objects linked into the binary, and defaults to 65535. |
| .IP "\fB\-mrtd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrtd" |
| Use a different function-calling convention, in which functions that |
| take a fixed number of arguments return with the \f(CW\*(C`ret \f(CInum\f(CW\*(C'\fR |
| instruction, which pops their arguments while returning. This saves one |
| instruction in the caller since there is no need to pop the arguments |
| there. |
| .Sp |
| You can specify that an individual function is called with this calling |
| sequence with the function attribute \fBstdcall\fR. You can also |
| override the \fB\-mrtd\fR option by using the function attribute |
| \&\fBcdecl\fR. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fBWarning:\fR this calling convention is incompatible with the one |
| normally used on Unix, so you cannot use it if you need to call |
| libraries compiled with the Unix compiler. |
| .Sp |
| Also, you must provide function prototypes for all functions that |
| take variable numbers of arguments (including \f(CW\*(C`printf\*(C'\fR); |
| otherwise incorrect code is generated for calls to those |
| functions. |
| .Sp |
| In addition, seriously incorrect code results if you call a |
| function with too many arguments. (Normally, extra arguments are |
| harmlessly ignored.) |
| .IP "\fB\-mregparm=\fR\fInum\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mregparm=num" |
| Control how many registers are used to pass integer arguments. By |
| default, no registers are used to pass arguments, and at most 3 |
| registers can be used. You can control this behavior for a specific |
| function by using the function attribute \fBregparm\fR. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fBWarning:\fR if you use this switch, and |
| \&\fInum\fR is nonzero, then you must build all modules with the same |
| value, including any libraries. This includes the system libraries and |
| startup modules. |
| .IP "\fB\-msseregparm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msseregparm" |
| Use \s-1SSE\s0 register passing conventions for float and double arguments |
| and return values. You can control this behavior for a specific |
| function by using the function attribute \fBsseregparm\fR. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fBWarning:\fR if you use this switch then you must build all |
| modules with the same value, including any libraries. This includes |
| the system libraries and startup modules. |
| .IP "\fB\-mvect8\-ret\-in\-mem\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mvect8-ret-in-mem" |
| Return 8\-byte vectors in memory instead of \s-1MMX\s0 registers. This is the |
| default on Solaris@tie{}8 and 9 and VxWorks to match the \s-1ABI\s0 of the Sun |
| Studio compilers until version 12. Later compiler versions (starting |
| with Studio 12 Update@tie{}1) follow the \s-1ABI\s0 used by other x86 targets, which |
| is the default on Solaris@tie{}10 and later. \fIOnly\fR use this option if |
| you need to remain compatible with existing code produced by those |
| previous compiler versions or older versions of \s-1GCC\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-mpc32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpc32" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mpc64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpc64" |
| .IP "\fB\-mpc80\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpc80" |
| .PD |
| Set 80387 floating-point precision to 32, 64 or 80 bits. When \fB\-mpc32\fR |
| is specified, the significands of results of floating-point operations are |
| rounded to 24 bits (single precision); \fB\-mpc64\fR rounds the |
| significands of results of floating-point operations to 53 bits (double |
| precision) and \fB\-mpc80\fR rounds the significands of results of |
| floating-point operations to 64 bits (extended double precision), which is |
| the default. When this option is used, floating-point operations in higher |
| precisions are not available to the programmer without setting the \s-1FPU\s0 |
| control word explicitly. |
| .Sp |
| Setting the rounding of floating-point operations to less than the default |
| 80 bits can speed some programs by 2% or more. Note that some mathematical |
| libraries assume that extended-precision (80\-bit) floating-point operations |
| are enabled by default; routines in such libraries could suffer significant |
| loss of accuracy, typically through so-called \*(L"catastrophic cancellation\*(R", |
| when this option is used to set the precision to less than extended precision. |
| .IP "\fB\-mstackrealign\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mstackrealign" |
| Realign the stack at entry. On the Intel x86, the \fB\-mstackrealign\fR |
| option generates an alternate prologue and epilogue that realigns the |
| run-time stack if necessary. This supports mixing legacy codes that keep |
| 4\-byte stack alignment with modern codes that keep 16\-byte stack alignment for |
| \&\s-1SSE\s0 compatibility. See also the attribute \f(CW\*(C`force_align_arg_pointer\*(C'\fR, |
| applicable to individual functions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mpreferred\-stack\-boundary=\fR\fInum\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpreferred-stack-boundary=num" |
| Attempt to keep the stack boundary aligned to a 2 raised to \fInum\fR |
| byte boundary. If \fB\-mpreferred\-stack\-boundary\fR is not specified, |
| the default is 4 (16 bytes or 128 bits). |
| .Sp |
| \&\fBWarning:\fR When generating code for the x86\-64 architecture with |
| \&\s-1SSE\s0 extensions disabled, \fB\-mpreferred\-stack\-boundary=3\fR can be |
| used to keep the stack boundary aligned to 8 byte boundary. Since |
| x86\-64 \s-1ABI\s0 require 16 byte stack alignment, this is \s-1ABI\s0 incompatible and |
| intended to be used in controlled environment where stack space is |
| important limitation. This option will lead to wrong code when functions |
| compiled with 16 byte stack alignment (such as functions from a standard |
| library) are called with misaligned stack. In this case, \s-1SSE\s0 |
| instructions may lead to misaligned memory access traps. In addition, |
| variable arguments will be handled incorrectly for 16 byte aligned |
| objects (including x87 long double and _\|_int128), leading to wrong |
| results. You must build all modules with |
| \&\fB\-mpreferred\-stack\-boundary=3\fR, including any libraries. This |
| includes the system libraries and startup modules. |
| .IP "\fB\-mincoming\-stack\-boundary=\fR\fInum\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mincoming-stack-boundary=num" |
| Assume the incoming stack is aligned to a 2 raised to \fInum\fR byte |
| boundary. If \fB\-mincoming\-stack\-boundary\fR is not specified, |
| the one specified by \fB\-mpreferred\-stack\-boundary\fR is used. |
| .Sp |
| On Pentium and Pentium Pro, \f(CW\*(C`double\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`long double\*(C'\fR values |
| should be aligned to an 8\-byte boundary (see \fB\-malign\-double\fR) or |
| suffer significant run time performance penalties. On Pentium \s-1III\s0, the |
| Streaming \s-1SIMD\s0 Extension (\s-1SSE\s0) data type \f(CW\*(C`_\|_m128\*(C'\fR may not work |
| properly if it is not 16\-byte aligned. |
| .Sp |
| To ensure proper alignment of this values on the stack, the stack boundary |
| must be as aligned as that required by any value stored on the stack. |
| Further, every function must be generated such that it keeps the stack |
| aligned. Thus calling a function compiled with a higher preferred |
| stack boundary from a function compiled with a lower preferred stack |
| boundary most likely misaligns the stack. It is recommended that |
| libraries that use callbacks always use the default setting. |
| .Sp |
| This extra alignment does consume extra stack space, and generally |
| increases code size. Code that is sensitive to stack space usage, such |
| as embedded systems and operating system kernels, may want to reduce the |
| preferred alignment to \fB\-mpreferred\-stack\-boundary=2\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmmx\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmmx" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-mmx\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-mmx" |
| .IP "\fB\-msse\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msse" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sse\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sse" |
| .IP "\fB\-msse2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msse2" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sse2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sse2" |
| .IP "\fB\-msse3\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msse3" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sse3\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sse3" |
| .IP "\fB\-mssse3\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mssse3" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-ssse3\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-ssse3" |
| .IP "\fB\-msse4.1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msse4.1" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sse4.1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sse4.1" |
| .IP "\fB\-msse4.2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msse4.2" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sse4.2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sse4.2" |
| .IP "\fB\-msse4\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msse4" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sse4\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sse4" |
| .IP "\fB\-mavx\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mavx" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-avx\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-avx" |
| .IP "\fB\-mavx2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mavx2" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-avx2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-avx2" |
| .IP "\fB\-maes\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-maes" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-aes\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-aes" |
| .IP "\fB\-mpclmul\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpclmul" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-pclmul\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-pclmul" |
| .IP "\fB\-mfsgsbase\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfsgsbase" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fsgsbase\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fsgsbase" |
| .IP "\fB\-mrdrnd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrdrnd" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-rdrnd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-rdrnd" |
| .IP "\fB\-mf16c\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mf16c" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-f16c\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-f16c" |
| .IP "\fB\-mfma\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfma" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fma\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fma" |
| .IP "\fB\-msse4a\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msse4a" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sse4a\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sse4a" |
| .IP "\fB\-mfma4\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfma4" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fma4\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fma4" |
| .IP "\fB\-mxop\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mxop" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-xop\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-xop" |
| .IP "\fB\-mlwp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlwp" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-lwp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-lwp" |
| .IP "\fB\-m3dnow\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m3dnow" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-3dnow\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-3dnow" |
| .IP "\fB\-mpopcnt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpopcnt" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-popcnt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-popcnt" |
| .IP "\fB\-mabm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mabm" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-abm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-abm" |
| .IP "\fB\-mbmi\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbmi" |
| .IP "\fB\-mbmi2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbmi2" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-bmi\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-bmi" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-bmi2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-bmi2" |
| .IP "\fB\-mlzcnt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlzcnt" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-lzcnt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-lzcnt" |
| .IP "\fB\-mrtm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrtm" |
| .IP "\fB\-mtbm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtbm" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-tbm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-tbm" |
| .PD |
| These switches enable or disable the use of instructions in the \s-1MMX\s0, \s-1SSE\s0, |
| \&\s-1SSE2\s0, \s-1SSE3\s0, \s-1SSSE3\s0, \s-1SSE4\s0.1, \s-1AVX\s0, \s-1AVX2\s0, \s-1AES\s0, \s-1PCLMUL\s0, \s-1FSGSBASE\s0, \s-1RDRND\s0, F16C, |
| \&\s-1FMA\s0, \s-1SSE4A\s0, \s-1FMA4\s0, \s-1XOP\s0, \s-1LWP\s0, \s-1ABM\s0, \s-1BMI\s0, \s-1BMI2\s0, \s-1LZCNT\s0, \s-1RTM\s0 or 3DNow! |
| extended instruction sets. |
| These extensions are also available as built-in functions: see |
| \&\fBX86 Built-in Functions\fR, for details of the functions enabled and |
| disabled by these switches. |
| .Sp |
| To generate \s-1SSE/SSE2\s0 instructions automatically from floating-point |
| code (as opposed to 387 instructions), see \fB\-mfpmath=sse\fR. |
| .Sp |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 depresses SSEx instructions when \fB\-mavx\fR is used. Instead, it |
| generates new \s-1AVX\s0 instructions or \s-1AVX\s0 equivalence for all SSEx instructions |
| when needed. |
| .Sp |
| These options enable \s-1GCC\s0 to use these extended instructions in |
| generated code, even without \fB\-mfpmath=sse\fR. Applications that |
| perform run-time \s-1CPU\s0 detection must compile separate files for each |
| supported architecture, using the appropriate flags. In particular, |
| the file containing the \s-1CPU\s0 detection code should be compiled without |
| these options. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcld\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcld" |
| This option instructs \s-1GCC\s0 to emit a \f(CW\*(C`cld\*(C'\fR instruction in the prologue |
| of functions that use string instructions. String instructions depend on |
| the \s-1DF\s0 flag to select between autoincrement or autodecrement mode. While the |
| \&\s-1ABI\s0 specifies the \s-1DF\s0 flag to be cleared on function entry, some operating |
| systems violate this specification by not clearing the \s-1DF\s0 flag in their |
| exception dispatchers. The exception handler can be invoked with the \s-1DF\s0 flag |
| set, which leads to wrong direction mode when string instructions are used. |
| This option can be enabled by default on 32\-bit x86 targets by configuring |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 with the \fB\-\-enable\-cld\fR configure option. Generation of \f(CW\*(C`cld\*(C'\fR |
| instructions can be suppressed with the \fB\-mno\-cld\fR compiler option |
| in this case. |
| .IP "\fB\-mvzeroupper\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mvzeroupper" |
| This option instructs \s-1GCC\s0 to emit a \f(CW\*(C`vzeroupper\*(C'\fR instruction |
| before a transfer of control flow out of the function to minimize |
| the \s-1AVX\s0 to \s-1SSE\s0 transition penalty as well as remove unnecessary \f(CW\*(C`zeroupper\*(C'\fR |
| intrinsics. |
| .IP "\fB\-mprefer\-avx128\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mprefer-avx128" |
| This option instructs \s-1GCC\s0 to use 128\-bit \s-1AVX\s0 instructions instead of |
| 256\-bit \s-1AVX\s0 instructions in the auto-vectorizer. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcx16\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcx16" |
| This option enables \s-1GCC\s0 to generate \f(CW\*(C`CMPXCHG16B\*(C'\fR instructions. |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`CMPXCHG16B\*(C'\fR allows for atomic operations on 128\-bit double quadword |
| (or oword) data types. |
| This is useful for high-resolution counters that can be updated |
| by multiple processors (or cores). This instruction is generated as part of |
| atomic built-in functions: see \fB_\|_sync Builtins\fR or |
| \&\fB_\|_atomic Builtins\fR for details. |
| .IP "\fB\-msahf\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msahf" |
| This option enables generation of \f(CW\*(C`SAHF\*(C'\fR instructions in 64\-bit code. |
| Early Intel Pentium 4 CPUs with Intel 64 support, |
| prior to the introduction of Pentium 4 G1 step in December 2005, |
| lacked the \f(CW\*(C`LAHF\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`SAHF\*(C'\fR instructions |
| which were supported by \s-1AMD64\s0. |
| These are load and store instructions, respectively, for certain status flags. |
| In 64\-bit mode, the \f(CW\*(C`SAHF\*(C'\fR instruction is used to optimize \f(CW\*(C`fmod\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`drem\*(C'\fR, and \f(CW\*(C`remainder\*(C'\fR built-in functions; |
| see \fBOther Builtins\fR for details. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmovbe\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmovbe" |
| This option enables use of the \f(CW\*(C`movbe\*(C'\fR instruction to implement |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_builtin_bswap32\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`_\|_builtin_bswap64\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcrc32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcrc32" |
| This option enables built-in functions \f(CW\*(C`_\|_builtin_ia32_crc32qi\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_builtin_ia32_crc32hi\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`_\|_builtin_ia32_crc32si\*(C'\fR and |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_builtin_ia32_crc32di\*(C'\fR to generate the \f(CW\*(C`crc32\*(C'\fR machine instruction. |
| .IP "\fB\-mrecip\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrecip" |
| This option enables use of \f(CW\*(C`RCPSS\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`RSQRTSS\*(C'\fR instructions |
| (and their vectorized variants \f(CW\*(C`RCPPS\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`RSQRTPS\*(C'\fR) |
| with an additional Newton-Raphson step |
| to increase precision instead of \f(CW\*(C`DIVSS\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`SQRTSS\*(C'\fR |
| (and their vectorized |
| variants) for single-precision floating-point arguments. These instructions |
| are generated only when \fB\-funsafe\-math\-optimizations\fR is enabled |
| together with \fB\-finite\-math\-only\fR and \fB\-fno\-trapping\-math\fR. |
| Note that while the throughput of the sequence is higher than the throughput |
| of the non-reciprocal instruction, the precision of the sequence can be |
| decreased by up to 2 ulp (i.e. the inverse of 1.0 equals 0.99999994). |
| .Sp |
| Note that \s-1GCC\s0 implements \f(CW\*(C`1.0f/sqrtf(\f(CIx\f(CW)\*(C'\fR in terms of \f(CW\*(C`RSQRTSS\*(C'\fR |
| (or \f(CW\*(C`RSQRTPS\*(C'\fR) already with \fB\-ffast\-math\fR (or the above option |
| combination), and doesn't need \fB\-mrecip\fR. |
| .Sp |
| Also note that \s-1GCC\s0 emits the above sequence with additional Newton-Raphson step |
| for vectorized single-float division and vectorized \f(CW\*(C`sqrtf(\f(CIx\f(CW)\*(C'\fR |
| already with \fB\-ffast\-math\fR (or the above option combination), and |
| doesn't need \fB\-mrecip\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mrecip=\fR\fIopt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrecip=opt" |
| This option controls which reciprocal estimate instructions |
| may be used. \fIopt\fR is a comma-separated list of options, which may |
| be preceded by a \fB!\fR to invert the option: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBall\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "all" |
| Enable all estimate instructions. |
| .IP "\fBdefault\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "default" |
| Enable the default instructions, equivalent to \fB\-mrecip\fR. |
| .IP "\fBnone\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "none" |
| Disable all estimate instructions, equivalent to \fB\-mno\-recip\fR. |
| .IP "\fBdiv\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "div" |
| Enable the approximation for scalar division. |
| .IP "\fBvec-div\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "vec-div" |
| Enable the approximation for vectorized division. |
| .IP "\fBsqrt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "sqrt" |
| Enable the approximation for scalar square root. |
| .IP "\fBvec-sqrt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "vec-sqrt" |
| Enable the approximation for vectorized square root. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| So, for example, \fB\-mrecip=all,!sqrt\fR enables |
| all of the reciprocal approximations, except for square root. |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-mveclibabi=\fR\fItype\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mveclibabi=type" |
| Specifies the \s-1ABI\s0 type to use for vectorizing intrinsics using an |
| external library. Supported values for \fItype\fR are \fBsvml\fR |
| for the Intel short |
| vector math library and \fBacml\fR for the \s-1AMD\s0 math core library. |
| To use this option, both \fB\-ftree\-vectorize\fR and |
| \&\fB\-funsafe\-math\-optimizations\fR have to be enabled, and an \s-1SVML\s0 or \s-1ACML\s0 |
| ABI-compatible library must be specified at link time. |
| .Sp |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 currently emits calls to \f(CW\*(C`vmldExp2\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`vmldLn2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmldLog102\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmldLog102\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmldPow2\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`vmldTanh2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmldTan2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmldAtan2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmldAtanh2\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`vmldCbrt2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmldSinh2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmldSin2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmldAsinh2\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`vmldAsin2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmldCosh2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmldCos2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmldAcosh2\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`vmldAcos2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmlsExp4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmlsLn4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmlsLog104\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`vmlsLog104\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmlsPow4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmlsTanh4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmlsTan4\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`vmlsAtan4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmlsAtanh4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmlsCbrt4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmlsSinh4\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`vmlsSin4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmlsAsinh4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmlsAsin4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmlsCosh4\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`vmlsCos4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vmlsAcosh4\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`vmlsAcos4\*(C'\fR for corresponding |
| function type when \fB\-mveclibabi=svml\fR is used, and \f(CW\*(C`_\|_vrd2_sin\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_vrd2_cos\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`_\|_vrd2_exp\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`_\|_vrd2_log\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`_\|_vrd2_log2\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_vrd2_log10\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`_\|_vrs4_sinf\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`_\|_vrs4_cosf\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_vrs4_expf\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`_\|_vrs4_logf\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`_\|_vrs4_log2f\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_vrs4_log10f\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`_\|_vrs4_powf\*(C'\fR for the corresponding function type |
| when \fB\-mveclibabi=acml\fR is used. |
| .IP "\fB\-mabi=\fR\fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mabi=name" |
| Generate code for the specified calling convention. Permissible values |
| are \fBsysv\fR for the \s-1ABI\s0 used on GNU/Linux and other systems, and |
| \&\fBms\fR for the Microsoft \s-1ABI\s0. The default is to use the Microsoft |
| \&\s-1ABI\s0 when targeting Microsoft Windows and the SysV \s-1ABI\s0 on all other systems. |
| You can control this behavior for a specific function by |
| using the function attribute \fBms_abi\fR/\fBsysv_abi\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtls\-dialect=\fR\fItype\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtls-dialect=type" |
| Generate code to access thread-local storage using the \fBgnu\fR or |
| \&\fBgnu2\fR conventions. \fBgnu\fR is the conservative default; |
| \&\fBgnu2\fR is more efficient, but it may add compile\- and run-time |
| requirements that cannot be satisfied on all systems. |
| .IP "\fB\-mpush\-args\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpush-args" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-push\-args\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-push-args" |
| .PD |
| Use \s-1PUSH\s0 operations to store outgoing parameters. This method is shorter |
| and usually equally fast as method using \s-1SUB/MOV\s0 operations and is enabled |
| by default. In some cases disabling it may improve performance because of |
| improved scheduling and reduced dependencies. |
| .IP "\fB\-maccumulate\-outgoing\-args\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-maccumulate-outgoing-args" |
| If enabled, the maximum amount of space required for outgoing arguments is |
| computed in the function prologue. This is faster on most modern CPUs |
| because of reduced dependencies, improved scheduling and reduced stack usage |
| when the preferred stack boundary is not equal to 2. The drawback is a notable |
| increase in code size. This switch implies \fB\-mno\-push\-args\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mthreads\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mthreads" |
| Support thread-safe exception handling on MinGW. Programs that rely |
| on thread-safe exception handling must compile and link all code with the |
| \&\fB\-mthreads\fR option. When compiling, \fB\-mthreads\fR defines |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`\-D_MT\*(C'\fR; when linking, it links in a special thread helper library |
| \&\fB\-lmingwthrd\fR which cleans up per-thread exception-handling data. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-align\-stringops\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-align-stringops" |
| Do not align the destination of inlined string operations. This switch reduces |
| code size and improves performance in case the destination is already aligned, |
| but \s-1GCC\s0 doesn't know about it. |
| .IP "\fB\-minline\-all\-stringops\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-minline-all-stringops" |
| By default \s-1GCC\s0 inlines string operations only when the destination is |
| known to be aligned to least a 4\-byte boundary. |
| This enables more inlining and increases code |
| size, but may improve performance of code that depends on fast |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`memcpy\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`strlen\*(C'\fR, |
| and \f(CW\*(C`memset\*(C'\fR for short lengths. |
| .IP "\fB\-minline\-stringops\-dynamically\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-minline-stringops-dynamically" |
| For string operations of unknown size, use run-time checks with |
| inline code for small blocks and a library call for large blocks. |
| .IP "\fB\-mstringop\-strategy=\fR\fIalg\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mstringop-strategy=alg" |
| Override the internal decision heuristic for the particular algorithm to use |
| for inlining string operations. The allowed values for \fIalg\fR are: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBrep_byte\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "rep_byte" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBrep_4byte\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "rep_4byte" |
| .IP "\fBrep_8byte\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "rep_8byte" |
| .PD |
| Expand using i386 \f(CW\*(C`rep\*(C'\fR prefix of the specified size. |
| .IP "\fBbyte_loop\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "byte_loop" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBloop\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "loop" |
| .IP "\fBunrolled_loop\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "unrolled_loop" |
| .PD |
| Expand into an inline loop. |
| .IP "\fBlibcall\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "libcall" |
| Always use a library call. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-momit\-leaf\-frame\-pointer\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-momit-leaf-frame-pointer" |
| Don't keep the frame pointer in a register for leaf functions. This |
| avoids the instructions to save, set up, and restore frame pointers and |
| makes an extra register available in leaf functions. The option |
| \&\fB\-fomit\-leaf\-frame\-pointer\fR removes the frame pointer for leaf functions, |
| which might make debugging harder. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtls\-direct\-seg\-refs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtls-direct-seg-refs" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-tls\-direct\-seg\-refs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-tls-direct-seg-refs" |
| .PD |
| Controls whether \s-1TLS\s0 variables may be accessed with offsets from the |
| \&\s-1TLS\s0 segment register (\f(CW%gs\fR for 32\-bit, \f(CW%fs\fR for 64\-bit), |
| or whether the thread base pointer must be added. Whether or not this |
| is valid depends on the operating system, and whether it maps the |
| segment to cover the entire \s-1TLS\s0 area. |
| .Sp |
| For systems that use the \s-1GNU\s0 C Library, the default is on. |
| .IP "\fB\-msse2avx\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msse2avx" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sse2avx\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sse2avx" |
| .PD |
| Specify that the assembler should encode \s-1SSE\s0 instructions with \s-1VEX\s0 |
| prefix. The option \fB\-mavx\fR turns this on by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfentry\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfentry" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fentry\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fentry" |
| .PD |
| If profiling is active (\fB\-pg\fR), put the profiling |
| counter call before the prologue. |
| Note: On x86 architectures the attribute \f(CW\*(C`ms_hook_prologue\*(C'\fR |
| isn't possible at the moment for \fB\-mfentry\fR and \fB\-pg\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-m8bit\-idiv\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m8bit-idiv" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-8bit\-idiv\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-8bit-idiv" |
| .PD |
| On some processors, like Intel Atom, 8\-bit unsigned integer divide is |
| much faster than 32\-bit/64\-bit integer divide. This option generates a |
| run-time check. If both dividend and divisor are within range of 0 |
| to 255, 8\-bit unsigned integer divide is used instead of |
| 32\-bit/64\-bit integer divide. |
| .IP "\fB\-mavx256\-split\-unaligned\-load\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mavx256-split-unaligned-load" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mavx256\-split\-unaligned\-store\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mavx256-split-unaligned-store" |
| .PD |
| Split 32\-byte \s-1AVX\s0 unaligned load and store. |
| .PP |
| These \fB\-m\fR switches are supported in addition to the above |
| on x86\-64 processors in 64\-bit environments. |
| .IP "\fB\-m32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m32" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-m64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m64" |
| .IP "\fB\-mx32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mx32" |
| .PD |
| Generate code for a 32\-bit or 64\-bit environment. |
| The \fB\-m32\fR option sets \f(CW\*(C`int\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`long\*(C'\fR, and pointer types |
| to 32 bits, and |
| generates code that runs on any i386 system. |
| .Sp |
| The \fB\-m64\fR option sets \f(CW\*(C`int\*(C'\fR to 32 bits and \f(CW\*(C`long\*(C'\fR and pointer |
| types to 64 bits, and generates code for the x86\-64 architecture. |
| For Darwin only the \fB\-m64\fR option also turns off the \fB\-fno\-pic\fR |
| and \fB\-mdynamic\-no\-pic\fR options. |
| .Sp |
| The \fB\-mx32\fR option sets \f(CW\*(C`int\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`long\*(C'\fR, and pointer types |
| to 32 bits, and |
| generates code for the x86\-64 architecture. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-red\-zone\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-red-zone" |
| Do not use a so-called \*(L"red zone\*(R" for x86\-64 code. The red zone is mandated |
| by the x86\-64 \s-1ABI\s0; it is a 128\-byte area beyond the location of the |
| stack pointer that is not modified by signal or interrupt handlers |
| and therefore can be used for temporary data without adjusting the stack |
| pointer. The flag \fB\-mno\-red\-zone\fR disables this red zone. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcmodel=small\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcmodel=small" |
| Generate code for the small code model: the program and its symbols must |
| be linked in the lower 2 \s-1GB\s0 of the address space. Pointers are 64 bits. |
| Programs can be statically or dynamically linked. This is the default |
| code model. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcmodel=kernel\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcmodel=kernel" |
| Generate code for the kernel code model. The kernel runs in the |
| negative 2 \s-1GB\s0 of the address space. |
| This model has to be used for Linux kernel code. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcmodel=medium\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcmodel=medium" |
| Generate code for the medium model: the program is linked in the lower 2 |
| \&\s-1GB\s0 of the address space. Small symbols are also placed there. Symbols |
| with sizes larger than \fB\-mlarge\-data\-threshold\fR are put into |
| large data or \s-1BSS\s0 sections and can be located above 2GB. Programs can |
| be statically or dynamically linked. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcmodel=large\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcmodel=large" |
| Generate code for the large model. This model makes no assumptions |
| about addresses and sizes of sections. |
| .IP "\fB\-maddress\-mode=long\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-maddress-mode=long" |
| Generate code for long address mode. This is only supported for 64\-bit |
| and x32 environments. It is the default address mode for 64\-bit |
| environments. |
| .IP "\fB\-maddress\-mode=short\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-maddress-mode=short" |
| Generate code for short address mode. This is only supported for 32\-bit |
| and x32 environments. It is the default address mode for 32\-bit and |
| x32 environments. |
| .PP |
| \fIi386 and x86\-64 Windows Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "i386 and x86-64 Windows Options" |
| .PP |
| These additional options are available for Microsoft Windows targets: |
| .IP "\fB\-mconsole\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mconsole" |
| This option |
| specifies that a console application is to be generated, by |
| instructing the linker to set the \s-1PE\s0 header subsystem type |
| required for console applications. |
| This option is available for Cygwin and MinGW targets and is |
| enabled by default on those targets. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdll\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdll" |
| This option is available for Cygwin and MinGW targets. It |
| specifies that a DLL\-\-\-a dynamic link library\-\-\-is to be |
| generated, enabling the selection of the required runtime |
| startup object and entry point. |
| .IP "\fB\-mnop\-fun\-dllimport\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mnop-fun-dllimport" |
| This option is available for Cygwin and MinGW targets. It |
| specifies that the \f(CW\*(C`dllimport\*(C'\fR attribute should be ignored. |
| .IP "\fB\-mthread\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mthread" |
| This option is available for MinGW targets. It specifies |
| that MinGW-specific thread support is to be used. |
| .IP "\fB\-municode\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-municode" |
| This option is available for MinGW\-w64 targets. It causes |
| the \f(CW\*(C`UNICODE\*(C'\fR preprocessor macro to be predefined, and |
| chooses Unicode-capable runtime startup code. |
| .IP "\fB\-mwin32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mwin32" |
| This option is available for Cygwin and MinGW targets. It |
| specifies that the typical Microsoft Windows predefined macros are to |
| be set in the pre-processor, but does not influence the choice |
| of runtime library/startup code. |
| .IP "\fB\-mwindows\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mwindows" |
| This option is available for Cygwin and MinGW targets. It |
| specifies that a \s-1GUI\s0 application is to be generated by |
| instructing the linker to set the \s-1PE\s0 header subsystem type |
| appropriately. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-set\-stack\-executable\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-set-stack-executable" |
| This option is available for MinGW targets. It specifies that |
| the executable flag for the stack used by nested functions isn't |
| set. This is necessary for binaries running in kernel mode of |
| Microsoft Windows, as there the User32 \s-1API\s0, which is used to set executable |
| privileges, isn't available. |
| .IP "\fB\-fwritable\-relocated\-rdata\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fwritable-relocated-rdata" |
| This option is available for MinGW and Cygwin targets. It specifies |
| that relocated-data in read-only section is put into .data |
| section. This is a necessary for older runtimes not supporting |
| modification of .rdata sections for pseudo-relocation. |
| .IP "\fB\-mpe\-aligned\-commons\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpe-aligned-commons" |
| This option is available for Cygwin and MinGW targets. It |
| specifies that the \s-1GNU\s0 extension to the \s-1PE\s0 file format that |
| permits the correct alignment of \s-1COMMON\s0 variables should be |
| used when generating code. It is enabled by default if |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 detects that the target assembler found during configuration |
| supports the feature. |
| .PP |
| See also under \fBi386 and x86\-64 Options\fR for standard options. |
| .PP |
| \fI\s-1IA\-64\s0 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "IA-64 Options" |
| .PP |
| These are the \fB\-m\fR options defined for the Intel \s-1IA\-64\s0 architecture. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbig\-endian\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbig-endian" |
| Generate code for a big-endian target. This is the default for HP-UX. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlittle\-endian\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlittle-endian" |
| Generate code for a little-endian target. This is the default for \s-1AIX5\s0 |
| and GNU/Linux. |
| .IP "\fB\-mgnu\-as\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mgnu-as" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-gnu\-as\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-gnu-as" |
| .PD |
| Generate (or don't) code for the \s-1GNU\s0 assembler. This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mgnu\-ld\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mgnu-ld" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-gnu\-ld\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-gnu-ld" |
| .PD |
| Generate (or don't) code for the \s-1GNU\s0 linker. This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-pic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-pic" |
| Generate code that does not use a global pointer register. The result |
| is not position independent code, and violates the \s-1IA\-64\s0 \s-1ABI\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-mvolatile\-asm\-stop\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mvolatile-asm-stop" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-volatile\-asm\-stop\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-volatile-asm-stop" |
| .PD |
| Generate (or don't) a stop bit immediately before and after volatile asm |
| statements. |
| .IP "\fB\-mregister\-names\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mregister-names" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-register\-names\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-register-names" |
| .PD |
| Generate (or don't) \fBin\fR, \fBloc\fR, and \fBout\fR register names for |
| the stacked registers. This may make assembler output more readable. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sdata\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sdata" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-msdata\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msdata" |
| .PD |
| Disable (or enable) optimizations that use the small data section. This may |
| be useful for working around optimizer bugs. |
| .IP "\fB\-mconstant\-gp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mconstant-gp" |
| Generate code that uses a single constant global pointer value. This is |
| useful when compiling kernel code. |
| .IP "\fB\-mauto\-pic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mauto-pic" |
| Generate code that is self-relocatable. This implies \fB\-mconstant\-gp\fR. |
| This is useful when compiling firmware code. |
| .IP "\fB\-minline\-float\-divide\-min\-latency\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-minline-float-divide-min-latency" |
| Generate code for inline divides of floating-point values |
| using the minimum latency algorithm. |
| .IP "\fB\-minline\-float\-divide\-max\-throughput\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-minline-float-divide-max-throughput" |
| Generate code for inline divides of floating-point values |
| using the maximum throughput algorithm. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-inline\-float\-divide\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-inline-float-divide" |
| Do not generate inline code for divides of floating-point values. |
| .IP "\fB\-minline\-int\-divide\-min\-latency\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-minline-int-divide-min-latency" |
| Generate code for inline divides of integer values |
| using the minimum latency algorithm. |
| .IP "\fB\-minline\-int\-divide\-max\-throughput\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-minline-int-divide-max-throughput" |
| Generate code for inline divides of integer values |
| using the maximum throughput algorithm. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-inline\-int\-divide\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-inline-int-divide" |
| Do not generate inline code for divides of integer values. |
| .IP "\fB\-minline\-sqrt\-min\-latency\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-minline-sqrt-min-latency" |
| Generate code for inline square roots |
| using the minimum latency algorithm. |
| .IP "\fB\-minline\-sqrt\-max\-throughput\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-minline-sqrt-max-throughput" |
| Generate code for inline square roots |
| using the maximum throughput algorithm. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-inline\-sqrt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-inline-sqrt" |
| Do not generate inline code for \f(CW\*(C`sqrt\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfused\-madd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfused-madd" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fused\-madd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fused-madd" |
| .PD |
| Do (don't) generate code that uses the fused multiply/add or multiply/subtract |
| instructions. The default is to use these instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-dwarf2\-asm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-dwarf2-asm" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mdwarf2\-asm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdwarf2-asm" |
| .PD |
| Don't (or do) generate assembler code for the \s-1DWARF\s0 2 line number debugging |
| info. This may be useful when not using the \s-1GNU\s0 assembler. |
| .IP "\fB\-mearly\-stop\-bits\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mearly-stop-bits" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-early\-stop\-bits\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-early-stop-bits" |
| .PD |
| Allow stop bits to be placed earlier than immediately preceding the |
| instruction that triggered the stop bit. This can improve instruction |
| scheduling, but does not always do so. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfixed\-range=\fR\fIregister-range\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfixed-range=register-range" |
| Generate code treating the given register range as fixed registers. |
| A fixed register is one that the register allocator cannot use. This is |
| useful when compiling kernel code. A register range is specified as |
| two registers separated by a dash. Multiple register ranges can be |
| specified separated by a comma. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtls\-size=\fR\fItls-size\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtls-size=tls-size" |
| Specify bit size of immediate \s-1TLS\s0 offsets. Valid values are 14, 22, and |
| 64. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtune=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtune=cpu-type" |
| Tune the instruction scheduling for a particular \s-1CPU\s0, Valid values are |
| \&\fBitanium\fR, \fBitanium1\fR, \fBmerced\fR, \fBitanium2\fR, |
| and \fBmckinley\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-milp32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-milp32" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mlp64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlp64" |
| .PD |
| Generate code for a 32\-bit or 64\-bit environment. |
| The 32\-bit environment sets int, long and pointer to 32 bits. |
| The 64\-bit environment sets int to 32 bits and long and pointer |
| to 64 bits. These are HP-UX specific flags. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sched\-br\-data\-spec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sched-br-data-spec" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-msched\-br\-data\-spec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msched-br-data-spec" |
| .PD |
| (Dis/En)able data speculative scheduling before reload. |
| This results in generation of \f(CW\*(C`ld.a\*(C'\fR instructions and |
| the corresponding check instructions (\f(CW\*(C`ld.c\*(C'\fR / \f(CW\*(C`chk.a\*(C'\fR). |
| The default is 'disable'. |
| .IP "\fB\-msched\-ar\-data\-spec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msched-ar-data-spec" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sched\-ar\-data\-spec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sched-ar-data-spec" |
| .PD |
| (En/Dis)able data speculative scheduling after reload. |
| This results in generation of \f(CW\*(C`ld.a\*(C'\fR instructions and |
| the corresponding check instructions (\f(CW\*(C`ld.c\*(C'\fR / \f(CW\*(C`chk.a\*(C'\fR). |
| The default is 'enable'. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sched\-control\-spec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sched-control-spec" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-msched\-control\-spec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msched-control-spec" |
| .PD |
| (Dis/En)able control speculative scheduling. This feature is |
| available only during region scheduling (i.e. before reload). |
| This results in generation of the \f(CW\*(C`ld.s\*(C'\fR instructions and |
| the corresponding check instructions \f(CW\*(C`chk.s\*(C'\fR. |
| The default is 'disable'. |
| .IP "\fB\-msched\-br\-in\-data\-spec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msched-br-in-data-spec" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sched\-br\-in\-data\-spec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sched-br-in-data-spec" |
| .PD |
| (En/Dis)able speculative scheduling of the instructions that |
| are dependent on the data speculative loads before reload. |
| This is effective only with \fB\-msched\-br\-data\-spec\fR enabled. |
| The default is 'enable'. |
| .IP "\fB\-msched\-ar\-in\-data\-spec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msched-ar-in-data-spec" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sched\-ar\-in\-data\-spec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sched-ar-in-data-spec" |
| .PD |
| (En/Dis)able speculative scheduling of the instructions that |
| are dependent on the data speculative loads after reload. |
| This is effective only with \fB\-msched\-ar\-data\-spec\fR enabled. |
| The default is 'enable'. |
| .IP "\fB\-msched\-in\-control\-spec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msched-in-control-spec" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sched\-in\-control\-spec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sched-in-control-spec" |
| .PD |
| (En/Dis)able speculative scheduling of the instructions that |
| are dependent on the control speculative loads. |
| This is effective only with \fB\-msched\-control\-spec\fR enabled. |
| The default is 'enable'. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sched\-prefer\-non\-data\-spec\-insns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sched-prefer-non-data-spec-insns" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-msched\-prefer\-non\-data\-spec\-insns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msched-prefer-non-data-spec-insns" |
| .PD |
| If enabled, data-speculative instructions are chosen for schedule |
| only if there are no other choices at the moment. This makes |
| the use of the data speculation much more conservative. |
| The default is 'disable'. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sched\-prefer\-non\-control\-spec\-insns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sched-prefer-non-control-spec-insns" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-msched\-prefer\-non\-control\-spec\-insns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msched-prefer-non-control-spec-insns" |
| .PD |
| If enabled, control-speculative instructions are chosen for schedule |
| only if there are no other choices at the moment. This makes |
| the use of the control speculation much more conservative. |
| The default is 'disable'. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sched\-count\-spec\-in\-critical\-path\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sched-count-spec-in-critical-path" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-msched\-count\-spec\-in\-critical\-path\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msched-count-spec-in-critical-path" |
| .PD |
| If enabled, speculative dependencies are considered during |
| computation of the instructions priorities. This makes the use of the |
| speculation a bit more conservative. |
| The default is 'disable'. |
| .IP "\fB\-msched\-spec\-ldc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msched-spec-ldc" |
| Use a simple data speculation check. This option is on by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-msched\-control\-spec\-ldc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msched-control-spec-ldc" |
| Use a simple check for control speculation. This option is on by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-msched\-stop\-bits\-after\-every\-cycle\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msched-stop-bits-after-every-cycle" |
| Place a stop bit after every cycle when scheduling. This option is on |
| by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-msched\-fp\-mem\-deps\-zero\-cost\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msched-fp-mem-deps-zero-cost" |
| Assume that floating-point stores and loads are not likely to cause a conflict |
| when placed into the same instruction group. This option is disabled by |
| default. |
| .IP "\fB\-msel\-sched\-dont\-check\-control\-spec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msel-sched-dont-check-control-spec" |
| Generate checks for control speculation in selective scheduling. |
| This flag is disabled by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-msched\-max\-memory\-insns=\fR\fImax-insns\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msched-max-memory-insns=max-insns" |
| Limit on the number of memory insns per instruction group, giving lower |
| priority to subsequent memory insns attempting to schedule in the same |
| instruction group. Frequently useful to prevent cache bank conflicts. |
| The default value is 1. |
| .IP "\fB\-msched\-max\-memory\-insns\-hard\-limit\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msched-max-memory-insns-hard-limit" |
| Makes the limit specified by \fBmsched-max-memory-insns\fR a hard limit, |
| disallowing more than that number in an instruction group. |
| Otherwise, the limit is \*(L"soft\*(R", meaning that non-memory operations |
| are preferred when the limit is reached, but memory operations may still |
| be scheduled. |
| .PP |
| \fI\s-1LM32\s0 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "LM32 Options" |
| .PP |
| These \fB\-m\fR options are defined for the LatticeMico32 architecture: |
| .IP "\fB\-mbarrel\-shift\-enabled\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbarrel-shift-enabled" |
| Enable barrel-shift instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdivide\-enabled\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdivide-enabled" |
| Enable divide and modulus instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmultiply\-enabled\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmultiply-enabled" |
| Enable multiply instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-msign\-extend\-enabled\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msign-extend-enabled" |
| Enable sign extend instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-muser\-enabled\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-muser-enabled" |
| Enable user-defined instructions. |
| .PP |
| \fIM32C Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "M32C Options" |
| .IP "\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcpu=name" |
| Select the \s-1CPU\s0 for which code is generated. \fIname\fR may be one of |
| \&\fBr8c\fR for the R8C/Tiny series, \fBm16c\fR for the M16C (up to |
| /60) series, \fBm32cm\fR for the M16C/80 series, or \fBm32c\fR for |
| the M32C/80 series. |
| .IP "\fB\-msim\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msim" |
| Specifies that the program will be run on the simulator. This causes |
| an alternate runtime library to be linked in which supports, for |
| example, file I/O. You must not use this option when generating |
| programs that will run on real hardware; you must provide your own |
| runtime library for whatever I/O functions are needed. |
| .IP "\fB\-memregs=\fR\fInumber\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-memregs=number" |
| Specifies the number of memory-based pseudo-registers \s-1GCC\s0 uses |
| during code generation. These pseudo-registers are used like real |
| registers, so there is a tradeoff between \s-1GCC\s0's ability to fit the |
| code into available registers, and the performance penalty of using |
| memory instead of registers. Note that all modules in a program must |
| be compiled with the same value for this option. Because of that, you |
| must not use this option with \s-1GCC\s0's default runtime libraries. |
| .PP |
| \fIM32R/D Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "M32R/D Options" |
| .PP |
| These \fB\-m\fR options are defined for Renesas M32R/D architectures: |
| .IP "\fB\-m32r2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m32r2" |
| Generate code for the M32R/2. |
| .IP "\fB\-m32rx\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m32rx" |
| Generate code for the M32R/X. |
| .IP "\fB\-m32r\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m32r" |
| Generate code for the M32R. This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmodel=small\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmodel=small" |
| Assume all objects live in the lower 16MB of memory (so that their addresses |
| can be loaded with the \f(CW\*(C`ld24\*(C'\fR instruction), and assume all subroutines |
| are reachable with the \f(CW\*(C`bl\*(C'\fR instruction. |
| This is the default. |
| .Sp |
| The addressability of a particular object can be set with the |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`model\*(C'\fR attribute. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmodel=medium\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmodel=medium" |
| Assume objects may be anywhere in the 32\-bit address space (the compiler |
| generates \f(CW\*(C`seth/add3\*(C'\fR instructions to load their addresses), and |
| assume all subroutines are reachable with the \f(CW\*(C`bl\*(C'\fR instruction. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmodel=large\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmodel=large" |
| Assume objects may be anywhere in the 32\-bit address space (the compiler |
| generates \f(CW\*(C`seth/add3\*(C'\fR instructions to load their addresses), and |
| assume subroutines may not be reachable with the \f(CW\*(C`bl\*(C'\fR instruction |
| (the compiler generates the much slower \f(CW\*(C`seth/add3/jl\*(C'\fR |
| instruction sequence). |
| .IP "\fB\-msdata=none\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msdata=none" |
| Disable use of the small data area. Variables are put into |
| one of \fB.data\fR, \fB.bss\fR, or \fB.rodata\fR (unless the |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`section\*(C'\fR attribute has been specified). |
| This is the default. |
| .Sp |
| The small data area consists of sections \fB.sdata\fR and \fB.sbss\fR. |
| Objects may be explicitly put in the small data area with the |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`section\*(C'\fR attribute using one of these sections. |
| .IP "\fB\-msdata=sdata\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msdata=sdata" |
| Put small global and static data in the small data area, but do not |
| generate special code to reference them. |
| .IP "\fB\-msdata=use\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msdata=use" |
| Put small global and static data in the small data area, and generate |
| special instructions to reference them. |
| .IP "\fB\-G\fR \fInum\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-G num" |
| Put global and static objects less than or equal to \fInum\fR bytes |
| into the small data or \s-1BSS\s0 sections instead of the normal data or \s-1BSS\s0 |
| sections. The default value of \fInum\fR is 8. |
| The \fB\-msdata\fR option must be set to one of \fBsdata\fR or \fBuse\fR |
| for this option to have any effect. |
| .Sp |
| All modules should be compiled with the same \fB\-G\fR \fInum\fR value. |
| Compiling with different values of \fInum\fR may or may not work; if it |
| doesn't the linker gives an error message\-\-\-incorrect code is not |
| generated. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdebug\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdebug" |
| Makes the M32R\-specific code in the compiler display some statistics |
| that might help in debugging programs. |
| .IP "\fB\-malign\-loops\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-malign-loops" |
| Align all loops to a 32\-byte boundary. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-align\-loops\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-align-loops" |
| Do not enforce a 32\-byte alignment for loops. This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-missue\-rate=\fR\fInumber\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-missue-rate=number" |
| Issue \fInumber\fR instructions per cycle. \fInumber\fR can only be 1 |
| or 2. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbranch\-cost=\fR\fInumber\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbranch-cost=number" |
| \&\fInumber\fR can only be 1 or 2. If it is 1 then branches are |
| preferred over conditional code, if it is 2, then the opposite applies. |
| .IP "\fB\-mflush\-trap=\fR\fInumber\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mflush-trap=number" |
| Specifies the trap number to use to flush the cache. The default is |
| 12. Valid numbers are between 0 and 15 inclusive. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-flush\-trap\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-flush-trap" |
| Specifies that the cache cannot be flushed by using a trap. |
| .IP "\fB\-mflush\-func=\fR\fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mflush-func=name" |
| Specifies the name of the operating system function to call to flush |
| the cache. The default is \fI_flush_cache\fR, but a function call |
| is only used if a trap is not available. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-flush\-func\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-flush-func" |
| Indicates that there is no \s-1OS\s0 function for flushing the cache. |
| .PP |
| \fIM680x0 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "M680x0 Options" |
| .PP |
| These are the \fB\-m\fR options defined for M680x0 and ColdFire processors. |
| The default settings depend on which architecture was selected when |
| the compiler was configured; the defaults for the most common choices |
| are given below. |
| .IP "\fB\-march=\fR\fIarch\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-march=arch" |
| Generate code for a specific M680x0 or ColdFire instruction set |
| architecture. Permissible values of \fIarch\fR for M680x0 |
| architectures are: \fB68000\fR, \fB68010\fR, \fB68020\fR, |
| \&\fB68030\fR, \fB68040\fR, \fB68060\fR and \fBcpu32\fR. ColdFire |
| architectures are selected according to Freescale's \s-1ISA\s0 classification |
| and the permissible values are: \fBisaa\fR, \fBisaaplus\fR, |
| \&\fBisab\fR and \fBisac\fR. |
| .Sp |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 defines a macro \fB_\|_mcf\fR\fIarch\fR\fB_\|_\fR whenever it is generating |
| code for a ColdFire target. The \fIarch\fR in this macro is one of the |
| \&\fB\-march\fR arguments given above. |
| .Sp |
| When used together, \fB\-march\fR and \fB\-mtune\fR select code |
| that runs on a family of similar processors but that is optimized |
| for a particular microarchitecture. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcpu=cpu" |
| Generate code for a specific M680x0 or ColdFire processor. |
| The M680x0 \fIcpu\fRs are: \fB68000\fR, \fB68010\fR, \fB68020\fR, |
| \&\fB68030\fR, \fB68040\fR, \fB68060\fR, \fB68302\fR, \fB68332\fR |
| and \fBcpu32\fR. The ColdFire \fIcpu\fRs are given by the table |
| below, which also classifies the CPUs into families: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "Family : \fB\-mcpu\fR arguments" 4 |
| .IX Item "Family : -mcpu arguments" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB51\fR : \fB51\fR \fB51ac\fR \fB51ag\fR \fB51cn\fR \fB51em\fR \fB51je\fR \fB51jf\fR \fB51jg\fR \fB51jm\fR \fB51mm\fR \fB51qe\fR \fB51qm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "51 : 51 51ac 51ag 51cn 51em 51je 51jf 51jg 51jm 51mm 51qe 51qm" |
| .IP "\fB5206\fR : \fB5202\fR \fB5204\fR \fB5206\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "5206 : 5202 5204 5206" |
| .IP "\fB5206e\fR : \fB5206e\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "5206e : 5206e" |
| .IP "\fB5208\fR : \fB5207\fR \fB5208\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "5208 : 5207 5208" |
| .IP "\fB5211a\fR : \fB5210a\fR \fB5211a\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "5211a : 5210a 5211a" |
| .IP "\fB5213\fR : \fB5211\fR \fB5212\fR \fB5213\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "5213 : 5211 5212 5213" |
| .IP "\fB5216\fR : \fB5214\fR \fB5216\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "5216 : 5214 5216" |
| .IP "\fB52235\fR : \fB52230\fR \fB52231\fR \fB52232\fR \fB52233\fR \fB52234\fR \fB52235\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "52235 : 52230 52231 52232 52233 52234 52235" |
| .IP "\fB5225\fR : \fB5224\fR \fB5225\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "5225 : 5224 5225" |
| .IP "\fB52259\fR : \fB52252\fR \fB52254\fR \fB52255\fR \fB52256\fR \fB52258\fR \fB52259\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "52259 : 52252 52254 52255 52256 52258 52259" |
| .IP "\fB5235\fR : \fB5232\fR \fB5233\fR \fB5234\fR \fB5235\fR \fB523x\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "5235 : 5232 5233 5234 5235 523x" |
| .IP "\fB5249\fR : \fB5249\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "5249 : 5249" |
| .IP "\fB5250\fR : \fB5250\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "5250 : 5250" |
| .IP "\fB5271\fR : \fB5270\fR \fB5271\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "5271 : 5270 5271" |
| .IP "\fB5272\fR : \fB5272\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "5272 : 5272" |
| .IP "\fB5275\fR : \fB5274\fR \fB5275\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "5275 : 5274 5275" |
| .IP "\fB5282\fR : \fB5280\fR \fB5281\fR \fB5282\fR \fB528x\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "5282 : 5280 5281 5282 528x" |
| .IP "\fB53017\fR : \fB53011\fR \fB53012\fR \fB53013\fR \fB53014\fR \fB53015\fR \fB53016\fR \fB53017\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "53017 : 53011 53012 53013 53014 53015 53016 53017" |
| .IP "\fB5307\fR : \fB5307\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "5307 : 5307" |
| .IP "\fB5329\fR : \fB5327\fR \fB5328\fR \fB5329\fR \fB532x\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "5329 : 5327 5328 5329 532x" |
| .IP "\fB5373\fR : \fB5372\fR \fB5373\fR \fB537x\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "5373 : 5372 5373 537x" |
| .IP "\fB5407\fR : \fB5407\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "5407 : 5407" |
| .IP "\fB5475\fR : \fB5470\fR \fB5471\fR \fB5472\fR \fB5473\fR \fB5474\fR \fB5475\fR \fB547x\fR \fB5480\fR \fB5481\fR \fB5482\fR \fB5483\fR \fB5484\fR \fB5485\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "5475 : 5470 5471 5472 5473 5474 5475 547x 5480 5481 5482 5483 5484 5485" |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .PD |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu\fR overrides \fB\-march=\fR\fIarch\fR if |
| \&\fIarch\fR is compatible with \fIcpu\fR. Other combinations of |
| \&\fB\-mcpu\fR and \fB\-march\fR are rejected. |
| .Sp |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 defines the macro \fB_\|_mcf_cpu_\fR\fIcpu\fR when ColdFire target |
| \&\fIcpu\fR is selected. It also defines \fB_\|_mcf_family_\fR\fIfamily\fR, |
| where the value of \fIfamily\fR is given by the table above. |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-mtune=\fR\fItune\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtune=tune" |
| Tune the code for a particular microarchitecture within the |
| constraints set by \fB\-march\fR and \fB\-mcpu\fR. |
| The M680x0 microarchitectures are: \fB68000\fR, \fB68010\fR, |
| \&\fB68020\fR, \fB68030\fR, \fB68040\fR, \fB68060\fR |
| and \fBcpu32\fR. The ColdFire microarchitectures |
| are: \fBcfv1\fR, \fBcfv2\fR, \fBcfv3\fR, \fBcfv4\fR and \fBcfv4e\fR. |
| .Sp |
| You can also use \fB\-mtune=68020\-40\fR for code that needs |
| to run relatively well on 68020, 68030 and 68040 targets. |
| \&\fB\-mtune=68020\-60\fR is similar but includes 68060 targets |
| as well. These two options select the same tuning decisions as |
| \&\fB\-m68020\-40\fR and \fB\-m68020\-60\fR respectively. |
| .Sp |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 defines the macros \fB_\|_mc\fR\fIarch\fR and \fB_\|_mc\fR\fIarch\fR\fB_\|_\fR |
| when tuning for 680x0 architecture \fIarch\fR. It also defines |
| \&\fBmc\fR\fIarch\fR unless either \fB\-ansi\fR or a non-GNU \fB\-std\fR |
| option is used. If \s-1GCC\s0 is tuning for a range of architectures, |
| as selected by \fB\-mtune=68020\-40\fR or \fB\-mtune=68020\-60\fR, |
| it defines the macros for every architecture in the range. |
| .Sp |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 also defines the macro \fB_\|_m\fR\fIuarch\fR\fB_\|_\fR when tuning for |
| ColdFire microarchitecture \fIuarch\fR, where \fIuarch\fR is one |
| of the arguments given above. |
| .IP "\fB\-m68000\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m68000" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mc68000\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mc68000" |
| .PD |
| Generate output for a 68000. This is the default |
| when the compiler is configured for 68000\-based systems. |
| It is equivalent to \fB\-march=68000\fR. |
| .Sp |
| Use this option for microcontrollers with a 68000 or \s-1EC000\s0 core, |
| including the 68008, 68302, 68306, 68307, 68322, 68328 and 68356. |
| .IP "\fB\-m68010\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m68010" |
| Generate output for a 68010. This is the default |
| when the compiler is configured for 68010\-based systems. |
| It is equivalent to \fB\-march=68010\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-m68020\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m68020" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mc68020\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mc68020" |
| .PD |
| Generate output for a 68020. This is the default |
| when the compiler is configured for 68020\-based systems. |
| It is equivalent to \fB\-march=68020\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-m68030\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m68030" |
| Generate output for a 68030. This is the default when the compiler is |
| configured for 68030\-based systems. It is equivalent to |
| \&\fB\-march=68030\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-m68040\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m68040" |
| Generate output for a 68040. This is the default when the compiler is |
| configured for 68040\-based systems. It is equivalent to |
| \&\fB\-march=68040\fR. |
| .Sp |
| This option inhibits the use of 68881/68882 instructions that have to be |
| emulated by software on the 68040. Use this option if your 68040 does not |
| have code to emulate those instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-m68060\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m68060" |
| Generate output for a 68060. This is the default when the compiler is |
| configured for 68060\-based systems. It is equivalent to |
| \&\fB\-march=68060\fR. |
| .Sp |
| This option inhibits the use of 68020 and 68881/68882 instructions that |
| have to be emulated by software on the 68060. Use this option if your 68060 |
| does not have code to emulate those instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcpu32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcpu32" |
| Generate output for a \s-1CPU32\s0. This is the default |
| when the compiler is configured for CPU32\-based systems. |
| It is equivalent to \fB\-march=cpu32\fR. |
| .Sp |
| Use this option for microcontrollers with a |
| \&\s-1CPU32\s0 or \s-1CPU32+\s0 core, including the 68330, 68331, 68332, 68333, 68334, |
| 68336, 68340, 68341, 68349 and 68360. |
| .IP "\fB\-m5200\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m5200" |
| Generate output for a 520X ColdFire \s-1CPU\s0. This is the default |
| when the compiler is configured for 520X\-based systems. |
| It is equivalent to \fB\-mcpu=5206\fR, and is now deprecated |
| in favor of that option. |
| .Sp |
| Use this option for microcontroller with a 5200 core, including |
| the \s-1MCF5202\s0, \s-1MCF5203\s0, \s-1MCF5204\s0 and \s-1MCF5206\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-m5206e\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m5206e" |
| Generate output for a 5206e ColdFire \s-1CPU\s0. The option is now |
| deprecated in favor of the equivalent \fB\-mcpu=5206e\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-m528x\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m528x" |
| Generate output for a member of the ColdFire 528X family. |
| The option is now deprecated in favor of the equivalent |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=528x\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-m5307\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m5307" |
| Generate output for a ColdFire 5307 \s-1CPU\s0. The option is now deprecated |
| in favor of the equivalent \fB\-mcpu=5307\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-m5407\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m5407" |
| Generate output for a ColdFire 5407 \s-1CPU\s0. The option is now deprecated |
| in favor of the equivalent \fB\-mcpu=5407\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcfv4e\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcfv4e" |
| Generate output for a ColdFire V4e family \s-1CPU\s0 (e.g. 547x/548x). |
| This includes use of hardware floating-point instructions. |
| The option is equivalent to \fB\-mcpu=547x\fR, and is now |
| deprecated in favor of that option. |
| .IP "\fB\-m68020\-40\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m68020-40" |
| Generate output for a 68040, without using any of the new instructions. |
| This results in code that can run relatively efficiently on either a |
| 68020/68881 or a 68030 or a 68040. The generated code does use the |
| 68881 instructions that are emulated on the 68040. |
| .Sp |
| The option is equivalent to \fB\-march=68020\fR \fB\-mtune=68020\-40\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-m68020\-60\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m68020-60" |
| Generate output for a 68060, without using any of the new instructions. |
| This results in code that can run relatively efficiently on either a |
| 68020/68881 or a 68030 or a 68040. The generated code does use the |
| 68881 instructions that are emulated on the 68060. |
| .Sp |
| The option is equivalent to \fB\-march=68020\fR \fB\-mtune=68020\-60\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mhard\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mhard-float" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-m68881\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m68881" |
| .PD |
| Generate floating-point instructions. This is the default for 68020 |
| and above, and for ColdFire devices that have an \s-1FPU\s0. It defines the |
| macro \fB_\|_HAVE_68881_\|_\fR on M680x0 targets and \fB_\|_mcffpu_\|_\fR |
| on ColdFire targets. |
| .IP "\fB\-msoft\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msoft-float" |
| Do not generate floating-point instructions; use library calls instead. |
| This is the default for 68000, 68010, and 68832 targets. It is also |
| the default for ColdFire devices that have no \s-1FPU\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdiv\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdiv" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-div\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-div" |
| .PD |
| Generate (do not generate) ColdFire hardware divide and remainder |
| instructions. If \fB\-march\fR is used without \fB\-mcpu\fR, |
| the default is \*(L"on\*(R" for ColdFire architectures and \*(L"off\*(R" for M680x0 |
| architectures. Otherwise, the default is taken from the target \s-1CPU\s0 |
| (either the default \s-1CPU\s0, or the one specified by \fB\-mcpu\fR). For |
| example, the default is \*(L"off\*(R" for \fB\-mcpu=5206\fR and \*(L"on\*(R" for |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=5206e\fR. |
| .Sp |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 defines the macro \fB_\|_mcfhwdiv_\|_\fR when this option is enabled. |
| .IP "\fB\-mshort\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mshort" |
| Consider type \f(CW\*(C`int\*(C'\fR to be 16 bits wide, like \f(CW\*(C`short int\*(C'\fR. |
| Additionally, parameters passed on the stack are also aligned to a |
| 16\-bit boundary even on targets whose \s-1API\s0 mandates promotion to 32\-bit. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-short\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-short" |
| Do not consider type \f(CW\*(C`int\*(C'\fR to be 16 bits wide. This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mnobitfield\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mnobitfield" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-bitfield\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-bitfield" |
| .PD |
| Do not use the bit-field instructions. The \fB\-m68000\fR, \fB\-mcpu32\fR |
| and \fB\-m5200\fR options imply \fB\-mnobitfield\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbitfield\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbitfield" |
| Do use the bit-field instructions. The \fB\-m68020\fR option implies |
| \&\fB\-mbitfield\fR. This is the default if you use a configuration |
| designed for a 68020. |
| .IP "\fB\-mrtd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrtd" |
| Use a different function-calling convention, in which functions |
| that take a fixed number of arguments return with the \f(CW\*(C`rtd\*(C'\fR |
| instruction, which pops their arguments while returning. This |
| saves one instruction in the caller since there is no need to pop |
| the arguments there. |
| .Sp |
| This calling convention is incompatible with the one normally |
| used on Unix, so you cannot use it if you need to call libraries |
| compiled with the Unix compiler. |
| .Sp |
| Also, you must provide function prototypes for all functions that |
| take variable numbers of arguments (including \f(CW\*(C`printf\*(C'\fR); |
| otherwise incorrect code is generated for calls to those |
| functions. |
| .Sp |
| In addition, seriously incorrect code results if you call a |
| function with too many arguments. (Normally, extra arguments are |
| harmlessly ignored.) |
| .Sp |
| The \f(CW\*(C`rtd\*(C'\fR instruction is supported by the 68010, 68020, 68030, |
| 68040, 68060 and \s-1CPU32\s0 processors, but not by the 68000 or 5200. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-rtd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-rtd" |
| Do not use the calling conventions selected by \fB\-mrtd\fR. |
| This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-malign\-int\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-malign-int" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-align\-int\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-align-int" |
| .PD |
| Control whether \s-1GCC\s0 aligns \f(CW\*(C`int\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`long\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`long long\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`float\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`double\*(C'\fR, and \f(CW\*(C`long double\*(C'\fR variables on a 32\-bit |
| boundary (\fB\-malign\-int\fR) or a 16\-bit boundary (\fB\-mno\-align\-int\fR). |
| Aligning variables on 32\-bit boundaries produces code that runs somewhat |
| faster on processors with 32\-bit busses at the expense of more memory. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fBWarning:\fR if you use the \fB\-malign\-int\fR switch, \s-1GCC\s0 |
| aligns structures containing the above types differently than |
| most published application binary interface specifications for the m68k. |
| .IP "\fB\-mpcrel\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpcrel" |
| Use the pc-relative addressing mode of the 68000 directly, instead of |
| using a global offset table. At present, this option implies \fB\-fpic\fR, |
| allowing at most a 16\-bit offset for pc-relative addressing. \fB\-fPIC\fR is |
| not presently supported with \fB\-mpcrel\fR, though this could be supported for |
| 68020 and higher processors. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-strict\-align\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-strict-align" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mstrict\-align\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mstrict-align" |
| .PD |
| Do not (do) assume that unaligned memory references are handled by |
| the system. |
| .IP "\fB\-msep\-data\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msep-data" |
| Generate code that allows the data segment to be located in a different |
| area of memory from the text segment. This allows for execute-in-place in |
| an environment without virtual memory management. This option implies |
| \&\fB\-fPIC\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sep\-data\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sep-data" |
| Generate code that assumes that the data segment follows the text segment. |
| This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mid\-shared\-library\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mid-shared-library" |
| Generate code that supports shared libraries via the library \s-1ID\s0 method. |
| This allows for execute-in-place and shared libraries in an environment |
| without virtual memory management. This option implies \fB\-fPIC\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-id\-shared\-library\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-id-shared-library" |
| Generate code that doesn't assume ID-based shared libraries are being used. |
| This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mshared\-library\-id=n\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mshared-library-id=n" |
| Specifies the identification number of the ID-based shared library being |
| compiled. Specifying a value of 0 generates more compact code; specifying |
| other values forces the allocation of that number to the current |
| library, but is no more space\- or time-efficient than omitting this option. |
| .IP "\fB\-mxgot\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mxgot" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-xgot\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-xgot" |
| .PD |
| When generating position-independent code for ColdFire, generate code |
| that works if the \s-1GOT\s0 has more than 8192 entries. This code is |
| larger and slower than code generated without this option. On M680x0 |
| processors, this option is not needed; \fB\-fPIC\fR suffices. |
| .Sp |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 normally uses a single instruction to load values from the \s-1GOT\s0. |
| While this is relatively efficient, it only works if the \s-1GOT\s0 |
| is smaller than about 64k. Anything larger causes the linker |
| to report an error such as: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& relocation truncated to fit: R_68K_GOT16O foobar |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| If this happens, you should recompile your code with \fB\-mxgot\fR. |
| It should then work with very large GOTs. However, code generated with |
| \&\fB\-mxgot\fR is less efficient, since it takes 4 instructions to fetch |
| the value of a global symbol. |
| .Sp |
| Note that some linkers, including newer versions of the \s-1GNU\s0 linker, |
| can create multiple GOTs and sort \s-1GOT\s0 entries. If you have such a linker, |
| you should only need to use \fB\-mxgot\fR when compiling a single |
| object file that accesses more than 8192 \s-1GOT\s0 entries. Very few do. |
| .Sp |
| These options have no effect unless \s-1GCC\s0 is generating |
| position-independent code. |
| .PP |
| \fIMCore Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "MCore Options" |
| .PP |
| These are the \fB\-m\fR options defined for the Motorola M*Core |
| processors. |
| .IP "\fB\-mhardlit\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mhardlit" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-hardlit\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-hardlit" |
| .PD |
| Inline constants into the code stream if it can be done in two |
| instructions or less. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdiv\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdiv" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-div\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-div" |
| .PD |
| Use the divide instruction. (Enabled by default). |
| .IP "\fB\-mrelax\-immediate\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrelax-immediate" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-relax\-immediate\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-relax-immediate" |
| .PD |
| Allow arbitrary-sized immediates in bit operations. |
| .IP "\fB\-mwide\-bitfields\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mwide-bitfields" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-wide\-bitfields\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-wide-bitfields" |
| .PD |
| Always treat bit-fields as \f(CW\*(C`int\*(C'\fR\-sized. |
| .IP "\fB\-m4byte\-functions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m4byte-functions" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-4byte\-functions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-4byte-functions" |
| .PD |
| Force all functions to be aligned to a 4\-byte boundary. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcallgraph\-data\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcallgraph-data" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-callgraph\-data\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-callgraph-data" |
| .PD |
| Emit callgraph information. |
| .IP "\fB\-mslow\-bytes\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mslow-bytes" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-slow\-bytes\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-slow-bytes" |
| .PD |
| Prefer word access when reading byte quantities. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlittle\-endian\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlittle-endian" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mbig\-endian\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbig-endian" |
| .PD |
| Generate code for a little-endian target. |
| .IP "\fB\-m210\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m210" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-m340\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m340" |
| .PD |
| Generate code for the 210 processor. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-lsim\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-lsim" |
| Assume that runtime support has been provided and so omit the |
| simulator library (\fIlibsim.a)\fR from the linker command line. |
| .IP "\fB\-mstack\-increment=\fR\fIsize\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mstack-increment=size" |
| Set the maximum amount for a single stack increment operation. Large |
| values can increase the speed of programs that contain functions |
| that need a large amount of stack space, but they can also trigger a |
| segmentation fault if the stack is extended too much. The default |
| value is 0x1000. |
| .PP |
| \fIMeP Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "MeP Options" |
| .IP "\fB\-mabsdiff\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mabsdiff" |
| Enables the \f(CW\*(C`abs\*(C'\fR instruction, which is the absolute difference |
| between two registers. |
| .IP "\fB\-mall\-opts\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mall-opts" |
| Enables all the optional instructions\-\-\-average, multiply, divide, bit |
| operations, leading zero, absolute difference, min/max, clip, and |
| saturation. |
| .IP "\fB\-maverage\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-maverage" |
| Enables the \f(CW\*(C`ave\*(C'\fR instruction, which computes the average of two |
| registers. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbased=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbased=n" |
| Variables of size \fIn\fR bytes or smaller are placed in the |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`.based\*(C'\fR section by default. Based variables use the \f(CW$tp\fR |
| register as a base register, and there is a 128\-byte limit to the |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`.based\*(C'\fR section. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbitops\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbitops" |
| Enables the bit operation instructions\-\-\-bit test (\f(CW\*(C`btstm\*(C'\fR), set |
| (\f(CW\*(C`bsetm\*(C'\fR), clear (\f(CW\*(C`bclrm\*(C'\fR), invert (\f(CW\*(C`bnotm\*(C'\fR), and |
| test-and-set (\f(CW\*(C`tas\*(C'\fR). |
| .IP "\fB\-mc=\fR\fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mc=name" |
| Selects which section constant data is placed in. \fIname\fR may |
| be \f(CW\*(C`tiny\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`near\*(C'\fR, or \f(CW\*(C`far\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mclip\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mclip" |
| Enables the \f(CW\*(C`clip\*(C'\fR instruction. Note that \f(CW\*(C`\-mclip\*(C'\fR is not |
| useful unless you also provide \f(CW\*(C`\-mminmax\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mconfig=\fR\fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mconfig=name" |
| Selects one of the built-in core configurations. Each MeP chip has |
| one or more modules in it; each module has a core \s-1CPU\s0 and a variety of |
| coprocessors, optional instructions, and peripherals. The |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`MeP\-Integrator\*(C'\fR tool, not part of \s-1GCC\s0, provides these |
| configurations through this option; using this option is the same as |
| using all the corresponding command-line options. The default |
| configuration is \f(CW\*(C`default\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcop\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcop" |
| Enables the coprocessor instructions. By default, this is a 32\-bit |
| coprocessor. Note that the coprocessor is normally enabled via the |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`\-mconfig=\*(C'\fR option. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcop32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcop32" |
| Enables the 32\-bit coprocessor's instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcop64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcop64" |
| Enables the 64\-bit coprocessor's instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mivc2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mivc2" |
| Enables \s-1IVC2\s0 scheduling. \s-1IVC2\s0 is a 64\-bit \s-1VLIW\s0 coprocessor. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdc" |
| Causes constant variables to be placed in the \f(CW\*(C`.near\*(C'\fR section. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdiv\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdiv" |
| Enables the \f(CW\*(C`div\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`divu\*(C'\fR instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-meb\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-meb" |
| Generate big-endian code. |
| .IP "\fB\-mel\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mel" |
| Generate little-endian code. |
| .IP "\fB\-mio\-volatile\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mio-volatile" |
| Tells the compiler that any variable marked with the \f(CW\*(C`io\*(C'\fR |
| attribute is to be considered volatile. |
| .IP "\fB\-ml\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ml" |
| Causes variables to be assigned to the \f(CW\*(C`.far\*(C'\fR section by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mleadz\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mleadz" |
| Enables the \f(CW\*(C`leadz\*(C'\fR (leading zero) instruction. |
| .IP "\fB\-mm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mm" |
| Causes variables to be assigned to the \f(CW\*(C`.near\*(C'\fR section by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mminmax\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mminmax" |
| Enables the \f(CW\*(C`min\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`max\*(C'\fR instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmult\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmult" |
| Enables the multiplication and multiply-accumulate instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-opts\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-opts" |
| Disables all the optional instructions enabled by \f(CW\*(C`\-mall\-opts\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mrepeat\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrepeat" |
| Enables the \f(CW\*(C`repeat\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`erepeat\*(C'\fR instructions, used for |
| low-overhead looping. |
| .IP "\fB\-ms\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ms" |
| Causes all variables to default to the \f(CW\*(C`.tiny\*(C'\fR section. Note |
| that there is a 65536\-byte limit to this section. Accesses to these |
| variables use the \f(CW%gp\fR base register. |
| .IP "\fB\-msatur\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msatur" |
| Enables the saturation instructions. Note that the compiler does not |
| currently generate these itself, but this option is included for |
| compatibility with other tools, like \f(CW\*(C`as\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-msdram\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msdram" |
| Link the SDRAM-based runtime instead of the default ROM-based runtime. |
| .IP "\fB\-msim\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msim" |
| Link the simulator runtime libraries. |
| .IP "\fB\-msimnovec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msimnovec" |
| Link the simulator runtime libraries, excluding built-in support |
| for reset and exception vectors and tables. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtf\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtf" |
| Causes all functions to default to the \f(CW\*(C`.far\*(C'\fR section. Without |
| this option, functions default to the \f(CW\*(C`.near\*(C'\fR section. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtiny=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtiny=n" |
| Variables that are \fIn\fR bytes or smaller are allocated to the |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`.tiny\*(C'\fR section. These variables use the \f(CW$gp\fR base |
| register. The default for this option is 4, but note that there's a |
| 65536\-byte limit to the \f(CW\*(C`.tiny\*(C'\fR section. |
| .PP |
| \fIMicroBlaze Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "MicroBlaze Options" |
| .IP "\fB\-msoft\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msoft-float" |
| Use software emulation for floating point (default). |
| .IP "\fB\-mhard\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mhard-float" |
| Use hardware floating-point instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmemcpy\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmemcpy" |
| Do not optimize block moves, use \f(CW\*(C`memcpy\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-clearbss\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-clearbss" |
| This option is deprecated. Use \fB\-fno\-zero\-initialized\-in\-bss\fR instead. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcpu=cpu-type" |
| Use features of, and schedule code for, the given \s-1CPU\s0. |
| Supported values are in the format \fBv\fR\fIX\fR\fB.\fR\fI\s-1YY\s0\fR\fB.\fR\fIZ\fR, |
| where \fIX\fR is a major version, \fI\s-1YY\s0\fR is the minor version, and |
| \&\fIZ\fR is compatibility code. Example values are \fBv3.00.a\fR, |
| \&\fBv4.00.b\fR, \fBv5.00.a\fR, \fBv5.00.b\fR, \fBv5.00.b\fR, \fBv6.00.a\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mxl\-soft\-mul\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mxl-soft-mul" |
| Use software multiply emulation (default). |
| .IP "\fB\-mxl\-soft\-div\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mxl-soft-div" |
| Use software emulation for divides (default). |
| .IP "\fB\-mxl\-barrel\-shift\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mxl-barrel-shift" |
| Use the hardware barrel shifter. |
| .IP "\fB\-mxl\-pattern\-compare\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mxl-pattern-compare" |
| Use pattern compare instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-msmall\-divides\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msmall-divides" |
| Use table lookup optimization for small signed integer divisions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mxl\-stack\-check\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mxl-stack-check" |
| This option is deprecated. Use \fB\-fstack\-check\fR instead. |
| .IP "\fB\-mxl\-gp\-opt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mxl-gp-opt" |
| Use GP-relative \f(CW\*(C`.sdata\*(C'\fR/\f(CW\*(C`.sbss\*(C'\fR sections. |
| .IP "\fB\-mxl\-multiply\-high\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mxl-multiply-high" |
| Use multiply high instructions for high part of 32x32 multiply. |
| .IP "\fB\-mxl\-float\-convert\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mxl-float-convert" |
| Use hardware floating-point conversion instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mxl\-float\-sqrt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mxl-float-sqrt" |
| Use hardware floating-point square root instruction. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbig\-endian\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbig-endian" |
| Generate code for a big-endian target. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlittle\-endian\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlittle-endian" |
| Generate code for a little-endian target. |
| .IP "\fB\-mxl\-reorder\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mxl-reorder" |
| Use reorder instructions (swap and byte reversed load/store). |
| .IP "\fB\-mxl\-mode\-\fR\fIapp-model\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mxl-mode-app-model" |
| Select application model \fIapp-model\fR. Valid models are |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBexecutable\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "executable" |
| normal executable (default), uses startup code \fIcrt0.o\fR. |
| .IP "\fBxmdstub\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "xmdstub" |
| for use with Xilinx Microprocessor Debugger (\s-1XMD\s0) based |
| software intrusive debug agent called xmdstub. This uses startup file |
| \&\fIcrt1.o\fR and sets the start address of the program to 0x800. |
| .IP "\fBbootstrap\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "bootstrap" |
| for applications that are loaded using a bootloader. |
| This model uses startup file \fIcrt2.o\fR which does not contain a processor |
| reset vector handler. This is suitable for transferring control on a |
| processor reset to the bootloader rather than the application. |
| .IP "\fBnovectors\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "novectors" |
| for applications that do not require any of the |
| MicroBlaze vectors. This option may be useful for applications running |
| within a monitoring application. This model uses \fIcrt3.o\fR as a startup file. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| Option \fB\-xl\-mode\-\fR\fIapp-model\fR is a deprecated alias for |
| \&\fB\-mxl\-mode\-\fR\fIapp-model\fR. |
| .RE |
| .PP |
| \fI\s-1MIPS\s0 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "MIPS Options" |
| .IP "\fB\-EB\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-EB" |
| Generate big-endian code. |
| .IP "\fB\-EL\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-EL" |
| Generate little-endian code. This is the default for \fBmips*el\-*\-*\fR |
| configurations. |
| .IP "\fB\-march=\fR\fIarch\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-march=arch" |
| Generate code that runs on \fIarch\fR, which can be the name of a |
| generic \s-1MIPS\s0 \s-1ISA\s0, or the name of a particular processor. |
| The \s-1ISA\s0 names are: |
| \&\fBmips1\fR, \fBmips2\fR, \fBmips3\fR, \fBmips4\fR, |
| \&\fBmips32\fR, \fBmips32r2\fR, \fBmips64\fR and \fBmips64r2\fR. |
| The processor names are: |
| \&\fB4kc\fR, \fB4km\fR, \fB4kp\fR, \fB4ksc\fR, |
| \&\fB4kec\fR, \fB4kem\fR, \fB4kep\fR, \fB4ksd\fR, |
| \&\fB5kc\fR, \fB5kf\fR, |
| \&\fB20kc\fR, |
| \&\fB24kc\fR, \fB24kf2_1\fR, \fB24kf1_1\fR, |
| \&\fB24kec\fR, \fB24kef2_1\fR, \fB24kef1_1\fR, |
| \&\fB34kc\fR, \fB34kf2_1\fR, \fB34kf1_1\fR, \fB34kn\fR, |
| \&\fB74kc\fR, \fB74kf2_1\fR, \fB74kf1_1\fR, \fB74kf3_2\fR, |
| \&\fB1004kc\fR, \fB1004kf2_1\fR, \fB1004kf1_1\fR, |
| \&\fBloongson2e\fR, \fBloongson2f\fR, \fBloongson3a\fR, |
| \&\fBm4k\fR, |
| \&\fBocteon\fR, \fBocteon+\fR, \fBocteon2\fR, |
| \&\fBorion\fR, |
| \&\fBr2000\fR, \fBr3000\fR, \fBr3900\fR, \fBr4000\fR, \fBr4400\fR, |
| \&\fBr4600\fR, \fBr4650\fR, \fBr4700\fR, \fBr6000\fR, \fBr8000\fR, |
| \&\fBrm7000\fR, \fBrm9000\fR, |
| \&\fBr10000\fR, \fBr12000\fR, \fBr14000\fR, \fBr16000\fR, |
| \&\fBsb1\fR, |
| \&\fBsr71000\fR, |
| \&\fBvr4100\fR, \fBvr4111\fR, \fBvr4120\fR, \fBvr4130\fR, \fBvr4300\fR, |
| \&\fBvr5000\fR, \fBvr5400\fR, \fBvr5500\fR, |
| \&\fBxlr\fR and \fBxlp\fR. |
| The special value \fBfrom-abi\fR selects the |
| most compatible architecture for the selected \s-1ABI\s0 (that is, |
| \&\fBmips1\fR for 32\-bit ABIs and \fBmips3\fR for 64\-bit ABIs). |
| .Sp |
| The native Linux/GNU toolchain also supports the value \fBnative\fR, |
| which selects the best architecture option for the host processor. |
| \&\fB\-march=native\fR has no effect if \s-1GCC\s0 does not recognize |
| the processor. |
| .Sp |
| In processor names, a final \fB000\fR can be abbreviated as \fBk\fR |
| (for example, \fB\-march=r2k\fR). Prefixes are optional, and |
| \&\fBvr\fR may be written \fBr\fR. |
| .Sp |
| Names of the form \fIn\fR\fBf2_1\fR refer to processors with |
| FPUs clocked at half the rate of the core, names of the form |
| \&\fIn\fR\fBf1_1\fR refer to processors with FPUs clocked at the same |
| rate as the core, and names of the form \fIn\fR\fBf3_2\fR refer to |
| processors with FPUs clocked a ratio of 3:2 with respect to the core. |
| For compatibility reasons, \fIn\fR\fBf\fR is accepted as a synonym |
| for \fIn\fR\fBf2_1\fR while \fIn\fR\fBx\fR and \fIb\fR\fBfx\fR are |
| accepted as synonyms for \fIn\fR\fBf1_1\fR. |
| .Sp |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 defines two macros based on the value of this option. The first |
| is \fB_MIPS_ARCH\fR, which gives the name of target architecture, as |
| a string. The second has the form \fB_MIPS_ARCH_\fR\fIfoo\fR, |
| where \fIfoo\fR is the capitalized value of \fB_MIPS_ARCH\fR. |
| For example, \fB\-march=r2000\fR sets \fB_MIPS_ARCH\fR |
| to \fB\*(L"r2000\*(R"\fR and defines the macro \fB_MIPS_ARCH_R2000\fR. |
| .Sp |
| Note that the \fB_MIPS_ARCH\fR macro uses the processor names given |
| above. In other words, it has the full prefix and does not |
| abbreviate \fB000\fR as \fBk\fR. In the case of \fBfrom-abi\fR, |
| the macro names the resolved architecture (either \fB\*(L"mips1\*(R"\fR or |
| \&\fB\*(L"mips3\*(R"\fR). It names the default architecture when no |
| \&\fB\-march\fR option is given. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtune=\fR\fIarch\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtune=arch" |
| Optimize for \fIarch\fR. Among other things, this option controls |
| the way instructions are scheduled, and the perceived cost of arithmetic |
| operations. The list of \fIarch\fR values is the same as for |
| \&\fB\-march\fR. |
| .Sp |
| When this option is not used, \s-1GCC\s0 optimizes for the processor |
| specified by \fB\-march\fR. By using \fB\-march\fR and |
| \&\fB\-mtune\fR together, it is possible to generate code that |
| runs on a family of processors, but optimize the code for one |
| particular member of that family. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-mtune\fR defines the macros \fB_MIPS_TUNE\fR and |
| \&\fB_MIPS_TUNE_\fR\fIfoo\fR, which work in the same way as the |
| \&\fB\-march\fR ones described above. |
| .IP "\fB\-mips1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mips1" |
| Equivalent to \fB\-march=mips1\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mips2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mips2" |
| Equivalent to \fB\-march=mips2\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mips3\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mips3" |
| Equivalent to \fB\-march=mips3\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mips4\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mips4" |
| Equivalent to \fB\-march=mips4\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mips32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mips32" |
| Equivalent to \fB\-march=mips32\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mips32r2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mips32r2" |
| Equivalent to \fB\-march=mips32r2\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mips64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mips64" |
| Equivalent to \fB\-march=mips64\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mips64r2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mips64r2" |
| Equivalent to \fB\-march=mips64r2\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mips16\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mips16" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-mips16\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-mips16" |
| .PD |
| Generate (do not generate) \s-1MIPS16\s0 code. If \s-1GCC\s0 is targeting a |
| \&\s-1MIPS32\s0 or \s-1MIPS64\s0 architecture, it makes use of the MIPS16e \s-1ASE\s0. |
| .Sp |
| \&\s-1MIPS16\s0 code generation can also be controlled on a per-function basis |
| by means of \f(CW\*(C`mips16\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`nomips16\*(C'\fR attributes. |
| .IP "\fB\-mflip\-mips16\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mflip-mips16" |
| Generate \s-1MIPS16\s0 code on alternating functions. This option is provided |
| for regression testing of mixed MIPS16/non\-MIPS16 code generation, and is |
| not intended for ordinary use in compiling user code. |
| .IP "\fB\-minterlink\-mips16\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-minterlink-mips16" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-interlink\-mips16\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-interlink-mips16" |
| .PD |
| Require (do not require) that non\-MIPS16 code be link-compatible with |
| \&\s-1MIPS16\s0 code. |
| .Sp |
| For example, non\-MIPS16 code cannot jump directly to \s-1MIPS16\s0 code; |
| it must either use a call or an indirect jump. \fB\-minterlink\-mips16\fR |
| therefore disables direct jumps unless \s-1GCC\s0 knows that the target of the |
| jump is not \s-1MIPS16\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-mabi=32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mabi=32" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mabi=o64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mabi=o64" |
| .IP "\fB\-mabi=n32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mabi=n32" |
| .IP "\fB\-mabi=64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mabi=64" |
| .IP "\fB\-mabi=eabi\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mabi=eabi" |
| .PD |
| Generate code for the given \s-1ABI\s0. |
| .Sp |
| Note that the \s-1EABI\s0 has a 32\-bit and a 64\-bit variant. \s-1GCC\s0 normally |
| generates 64\-bit code when you select a 64\-bit architecture, but you |
| can use \fB\-mgp32\fR to get 32\-bit code instead. |
| .Sp |
| For information about the O64 \s-1ABI\s0, see |
| <\fBhttp://gcc.gnu.org/projects/mipso64\-abi.html\fR>. |
| .Sp |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 supports a variant of the o32 \s-1ABI\s0 in which floating-point registers |
| are 64 rather than 32 bits wide. You can select this combination with |
| \&\fB\-mabi=32\fR \fB\-mfp64\fR. This \s-1ABI\s0 relies on the \f(CW\*(C`mthc1\*(C'\fR |
| and \f(CW\*(C`mfhc1\*(C'\fR instructions and is therefore only supported for |
| \&\s-1MIPS32R2\s0 processors. |
| .Sp |
| The register assignments for arguments and return values remain the |
| same, but each scalar value is passed in a single 64\-bit register |
| rather than a pair of 32\-bit registers. For example, scalar |
| floating-point values are returned in \fB\f(CB$f0\fB\fR only, not a |
| \&\fB\f(CB$f0\fB\fR/\fB\f(CB$f1\fB\fR pair. The set of call-saved registers also |
| remains the same, but all 64 bits are saved. |
| .IP "\fB\-mabicalls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mabicalls" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-abicalls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-abicalls" |
| .PD |
| Generate (do not generate) code that is suitable for SVR4\-style |
| dynamic objects. \fB\-mabicalls\fR is the default for SVR4\-based |
| systems. |
| .IP "\fB\-mshared\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mshared" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-shared\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-shared" |
| .PD |
| Generate (do not generate) code that is fully position-independent, |
| and that can therefore be linked into shared libraries. This option |
| only affects \fB\-mabicalls\fR. |
| .Sp |
| All \fB\-mabicalls\fR code has traditionally been position-independent, |
| regardless of options like \fB\-fPIC\fR and \fB\-fpic\fR. However, |
| as an extension, the \s-1GNU\s0 toolchain allows executables to use absolute |
| accesses for locally-binding symbols. It can also use shorter \s-1GP\s0 |
| initialization sequences and generate direct calls to locally-defined |
| functions. This mode is selected by \fB\-mno\-shared\fR. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-mno\-shared\fR depends on binutils 2.16 or higher and generates |
| objects that can only be linked by the \s-1GNU\s0 linker. However, the option |
| does not affect the \s-1ABI\s0 of the final executable; it only affects the \s-1ABI\s0 |
| of relocatable objects. Using \fB\-mno\-shared\fR generally makes |
| executables both smaller and quicker. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-mshared\fR is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mplt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mplt" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-plt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-plt" |
| .PD |
| Assume (do not assume) that the static and dynamic linkers |
| support PLTs and copy relocations. This option only affects |
| \&\fB\-mno\-shared \-mabicalls\fR. For the n64 \s-1ABI\s0, this option |
| has no effect without \fB\-msym32\fR. |
| .Sp |
| You can make \fB\-mplt\fR the default by configuring |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 with \fB\-\-with\-mips\-plt\fR. The default is |
| \&\fB\-mno\-plt\fR otherwise. |
| .IP "\fB\-mxgot\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mxgot" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-xgot\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-xgot" |
| .PD |
| Lift (do not lift) the usual restrictions on the size of the global |
| offset table. |
| .Sp |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 normally uses a single instruction to load values from the \s-1GOT\s0. |
| While this is relatively efficient, it only works if the \s-1GOT\s0 |
| is smaller than about 64k. Anything larger causes the linker |
| to report an error such as: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& relocation truncated to fit: R_MIPS_GOT16 foobar |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| If this happens, you should recompile your code with \fB\-mxgot\fR. |
| This works with very large GOTs, although the code is also |
| less efficient, since it takes three instructions to fetch the |
| value of a global symbol. |
| .Sp |
| Note that some linkers can create multiple GOTs. If you have such a |
| linker, you should only need to use \fB\-mxgot\fR when a single object |
| file accesses more than 64k's worth of \s-1GOT\s0 entries. Very few do. |
| .Sp |
| These options have no effect unless \s-1GCC\s0 is generating position |
| independent code. |
| .IP "\fB\-mgp32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mgp32" |
| Assume that general-purpose registers are 32 bits wide. |
| .IP "\fB\-mgp64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mgp64" |
| Assume that general-purpose registers are 64 bits wide. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfp32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfp32" |
| Assume that floating-point registers are 32 bits wide. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfp64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfp64" |
| Assume that floating-point registers are 64 bits wide. |
| .IP "\fB\-mhard\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mhard-float" |
| Use floating-point coprocessor instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-msoft\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msoft-float" |
| Do not use floating-point coprocessor instructions. Implement |
| floating-point calculations using library calls instead. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-float" |
| Equivalent to \fB\-msoft\-float\fR, but additionally asserts that the |
| program being compiled does not perform any floating-point operations. |
| This option is presently supported only by some bare-metal \s-1MIPS\s0 |
| configurations, where it may select a special set of libraries |
| that lack all floating-point support (including, for example, the |
| floating-point \f(CW\*(C`printf\*(C'\fR formats). |
| If code compiled with \f(CW\*(C`\-mno\-float\*(C'\fR accidentally contains |
| floating-point operations, it is likely to suffer a link-time |
| or run-time failure. |
| .IP "\fB\-msingle\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msingle-float" |
| Assume that the floating-point coprocessor only supports single-precision |
| operations. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdouble\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdouble-float" |
| Assume that the floating-point coprocessor supports double-precision |
| operations. This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mllsc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mllsc" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-llsc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-llsc" |
| .PD |
| Use (do not use) \fBll\fR, \fBsc\fR, and \fBsync\fR instructions to |
| implement atomic memory built-in functions. When neither option is |
| specified, \s-1GCC\s0 uses the instructions if the target architecture |
| supports them. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-mllsc\fR is useful if the runtime environment can emulate the |
| instructions and \fB\-mno\-llsc\fR can be useful when compiling for |
| nonstandard ISAs. You can make either option the default by |
| configuring \s-1GCC\s0 with \fB\-\-with\-llsc\fR and \fB\-\-without\-llsc\fR |
| respectively. \fB\-\-with\-llsc\fR is the default for some |
| configurations; see the installation documentation for details. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdsp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdsp" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-dsp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-dsp" |
| .PD |
| Use (do not use) revision 1 of the \s-1MIPS\s0 \s-1DSP\s0 \s-1ASE\s0. |
| This option defines the |
| preprocessor macro \fB_\|_mips_dsp\fR. It also defines |
| \&\fB_\|_mips_dsp_rev\fR to 1. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdspr2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdspr2" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-dspr2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-dspr2" |
| .PD |
| Use (do not use) revision 2 of the \s-1MIPS\s0 \s-1DSP\s0 \s-1ASE\s0. |
| This option defines the |
| preprocessor macros \fB_\|_mips_dsp\fR and \fB_\|_mips_dspr2\fR. |
| It also defines \fB_\|_mips_dsp_rev\fR to 2. |
| .IP "\fB\-msmartmips\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msmartmips" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-smartmips\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-smartmips" |
| .PD |
| Use (do not use) the \s-1MIPS\s0 SmartMIPS \s-1ASE\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-mpaired\-single\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpaired-single" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-paired\-single\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-paired-single" |
| .PD |
| Use (do not use) paired-single floating-point instructions. |
| This option requires |
| hardware floating-point support to be enabled. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdmx\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdmx" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-mdmx\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-mdmx" |
| .PD |
| Use (do not use) \s-1MIPS\s0 Digital Media Extension instructions. |
| This option can only be used when generating 64\-bit code and requires |
| hardware floating-point support to be enabled. |
| .IP "\fB\-mips3d\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mips3d" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-mips3d\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-mips3d" |
| .PD |
| Use (do not use) the \s-1MIPS\-3D\s0 \s-1ASE\s0. |
| The option \fB\-mips3d\fR implies \fB\-mpaired\-single\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmt" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-mt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-mt" |
| .PD |
| Use (do not use) \s-1MT\s0 Multithreading instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmcu\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmcu" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-mcu\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-mcu" |
| .PD |
| Use (do not use) the \s-1MIPS\s0 \s-1MCU\s0 \s-1ASE\s0 instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlong64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlong64" |
| Force \f(CW\*(C`long\*(C'\fR types to be 64 bits wide. See \fB\-mlong32\fR for |
| an explanation of the default and the way that the pointer size is |
| determined. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlong32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlong32" |
| Force \f(CW\*(C`long\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`int\*(C'\fR, and pointer types to be 32 bits wide. |
| .Sp |
| The default size of \f(CW\*(C`int\*(C'\fRs, \f(CW\*(C`long\*(C'\fRs and pointers depends on |
| the \s-1ABI\s0. All the supported ABIs use 32\-bit \f(CW\*(C`int\*(C'\fRs. The n64 \s-1ABI\s0 |
| uses 64\-bit \f(CW\*(C`long\*(C'\fRs, as does the 64\-bit \s-1EABI\s0; the others use |
| 32\-bit \f(CW\*(C`long\*(C'\fRs. Pointers are the same size as \f(CW\*(C`long\*(C'\fRs, |
| or the same size as integer registers, whichever is smaller. |
| .IP "\fB\-msym32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msym32" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sym32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sym32" |
| .PD |
| Assume (do not assume) that all symbols have 32\-bit values, regardless |
| of the selected \s-1ABI\s0. This option is useful in combination with |
| \&\fB\-mabi=64\fR and \fB\-mno\-abicalls\fR because it allows \s-1GCC\s0 |
| to generate shorter and faster references to symbolic addresses. |
| .IP "\fB\-G\fR \fInum\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-G num" |
| Put definitions of externally-visible data in a small data section |
| if that data is no bigger than \fInum\fR bytes. \s-1GCC\s0 can then generate |
| more efficient accesses to the data; see \fB\-mgpopt\fR for details. |
| .Sp |
| The default \fB\-G\fR option depends on the configuration. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlocal\-sdata\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlocal-sdata" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-local\-sdata\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-local-sdata" |
| .PD |
| Extend (do not extend) the \fB\-G\fR behavior to local data too, |
| such as to static variables in C. \fB\-mlocal\-sdata\fR is the |
| default for all configurations. |
| .Sp |
| If the linker complains that an application is using too much small data, |
| you might want to try rebuilding the less performance-critical parts with |
| \&\fB\-mno\-local\-sdata\fR. You might also want to build large |
| libraries with \fB\-mno\-local\-sdata\fR, so that the libraries leave |
| more room for the main program. |
| .IP "\fB\-mextern\-sdata\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mextern-sdata" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-extern\-sdata\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-extern-sdata" |
| .PD |
| Assume (do not assume) that externally-defined data is in |
| a small data section if the size of that data is within the \fB\-G\fR limit. |
| \&\fB\-mextern\-sdata\fR is the default for all configurations. |
| .Sp |
| If you compile a module \fIMod\fR with \fB\-mextern\-sdata\fR \fB\-G\fR |
| \&\fInum\fR \fB\-mgpopt\fR, and \fIMod\fR references a variable \fIVar\fR |
| that is no bigger than \fInum\fR bytes, you must make sure that \fIVar\fR |
| is placed in a small data section. If \fIVar\fR is defined by another |
| module, you must either compile that module with a high-enough |
| \&\fB\-G\fR setting or attach a \f(CW\*(C`section\*(C'\fR attribute to \fIVar\fR's |
| definition. If \fIVar\fR is common, you must link the application |
| with a high-enough \fB\-G\fR setting. |
| .Sp |
| The easiest way of satisfying these restrictions is to compile |
| and link every module with the same \fB\-G\fR option. However, |
| you may wish to build a library that supports several different |
| small data limits. You can do this by compiling the library with |
| the highest supported \fB\-G\fR setting and additionally using |
| \&\fB\-mno\-extern\-sdata\fR to stop the library from making assumptions |
| about externally-defined data. |
| .IP "\fB\-mgpopt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mgpopt" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-gpopt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-gpopt" |
| .PD |
| Use (do not use) GP-relative accesses for symbols that are known to be |
| in a small data section; see \fB\-G\fR, \fB\-mlocal\-sdata\fR and |
| \&\fB\-mextern\-sdata\fR. \fB\-mgpopt\fR is the default for all |
| configurations. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-mno\-gpopt\fR is useful for cases where the \f(CW$gp\fR register |
| might not hold the value of \f(CW\*(C`_gp\*(C'\fR. For example, if the code is |
| part of a library that might be used in a boot monitor, programs that |
| call boot monitor routines pass an unknown value in \f(CW$gp\fR. |
| (In such situations, the boot monitor itself is usually compiled |
| with \fB\-G0\fR.) |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-mno\-gpopt\fR implies \fB\-mno\-local\-sdata\fR and |
| \&\fB\-mno\-extern\-sdata\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-membedded\-data\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-membedded-data" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-embedded\-data\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-embedded-data" |
| .PD |
| Allocate variables to the read-only data section first if possible, then |
| next in the small data section if possible, otherwise in data. This gives |
| slightly slower code than the default, but reduces the amount of \s-1RAM\s0 required |
| when executing, and thus may be preferred for some embedded systems. |
| .IP "\fB\-muninit\-const\-in\-rodata\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-muninit-const-in-rodata" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-uninit\-const\-in\-rodata\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-uninit-const-in-rodata" |
| .PD |
| Put uninitialized \f(CW\*(C`const\*(C'\fR variables in the read-only data section. |
| This option is only meaningful in conjunction with \fB\-membedded\-data\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcode\-readable=\fR\fIsetting\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcode-readable=setting" |
| Specify whether \s-1GCC\s0 may generate code that reads from executable sections. |
| There are three possible settings: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fB\-mcode\-readable=yes\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcode-readable=yes" |
| Instructions may freely access executable sections. This is the |
| default setting. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcode\-readable=pcrel\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcode-readable=pcrel" |
| \&\s-1MIPS16\s0 PC-relative load instructions can access executable sections, |
| but other instructions must not do so. This option is useful on 4KSc |
| and 4KSd processors when the code TLBs have the Read Inhibit bit set. |
| It is also useful on processors that can be configured to have a dual |
| instruction/data \s-1SRAM\s0 interface and that, like the M4K, automatically |
| redirect PC-relative loads to the instruction \s-1RAM\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcode\-readable=no\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcode-readable=no" |
| Instructions must not access executable sections. This option can be |
| useful on targets that are configured to have a dual instruction/data |
| \&\s-1SRAM\s0 interface but that (unlike the M4K) do not automatically redirect |
| PC-relative loads to the instruction \s-1RAM\s0. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-msplit\-addresses\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msplit-addresses" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-split\-addresses\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-split-addresses" |
| .PD |
| Enable (disable) use of the \f(CW\*(C`%hi()\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`%lo()\*(C'\fR assembler |
| relocation operators. This option has been superseded by |
| \&\fB\-mexplicit\-relocs\fR but is retained for backwards compatibility. |
| .IP "\fB\-mexplicit\-relocs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mexplicit-relocs" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-explicit\-relocs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-explicit-relocs" |
| .PD |
| Use (do not use) assembler relocation operators when dealing with symbolic |
| addresses. The alternative, selected by \fB\-mno\-explicit\-relocs\fR, |
| is to use assembler macros instead. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-mexplicit\-relocs\fR is the default if \s-1GCC\s0 was configured |
| to use an assembler that supports relocation operators. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcheck\-zero\-division\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcheck-zero-division" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-check\-zero\-division\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-check-zero-division" |
| .PD |
| Trap (do not trap) on integer division by zero. |
| .Sp |
| The default is \fB\-mcheck\-zero\-division\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdivide\-traps\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdivide-traps" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mdivide\-breaks\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdivide-breaks" |
| .PD |
| \&\s-1MIPS\s0 systems check for division by zero by generating either a |
| conditional trap or a break instruction. Using traps results in |
| smaller code, but is only supported on \s-1MIPS\s0 \s-1II\s0 and later. Also, some |
| versions of the Linux kernel have a bug that prevents trap from |
| generating the proper signal (\f(CW\*(C`SIGFPE\*(C'\fR). Use \fB\-mdivide\-traps\fR to |
| allow conditional traps on architectures that support them and |
| \&\fB\-mdivide\-breaks\fR to force the use of breaks. |
| .Sp |
| The default is usually \fB\-mdivide\-traps\fR, but this can be |
| overridden at configure time using \fB\-\-with\-divide=breaks\fR. |
| Divide-by-zero checks can be completely disabled using |
| \&\fB\-mno\-check\-zero\-division\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmemcpy\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmemcpy" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-memcpy\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-memcpy" |
| .PD |
| Force (do not force) the use of \f(CW\*(C`memcpy()\*(C'\fR for non-trivial block |
| moves. The default is \fB\-mno\-memcpy\fR, which allows \s-1GCC\s0 to inline |
| most constant-sized copies. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlong\-calls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlong-calls" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-long\-calls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-long-calls" |
| .PD |
| Disable (do not disable) use of the \f(CW\*(C`jal\*(C'\fR instruction. Calling |
| functions using \f(CW\*(C`jal\*(C'\fR is more efficient but requires the caller |
| and callee to be in the same 256 megabyte segment. |
| .Sp |
| This option has no effect on abicalls code. The default is |
| \&\fB\-mno\-long\-calls\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmad\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmad" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-mad\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-mad" |
| .PD |
| Enable (disable) use of the \f(CW\*(C`mad\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`madu\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`mul\*(C'\fR |
| instructions, as provided by the R4650 \s-1ISA\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfused\-madd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfused-madd" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fused\-madd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fused-madd" |
| .PD |
| Enable (disable) use of the floating-point multiply-accumulate |
| instructions, when they are available. The default is |
| \&\fB\-mfused\-madd\fR. |
| .Sp |
| On the R8000 \s-1CPU\s0 when multiply-accumulate instructions are used, |
| the intermediate product is calculated to infinite precision |
| and is not subject to the \s-1FCSR\s0 Flush to Zero bit. This may be |
| undesirable in some circumstances. On other processors the result |
| is numerically identical to the equivalent computation using |
| separate multiply, add, subtract and negate instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-nocpp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-nocpp" |
| Tell the \s-1MIPS\s0 assembler to not run its preprocessor over user |
| assembler files (with a \fB.s\fR suffix) when assembling them. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfix\-24k\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfix-24k" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fix\-24k\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fix-24k" |
| .PD |
| Work around the 24K E48 (lost data on stores during refill) errata. |
| The workarounds are implemented by the assembler rather than by \s-1GCC\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfix\-r4000\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfix-r4000" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fix\-r4000\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fix-r4000" |
| .PD |
| Work around certain R4000 \s-1CPU\s0 errata: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\-" 4 |
| A double-word or a variable shift may give an incorrect result if executed |
| immediately after starting an integer division. |
| .IP "\-" 4 |
| A double-word or a variable shift may give an incorrect result if executed |
| while an integer multiplication is in progress. |
| .IP "\-" 4 |
| An integer division may give an incorrect result if started in a delay slot |
| of a taken branch or a jump. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-mfix\-r4400\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfix-r4400" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fix\-r4400\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fix-r4400" |
| .PD |
| Work around certain R4400 \s-1CPU\s0 errata: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\-" 4 |
| A double-word or a variable shift may give an incorrect result if executed |
| immediately after starting an integer division. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-mfix\-r10000\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfix-r10000" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fix\-r10000\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fix-r10000" |
| .PD |
| Work around certain R10000 errata: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\-" 4 |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`ll\*(C'\fR/\f(CW\*(C`sc\*(C'\fR sequences may not behave atomically on revisions |
| prior to 3.0. They may deadlock on revisions 2.6 and earlier. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| This option can only be used if the target architecture supports |
| branch-likely instructions. \fB\-mfix\-r10000\fR is the default when |
| \&\fB\-march=r10000\fR is used; \fB\-mno\-fix\-r10000\fR is the default |
| otherwise. |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-mfix\-vr4120\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfix-vr4120" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fix\-vr4120\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fix-vr4120" |
| .PD |
| Work around certain \s-1VR4120\s0 errata: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\-" 4 |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`dmultu\*(C'\fR does not always produce the correct result. |
| .IP "\-" 4 |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`div\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`ddiv\*(C'\fR do not always produce the correct result if one |
| of the operands is negative. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| The workarounds for the division errata rely on special functions in |
| \&\fIlibgcc.a\fR. At present, these functions are only provided by |
| the \f(CW\*(C`mips64vr*\-elf\*(C'\fR configurations. |
| .Sp |
| Other \s-1VR4120\s0 errata require a \s-1NOP\s0 to be inserted between certain pairs of |
| instructions. These errata are handled by the assembler, not by \s-1GCC\s0 itself. |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-mfix\-vr4130\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfix-vr4130" |
| Work around the \s-1VR4130\s0 \f(CW\*(C`mflo\*(C'\fR/\f(CW\*(C`mfhi\*(C'\fR errata. The |
| workarounds are implemented by the assembler rather than by \s-1GCC\s0, |
| although \s-1GCC\s0 avoids using \f(CW\*(C`mflo\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`mfhi\*(C'\fR if the |
| \&\s-1VR4130\s0 \f(CW\*(C`macc\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`macchi\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`dmacc\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`dmacchi\*(C'\fR |
| instructions are available instead. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfix\-sb1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfix-sb1" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fix\-sb1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fix-sb1" |
| .PD |
| Work around certain \s-1SB\-1\s0 \s-1CPU\s0 core errata. |
| (This flag currently works around the \s-1SB\-1\s0 revision 2 |
| \&\*(L"F1\*(R" and \*(L"F2\*(R" floating-point errata.) |
| .IP "\fB\-mr10k\-cache\-barrier=\fR\fIsetting\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mr10k-cache-barrier=setting" |
| Specify whether \s-1GCC\s0 should insert cache barriers to avoid the |
| side-effects of speculation on R10K processors. |
| .Sp |
| In common with many processors, the R10K tries to predict the outcome |
| of a conditional branch and speculatively executes instructions from |
| the \*(L"taken\*(R" branch. It later aborts these instructions if the |
| predicted outcome is wrong. However, on the R10K, even aborted |
| instructions can have side effects. |
| .Sp |
| This problem only affects kernel stores and, depending on the system, |
| kernel loads. As an example, a speculatively-executed store may load |
| the target memory into cache and mark the cache line as dirty, even if |
| the store itself is later aborted. If a \s-1DMA\s0 operation writes to the |
| same area of memory before the \*(L"dirty\*(R" line is flushed, the cached |
| data overwrites the DMA-ed data. See the R10K processor manual |
| for a full description, including other potential problems. |
| .Sp |
| One workaround is to insert cache barrier instructions before every memory |
| access that might be speculatively executed and that might have side |
| effects even if aborted. \fB\-mr10k\-cache\-barrier=\fR\fIsetting\fR |
| controls \s-1GCC\s0's implementation of this workaround. It assumes that |
| aborted accesses to any byte in the following regions does not have |
| side effects: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "1." 4 |
| the memory occupied by the current function's stack frame; |
| .IP "2." 4 |
| the memory occupied by an incoming stack argument; |
| .IP "3." 4 |
| the memory occupied by an object with a link-time-constant address. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| It is the kernel's responsibility to ensure that speculative |
| accesses to these regions are indeed safe. |
| .Sp |
| If the input program contains a function declaration such as: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& void foo (void); |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| then the implementation of \f(CW\*(C`foo\*(C'\fR must allow \f(CW\*(C`j foo\*(C'\fR and |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`jal foo\*(C'\fR to be executed speculatively. \s-1GCC\s0 honors this |
| restriction for functions it compiles itself. It expects non-GCC |
| functions (such as hand-written assembly code) to do the same. |
| .Sp |
| The option has three forms: |
| .IP "\fB\-mr10k\-cache\-barrier=load\-store\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mr10k-cache-barrier=load-store" |
| Insert a cache barrier before a load or store that might be |
| speculatively executed and that might have side effects even |
| if aborted. |
| .IP "\fB\-mr10k\-cache\-barrier=store\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mr10k-cache-barrier=store" |
| Insert a cache barrier before a store that might be speculatively |
| executed and that might have side effects even if aborted. |
| .IP "\fB\-mr10k\-cache\-barrier=none\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mr10k-cache-barrier=none" |
| Disable the insertion of cache barriers. This is the default setting. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-mflush\-func=\fR\fIfunc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mflush-func=func" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-flush\-func\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-flush-func" |
| .PD |
| Specifies the function to call to flush the I and D caches, or to not |
| call any such function. If called, the function must take the same |
| arguments as the common \f(CW\*(C`_flush_func()\*(C'\fR, that is, the address of the |
| memory range for which the cache is being flushed, the size of the |
| memory range, and the number 3 (to flush both caches). The default |
| depends on the target \s-1GCC\s0 was configured for, but commonly is either |
| \&\fB_flush_func\fR or \fB_\|_cpu_flush\fR. |
| .IP "\fBmbranch\-cost=\fR\fInum\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "mbranch-cost=num" |
| Set the cost of branches to roughly \fInum\fR \*(L"simple\*(R" instructions. |
| This cost is only a heuristic and is not guaranteed to produce |
| consistent results across releases. A zero cost redundantly selects |
| the default, which is based on the \fB\-mtune\fR setting. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbranch\-likely\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbranch-likely" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-branch\-likely\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-branch-likely" |
| .PD |
| Enable or disable use of Branch Likely instructions, regardless of the |
| default for the selected architecture. By default, Branch Likely |
| instructions may be generated if they are supported by the selected |
| architecture. An exception is for the \s-1MIPS32\s0 and \s-1MIPS64\s0 architectures |
| and processors that implement those architectures; for those, Branch |
| Likely instructions are not be generated by default because the \s-1MIPS32\s0 |
| and \s-1MIPS64\s0 architectures specifically deprecate their use. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfp\-exceptions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfp-exceptions" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fp\-exceptions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fp-exceptions" |
| .PD |
| Specifies whether \s-1FP\s0 exceptions are enabled. This affects how |
| \&\s-1FP\s0 instructions are scheduled for some processors. |
| The default is that \s-1FP\s0 exceptions are |
| enabled. |
| .Sp |
| For instance, on the \s-1SB\-1\s0, if \s-1FP\s0 exceptions are disabled, and we are emitting |
| 64\-bit code, then we can use both \s-1FP\s0 pipes. Otherwise, we can only use one |
| \&\s-1FP\s0 pipe. |
| .IP "\fB\-mvr4130\-align\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mvr4130-align" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-vr4130\-align\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-vr4130-align" |
| .PD |
| The \s-1VR4130\s0 pipeline is two-way superscalar, but can only issue two |
| instructions together if the first one is 8\-byte aligned. When this |
| option is enabled, \s-1GCC\s0 aligns pairs of instructions that it |
| thinks should execute in parallel. |
| .Sp |
| This option only has an effect when optimizing for the \s-1VR4130\s0. |
| It normally makes code faster, but at the expense of making it bigger. |
| It is enabled by default at optimization level \fB\-O3\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-msynci\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msynci" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-synci\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-synci" |
| .PD |
| Enable (disable) generation of \f(CW\*(C`synci\*(C'\fR instructions on |
| architectures that support it. The \f(CW\*(C`synci\*(C'\fR instructions (if |
| enabled) are generated when \f(CW\*(C`_\|_builtin_\|_\|_clear_cache()\*(C'\fR is |
| compiled. |
| .Sp |
| This option defaults to \f(CW\*(C`\-mno\-synci\*(C'\fR, but the default can be |
| overridden by configuring with \f(CW\*(C`\-\-with\-synci\*(C'\fR. |
| .Sp |
| When compiling code for single processor systems, it is generally safe |
| to use \f(CW\*(C`synci\*(C'\fR. However, on many multi-core (\s-1SMP\s0) systems, it |
| does not invalidate the instruction caches on all cores and may lead |
| to undefined behavior. |
| .IP "\fB\-mrelax\-pic\-calls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrelax-pic-calls" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-relax\-pic\-calls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-relax-pic-calls" |
| .PD |
| Try to turn \s-1PIC\s0 calls that are normally dispatched via register |
| \&\f(CW$25\fR into direct calls. This is only possible if the linker can |
| resolve the destination at link-time and if the destination is within |
| range for a direct call. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-mrelax\-pic\-calls\fR is the default if \s-1GCC\s0 was configured to use |
| an assembler and a linker that support the \f(CW\*(C`.reloc\*(C'\fR assembly |
| directive and \f(CW\*(C`\-mexplicit\-relocs\*(C'\fR is in effect. With |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`\-mno\-explicit\-relocs\*(C'\fR, this optimization can be performed by the |
| assembler and the linker alone without help from the compiler. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmcount\-ra\-address\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmcount-ra-address" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-mcount\-ra\-address\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-mcount-ra-address" |
| .PD |
| Emit (do not emit) code that allows \f(CW\*(C`_mcount\*(C'\fR to modify the |
| calling function's return address. When enabled, this option extends |
| the usual \f(CW\*(C`_mcount\*(C'\fR interface with a new \fIra-address\fR |
| parameter, which has type \f(CW\*(C`intptr_t *\*(C'\fR and is passed in register |
| \&\f(CW$12\fR. \f(CW\*(C`_mcount\*(C'\fR can then modify the return address by |
| doing both of the following: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Returning the new address in register \f(CW$31\fR. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Storing the new address in \f(CW\*(C`*\f(CIra\-address\f(CW\*(C'\fR, |
| if \fIra-address\fR is nonnull. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| The default is \fB\-mno\-mcount\-ra\-address\fR. |
| .RE |
| .PP |
| \fI\s-1MMIX\s0 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "MMIX Options" |
| .PP |
| These options are defined for the \s-1MMIX:\s0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mlibfuncs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlibfuncs" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-libfuncs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-libfuncs" |
| .PD |
| Specify that intrinsic library functions are being compiled, passing all |
| values in registers, no matter the size. |
| .IP "\fB\-mepsilon\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mepsilon" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-epsilon\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-epsilon" |
| .PD |
| Generate floating-point comparison instructions that compare with respect |
| to the \f(CW\*(C`rE\*(C'\fR epsilon register. |
| .IP "\fB\-mabi=mmixware\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mabi=mmixware" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mabi=gnu\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mabi=gnu" |
| .PD |
| Generate code that passes function parameters and return values that (in |
| the called function) are seen as registers \f(CW$0\fR and up, as opposed to |
| the \s-1GNU\s0 \s-1ABI\s0 which uses global registers \f(CW$231\fR and up. |
| .IP "\fB\-mzero\-extend\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mzero-extend" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-zero\-extend\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-zero-extend" |
| .PD |
| When reading data from memory in sizes shorter than 64 bits, use (do not |
| use) zero-extending load instructions by default, rather than |
| sign-extending ones. |
| .IP "\fB\-mknuthdiv\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mknuthdiv" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-knuthdiv\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-knuthdiv" |
| .PD |
| Make the result of a division yielding a remainder have the same sign as |
| the divisor. With the default, \fB\-mno\-knuthdiv\fR, the sign of the |
| remainder follows the sign of the dividend. Both methods are |
| arithmetically valid, the latter being almost exclusively used. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtoplevel\-symbols\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtoplevel-symbols" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-toplevel\-symbols\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-toplevel-symbols" |
| .PD |
| Prepend (do not prepend) a \fB:\fR to all global symbols, so the assembly |
| code can be used with the \f(CW\*(C`PREFIX\*(C'\fR assembly directive. |
| .IP "\fB\-melf\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-melf" |
| Generate an executable in the \s-1ELF\s0 format, rather than the default |
| \&\fBmmo\fR format used by the \fBmmix\fR simulator. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbranch\-predict\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbranch-predict" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-branch\-predict\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-branch-predict" |
| .PD |
| Use (do not use) the probable-branch instructions, when static branch |
| prediction indicates a probable branch. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbase\-addresses\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbase-addresses" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-base\-addresses\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-base-addresses" |
| .PD |
| Generate (do not generate) code that uses \fIbase addresses\fR. Using a |
| base address automatically generates a request (handled by the assembler |
| and the linker) for a constant to be set up in a global register. The |
| register is used for one or more base address requests within the range 0 |
| to 255 from the value held in the register. The generally leads to short |
| and fast code, but the number of different data items that can be |
| addressed is limited. This means that a program that uses lots of static |
| data may require \fB\-mno\-base\-addresses\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-msingle\-exit\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msingle-exit" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-single\-exit\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-single-exit" |
| .PD |
| Force (do not force) generated code to have a single exit point in each |
| function. |
| .PP |
| \fI\s-1MN10300\s0 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "MN10300 Options" |
| .PP |
| These \fB\-m\fR options are defined for Matsushita \s-1MN10300\s0 architectures: |
| .IP "\fB\-mmult\-bug\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmult-bug" |
| Generate code to avoid bugs in the multiply instructions for the \s-1MN10300\s0 |
| processors. This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-mult\-bug\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-mult-bug" |
| Do not generate code to avoid bugs in the multiply instructions for the |
| \&\s-1MN10300\s0 processors. |
| .IP "\fB\-mam33\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mam33" |
| Generate code using features specific to the \s-1AM33\s0 processor. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-am33\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-am33" |
| Do not generate code using features specific to the \s-1AM33\s0 processor. This |
| is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mam33\-2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mam33-2" |
| Generate code using features specific to the \s-1AM33/2\s0.0 processor. |
| .IP "\fB\-mam34\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mam34" |
| Generate code using features specific to the \s-1AM34\s0 processor. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtune=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtune=cpu-type" |
| Use the timing characteristics of the indicated \s-1CPU\s0 type when |
| scheduling instructions. This does not change the targeted processor |
| type. The \s-1CPU\s0 type must be one of \fBmn10300\fR, \fBam33\fR, |
| \&\fBam33\-2\fR or \fBam34\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mreturn\-pointer\-on\-d0\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mreturn-pointer-on-d0" |
| When generating a function that returns a pointer, return the pointer |
| in both \f(CW\*(C`a0\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`d0\*(C'\fR. Otherwise, the pointer is returned |
| only in \f(CW\*(C`a0\*(C'\fR, and attempts to call such functions without a prototype |
| result in errors. Note that this option is on by default; use |
| \&\fB\-mno\-return\-pointer\-on\-d0\fR to disable it. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-crt0\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-crt0" |
| Do not link in the C run-time initialization object file. |
| .IP "\fB\-mrelax\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrelax" |
| Indicate to the linker that it should perform a relaxation optimization pass |
| to shorten branches, calls and absolute memory addresses. This option only |
| has an effect when used on the command line for the final link step. |
| .Sp |
| This option makes symbolic debugging impossible. |
| .IP "\fB\-mliw\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mliw" |
| Allow the compiler to generate \fILong Instruction Word\fR |
| instructions if the target is the \fB\s-1AM33\s0\fR or later. This is the |
| default. This option defines the preprocessor macro \fB_\|_LIW_\|_\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mnoliw\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mnoliw" |
| Do not allow the compiler to generate \fILong Instruction Word\fR |
| instructions. This option defines the preprocessor macro |
| \&\fB_\|_NO_LIW_\|_\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-msetlb\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msetlb" |
| Allow the compiler to generate the \fI\s-1SETLB\s0\fR and \fILcc\fR |
| instructions if the target is the \fB\s-1AM33\s0\fR or later. This is the |
| default. This option defines the preprocessor macro \fB_\|_SETLB_\|_\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mnosetlb\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mnosetlb" |
| Do not allow the compiler to generate \fI\s-1SETLB\s0\fR or \fILcc\fR |
| instructions. This option defines the preprocessor macro |
| \&\fB_\|_NO_SETLB_\|_\fR. |
| .PP |
| \fIMoxie Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "Moxie Options" |
| .IP "\fB\-meb\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-meb" |
| Generate big-endian code. This is the default for \fBmoxie\-*\-*\fR |
| configurations. |
| .IP "\fB\-mel\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mel" |
| Generate little-endian code. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-crt0\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-crt0" |
| Do not link in the C run-time initialization object file. |
| .PP |
| \fI\s-1PDP\-11\s0 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "PDP-11 Options" |
| .PP |
| These options are defined for the \s-1PDP\-11:\s0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mfpu\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfpu" |
| Use hardware \s-1FPP\s0 floating point. This is the default. (\s-1FIS\s0 floating |
| point on the \s-1PDP\-11/40\s0 is not supported.) |
| .IP "\fB\-msoft\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msoft-float" |
| Do not use hardware floating point. |
| .IP "\fB\-mac0\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mac0" |
| Return floating-point results in ac0 (fr0 in Unix assembler syntax). |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-ac0\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-ac0" |
| Return floating-point results in memory. This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-m40\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m40" |
| Generate code for a \s-1PDP\-11/40\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-m45\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m45" |
| Generate code for a \s-1PDP\-11/45\s0. This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-m10\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m10" |
| Generate code for a \s-1PDP\-11/10\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbcopy\-builtin\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbcopy-builtin" |
| Use inline \f(CW\*(C`movmemhi\*(C'\fR patterns for copying memory. This is the |
| default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbcopy\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbcopy" |
| Do not use inline \f(CW\*(C`movmemhi\*(C'\fR patterns for copying memory. |
| .IP "\fB\-mint16\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mint16" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-int32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-int32" |
| .PD |
| Use 16\-bit \f(CW\*(C`int\*(C'\fR. This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mint32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mint32" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-int16\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-int16" |
| .PD |
| Use 32\-bit \f(CW\*(C`int\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfloat64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfloat64" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-float32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-float32" |
| .PD |
| Use 64\-bit \f(CW\*(C`float\*(C'\fR. This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfloat32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfloat32" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-float64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-float64" |
| .PD |
| Use 32\-bit \f(CW\*(C`float\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mabshi\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mabshi" |
| Use \f(CW\*(C`abshi2\*(C'\fR pattern. This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-abshi\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-abshi" |
| Do not use \f(CW\*(C`abshi2\*(C'\fR pattern. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbranch\-expensive\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbranch-expensive" |
| Pretend that branches are expensive. This is for experimenting with |
| code generation only. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbranch\-cheap\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbranch-cheap" |
| Do not pretend that branches are expensive. This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-munix\-asm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-munix-asm" |
| Use Unix assembler syntax. This is the default when configured for |
| \&\fBpdp11\-*\-bsd\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdec\-asm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdec-asm" |
| Use \s-1DEC\s0 assembler syntax. This is the default when configured for any |
| \&\s-1PDP\-11\s0 target other than \fBpdp11\-*\-bsd\fR. |
| .PP |
| \fIpicoChip Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "picoChip Options" |
| .PP |
| These \fB\-m\fR options are defined for picoChip implementations: |
| .IP "\fB\-mae=\fR\fIae_type\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mae=ae_type" |
| Set the instruction set, register set, and instruction scheduling |
| parameters for array element type \fIae_type\fR. Supported values |
| for \fIae_type\fR are \fB\s-1ANY\s0\fR, \fB\s-1MUL\s0\fR, and \fB\s-1MAC\s0\fR. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-mae=ANY\fR selects a completely generic \s-1AE\s0 type. Code |
| generated with this option runs on any of the other \s-1AE\s0 types. The |
| code is not as efficient as it would be if compiled for a specific |
| \&\s-1AE\s0 type, and some types of operation (e.g., multiplication) do not |
| work properly on all types of \s-1AE\s0. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-mae=MUL\fR selects a \s-1MUL\s0 \s-1AE\s0 type. This is the most useful \s-1AE\s0 type |
| for compiled code, and is the default. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-mae=MAC\fR selects a DSP-style \s-1MAC\s0 \s-1AE\s0. Code compiled with this |
| option may suffer from poor performance of byte (char) manipulation, |
| since the \s-1DSP\s0 \s-1AE\s0 does not provide hardware support for byte load/stores. |
| .IP "\fB\-msymbol\-as\-address\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msymbol-as-address" |
| Enable the compiler to directly use a symbol name as an address in a |
| load/store instruction, without first loading it into a |
| register. Typically, the use of this option generates larger |
| programs, which run faster than when the option isn't used. However, the |
| results vary from program to program, so it is left as a user option, |
| rather than being permanently enabled. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-inefficient\-warnings\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-inefficient-warnings" |
| Disables warnings about the generation of inefficient code. These |
| warnings can be generated, for example, when compiling code that |
| performs byte-level memory operations on the \s-1MAC\s0 \s-1AE\s0 type. The \s-1MAC\s0 \s-1AE\s0 has |
| no hardware support for byte-level memory operations, so all byte |
| load/stores must be synthesized from word load/store operations. This is |
| inefficient and a warning is generated to indicate |
| that you should rewrite the code to avoid byte operations, or to target |
| an \s-1AE\s0 type that has the necessary hardware support. This option disables |
| these warnings. |
| .PP |
| \fIPowerPC Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "PowerPC Options" |
| .PP |
| These are listed under |
| .PP |
| \fI\s-1RL78\s0 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "RL78 Options" |
| .IP "\fB\-msim\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msim" |
| Links in additional target libraries to support operation within a |
| simulator. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmul=none\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmul=none" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mmul=g13\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmul=g13" |
| .IP "\fB\-mmul=rl78\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmul=rl78" |
| .PD |
| Specifies the type of hardware multiplication support to be used. The |
| default is \f(CW\*(C`none\*(C'\fR, which uses software multiplication functions. |
| The \f(CW\*(C`g13\*(C'\fR option is for the hardware multiply/divide peripheral |
| only on the \s-1RL78/G13\s0 targets. The \f(CW\*(C`rl78\*(C'\fR option is for the |
| standard hardware multiplication defined in the \s-1RL78\s0 software manual. |
| .PP |
| \fI\s-1IBM\s0 \s-1RS/6000\s0 and PowerPC Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "IBM RS/6000 and PowerPC Options" |
| .PP |
| These \fB\-m\fR options are defined for the \s-1IBM\s0 \s-1RS/6000\s0 and PowerPC: |
| .IP "\fB\-mpowerpc\-gpopt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpowerpc-gpopt" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-powerpc\-gpopt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-powerpc-gpopt" |
| .IP "\fB\-mpowerpc\-gfxopt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpowerpc-gfxopt" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-powerpc\-gfxopt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-powerpc-gfxopt" |
| .IP "\fB\-mpowerpc64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpowerpc64" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-powerpc64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-powerpc64" |
| .IP "\fB\-mmfcrf\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmfcrf" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-mfcrf\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-mfcrf" |
| .IP "\fB\-mpopcntb\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpopcntb" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-popcntb\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-popcntb" |
| .IP "\fB\-mpopcntd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpopcntd" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-popcntd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-popcntd" |
| .IP "\fB\-mfprnd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfprnd" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fprnd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fprnd" |
| .IP "\fB\-mcmpb\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcmpb" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-cmpb\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-cmpb" |
| .IP "\fB\-mmfpgpr\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmfpgpr" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-mfpgpr\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-mfpgpr" |
| .IP "\fB\-mhard\-dfp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mhard-dfp" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-hard\-dfp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-hard-dfp" |
| .PD |
| You use these options to specify which instructions are available on the |
| processor you are using. The default value of these options is |
| determined when configuring \s-1GCC\s0. Specifying the |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu_type\fR overrides the specification of these |
| options. We recommend you use the \fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu_type\fR option |
| rather than the options listed above. |
| .Sp |
| Specifying \fB\-mpowerpc\-gpopt\fR allows |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 to use the optional PowerPC architecture instructions in the |
| General Purpose group, including floating-point square root. Specifying |
| \&\fB\-mpowerpc\-gfxopt\fR allows \s-1GCC\s0 to |
| use the optional PowerPC architecture instructions in the Graphics |
| group, including floating-point select. |
| .Sp |
| The \fB\-mmfcrf\fR option allows \s-1GCC\s0 to generate the move from |
| condition register field instruction implemented on the \s-1POWER4\s0 |
| processor and other processors that support the PowerPC V2.01 |
| architecture. |
| The \fB\-mpopcntb\fR option allows \s-1GCC\s0 to generate the popcount and |
| double-precision \s-1FP\s0 reciprocal estimate instruction implemented on the |
| \&\s-1POWER5\s0 processor and other processors that support the PowerPC V2.02 |
| architecture. |
| The \fB\-mpopcntd\fR option allows \s-1GCC\s0 to generate the popcount |
| instruction implemented on the \s-1POWER7\s0 processor and other processors |
| that support the PowerPC V2.06 architecture. |
| The \fB\-mfprnd\fR option allows \s-1GCC\s0 to generate the \s-1FP\s0 round to |
| integer instructions implemented on the \s-1POWER5+\s0 processor and other |
| processors that support the PowerPC V2.03 architecture. |
| The \fB\-mcmpb\fR option allows \s-1GCC\s0 to generate the compare bytes |
| instruction implemented on the \s-1POWER6\s0 processor and other processors |
| that support the PowerPC V2.05 architecture. |
| The \fB\-mmfpgpr\fR option allows \s-1GCC\s0 to generate the \s-1FP\s0 move to/from |
| general-purpose register instructions implemented on the \s-1POWER6X\s0 |
| processor and other processors that support the extended PowerPC V2.05 |
| architecture. |
| The \fB\-mhard\-dfp\fR option allows \s-1GCC\s0 to generate the decimal |
| floating-point instructions implemented on some \s-1POWER\s0 processors. |
| .Sp |
| The \fB\-mpowerpc64\fR option allows \s-1GCC\s0 to generate the additional |
| 64\-bit instructions that are found in the full PowerPC64 architecture |
| and to treat GPRs as 64\-bit, doubleword quantities. \s-1GCC\s0 defaults to |
| \&\fB\-mno\-powerpc64\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu_type\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcpu=cpu_type" |
| Set architecture type, register usage, and |
| instruction scheduling parameters for machine type \fIcpu_type\fR. |
| Supported values for \fIcpu_type\fR are \fB401\fR, \fB403\fR, |
| \&\fB405\fR, \fB405fp\fR, \fB440\fR, \fB440fp\fR, \fB464\fR, \fB464fp\fR, |
| \&\fB476\fR, \fB476fp\fR, \fB505\fR, \fB601\fR, \fB602\fR, \fB603\fR, |
| \&\fB603e\fR, \fB604\fR, \fB604e\fR, \fB620\fR, \fB630\fR, \fB740\fR, |
| \&\fB7400\fR, \fB7450\fR, \fB750\fR, \fB801\fR, \fB821\fR, \fB823\fR, |
| \&\fB860\fR, \fB970\fR, \fB8540\fR, \fBa2\fR, \fBe300c2\fR, |
| \&\fBe300c3\fR, \fBe500mc\fR, \fBe500mc64\fR, \fBe5500\fR, |
| \&\fBe6500\fR, \fBec603e\fR, \fBG3\fR, \fBG4\fR, \fBG5\fR, |
| \&\fBtitan\fR, \fBpower3\fR, \fBpower4\fR, \fBpower5\fR, \fBpower5+\fR, |
| \&\fBpower6\fR, \fBpower6x\fR, \fBpower7\fR, \fBpower8\fR, \fBpowerpc\fR, |
| \&\fBpowerpc64\fR, and \fBrs64\fR. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=powerpc\fR, and \fB\-mcpu=powerpc64\fR specify pure 32\-bit |
| PowerPC and 64\-bit PowerPC architecture machine |
| types, with an appropriate, generic processor model assumed for |
| scheduling purposes. |
| .Sp |
| The other options specify a specific processor. Code generated under |
| those options runs best on that processor, and may not run at all on |
| others. |
| .Sp |
| The \fB\-mcpu\fR options automatically enable or disable the |
| following options: |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-maltivec \-mfprnd \-mhard\-float \-mmfcrf \-mmultiple |
| \&\-mpopcntb \-mpopcntd \-mpowerpc64 |
| \&\-mpowerpc\-gpopt \-mpowerpc\-gfxopt \-msingle\-float \-mdouble\-float |
| \&\-msimple\-fpu \-mstring \-mmulhw \-mdlmzb \-mmfpgpr \-mvsx |
| \&\-mcrypto \-mdirect\-move \-mpower8\-fusion \-mpower8\-vector |
| \&\-mquad\-memory \-mquad\-memory\-atomic\fR |
| .Sp |
| The particular options set for any particular \s-1CPU\s0 varies between |
| compiler versions, depending on what setting seems to produce optimal |
| code for that \s-1CPU\s0; it doesn't necessarily reflect the actual hardware's |
| capabilities. If you wish to set an individual option to a particular |
| value, you may specify it after the \fB\-mcpu\fR option, like |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=970 \-mno\-altivec\fR. |
| .Sp |
| On \s-1AIX\s0, the \fB\-maltivec\fR and \fB\-mpowerpc64\fR options are |
| not enabled or disabled by the \fB\-mcpu\fR option at present because |
| \&\s-1AIX\s0 does not have full support for these options. You may still |
| enable or disable them individually if you're sure it'll work in your |
| environment. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtune=\fR\fIcpu_type\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtune=cpu_type" |
| Set the instruction scheduling parameters for machine type |
| \&\fIcpu_type\fR, but do not set the architecture type or register usage, |
| as \fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu_type\fR does. The same |
| values for \fIcpu_type\fR are used for \fB\-mtune\fR as for |
| \&\fB\-mcpu\fR. If both are specified, the code generated uses the |
| architecture and registers set by \fB\-mcpu\fR, but the |
| scheduling parameters set by \fB\-mtune\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcmodel=small\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcmodel=small" |
| Generate PowerPC64 code for the small model: The \s-1TOC\s0 is limited to |
| 64k. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcmodel=medium\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcmodel=medium" |
| Generate PowerPC64 code for the medium model: The \s-1TOC\s0 and other static |
| data may be up to a total of 4G in size. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcmodel=large\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcmodel=large" |
| Generate PowerPC64 code for the large model: The \s-1TOC\s0 may be up to 4G |
| in size. Other data and code is only limited by the 64\-bit address |
| space. |
| .IP "\fB\-maltivec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-maltivec" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-altivec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-altivec" |
| .PD |
| Generate code that uses (does not use) AltiVec instructions, and also |
| enable the use of built-in functions that allow more direct access to |
| the AltiVec instruction set. You may also need to set |
| \&\fB\-mabi=altivec\fR to adjust the current \s-1ABI\s0 with AltiVec \s-1ABI\s0 |
| enhancements. |
| .Sp |
| When \fB\-maltivec\fR is used, rather than \fB\-maltivec=le\fR or |
| \&\fB\-maltivec=be\fR, the element order for Altivec intrinsics such |
| as \f(CW\*(C`vec_splat\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vec_extract\*(C'\fR, and \f(CW\*(C`vec_insert\*(C'\fR will |
| match array element order corresponding to the endianness of the |
| target. That is, element zero identifies the leftmost element in a |
| vector register when targeting a big-endian platform, and identifies |
| the rightmost element in a vector register when targeting a |
| little-endian platform. |
| .IP "\fB\-maltivec=be\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-maltivec=be" |
| Generate Altivec instructions using big-endian element order, |
| regardless of whether the target is big\- or little-endian. This is |
| the default when targeting a big-endian platform. |
| .Sp |
| The element order is used to interpret element numbers in Altivec |
| intrinsics such as \f(CW\*(C`vec_splat\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vec_extract\*(C'\fR, and |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`vec_insert\*(C'\fR. By default, these will match array element order |
| corresponding to the endianness for the target. |
| .IP "\fB\-maltivec=le\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-maltivec=le" |
| Generate Altivec instructions using little-endian element order, |
| regardless of whether the target is big\- or little-endian. This is |
| the default when targeting a little-endian platform. This option is |
| currently ignored when targeting a big-endian platform. |
| .Sp |
| The element order is used to interpret element numbers in Altivec |
| intrinsics such as \f(CW\*(C`vec_splat\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`vec_extract\*(C'\fR, and |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`vec_insert\*(C'\fR. By default, these will match array element order |
| corresponding to the endianness for the target. |
| .IP "\fB\-mvrsave\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mvrsave" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-vrsave\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-vrsave" |
| .PD |
| Generate \s-1VRSAVE\s0 instructions when generating AltiVec code. |
| .IP "\fB\-mgen\-cell\-microcode\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mgen-cell-microcode" |
| Generate Cell microcode instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mwarn\-cell\-microcode\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mwarn-cell-microcode" |
| Warn when a Cell microcode instruction is emitted. An example |
| of a Cell microcode instruction is a variable shift. |
| .IP "\fB\-msecure\-plt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msecure-plt" |
| Generate code that allows \fBld\fR and \fBld.so\fR |
| to build executables and shared |
| libraries with non-executable \f(CW\*(C`.plt\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`.got\*(C'\fR sections. |
| This is a PowerPC |
| 32\-bit \s-1SYSV\s0 \s-1ABI\s0 option. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbss\-plt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbss-plt" |
| Generate code that uses a \s-1BSS\s0 \f(CW\*(C`.plt\*(C'\fR section that \fBld.so\fR |
| fills in, and |
| requires \f(CW\*(C`.plt\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`.got\*(C'\fR |
| sections that are both writable and executable. |
| This is a PowerPC 32\-bit \s-1SYSV\s0 \s-1ABI\s0 option. |
| .IP "\fB\-misel\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-misel" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-isel\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-isel" |
| .PD |
| This switch enables or disables the generation of \s-1ISEL\s0 instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-misel=\fR\fIyes/no\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-misel=yes/no" |
| This switch has been deprecated. Use \fB\-misel\fR and |
| \&\fB\-mno\-isel\fR instead. |
| .IP "\fB\-mspe\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mspe" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-spe\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-spe" |
| .PD |
| This switch enables or disables the generation of \s-1SPE\s0 simd |
| instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mpaired\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpaired" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-paired\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-paired" |
| .PD |
| This switch enables or disables the generation of \s-1PAIRED\s0 simd |
| instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mspe=\fR\fIyes/no\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mspe=yes/no" |
| This option has been deprecated. Use \fB\-mspe\fR and |
| \&\fB\-mno\-spe\fR instead. |
| .IP "\fB\-mvsx\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mvsx" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-vsx\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-vsx" |
| .PD |
| Generate code that uses (does not use) vector/scalar (\s-1VSX\s0) |
| instructions, and also enable the use of built-in functions that allow |
| more direct access to the \s-1VSX\s0 instruction set. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcrypto\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcrypto" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-crypto\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-crypto" |
| .PD |
| Enable the use (disable) of the built-in functions that allow direct |
| access to the cryptographic instructions that were added in version |
| 2.07 of the PowerPC \s-1ISA\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdirect\-move\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdirect-move" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-direct\-move\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-direct-move" |
| .PD |
| Generate code that uses (does not use) the instructions to move data |
| between the general purpose registers and the vector/scalar (\s-1VSX\s0) |
| registers that were added in version 2.07 of the PowerPC \s-1ISA\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-mpower8\-fusion\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpower8-fusion" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-power8\-fusion\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-power8-fusion" |
| .PD |
| Generate code that keeps (does not keeps) some integer operations |
| adjacent so that the instructions can be fused together on power8 and |
| later processors. |
| .IP "\fB\-mpower8\-vector\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpower8-vector" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-power8\-vector\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-power8-vector" |
| .PD |
| Generate code that uses (does not use) the vector and scalar |
| instructions that were added in version 2.07 of the PowerPC \s-1ISA\s0. Also |
| enable the use of built-in functions that allow more direct access to |
| the vector instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mquad\-memory\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mquad-memory" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-quad\-memory\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-quad-memory" |
| .PD |
| Generate code that uses (does not use) the non-atomic quad word memory |
| instructions. The \fB\-mquad\-memory\fR option requires use of |
| 64\-bit mode. |
| .IP "\fB\-mquad\-memory\-atomic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mquad-memory-atomic" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-quad\-memory\-atomic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-quad-memory-atomic" |
| .PD |
| Generate code that uses (does not use) the atomic quad word memory |
| instructions. The \fB\-mquad\-memory\-atomic\fR option requires use of |
| 64\-bit mode. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfloat\-gprs=\fR\fIyes/single/double/no\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfloat-gprs=yes/single/double/no" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mfloat\-gprs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfloat-gprs" |
| .PD |
| This switch enables or disables the generation of floating-point |
| operations on the general-purpose registers for architectures that |
| support it. |
| .Sp |
| The argument \fIyes\fR or \fIsingle\fR enables the use of |
| single-precision floating-point operations. |
| .Sp |
| The argument \fIdouble\fR enables the use of single and |
| double-precision floating-point operations. |
| .Sp |
| The argument \fIno\fR disables floating-point operations on the |
| general-purpose registers. |
| .Sp |
| This option is currently only available on the MPC854x. |
| .IP "\fB\-m32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m32" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-m64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m64" |
| .PD |
| Generate code for 32\-bit or 64\-bit environments of Darwin and \s-1SVR4\s0 |
| targets (including GNU/Linux). The 32\-bit environment sets int, long |
| and pointer to 32 bits and generates code that runs on any PowerPC |
| variant. The 64\-bit environment sets int to 32 bits and long and |
| pointer to 64 bits, and generates code for PowerPC64, as for |
| \&\fB\-mpowerpc64\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfull\-toc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfull-toc" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fp\-in\-toc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fp-in-toc" |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sum\-in\-toc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sum-in-toc" |
| .IP "\fB\-mminimal\-toc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mminimal-toc" |
| .PD |
| Modify generation of the \s-1TOC\s0 (Table Of Contents), which is created for |
| every executable file. The \fB\-mfull\-toc\fR option is selected by |
| default. In that case, \s-1GCC\s0 allocates at least one \s-1TOC\s0 entry for |
| each unique non-automatic variable reference in your program. \s-1GCC\s0 |
| also places floating-point constants in the \s-1TOC\s0. However, only |
| 16,384 entries are available in the \s-1TOC\s0. |
| .Sp |
| If you receive a linker error message that saying you have overflowed |
| the available \s-1TOC\s0 space, you can reduce the amount of \s-1TOC\s0 space used |
| with the \fB\-mno\-fp\-in\-toc\fR and \fB\-mno\-sum\-in\-toc\fR options. |
| \&\fB\-mno\-fp\-in\-toc\fR prevents \s-1GCC\s0 from putting floating-point |
| constants in the \s-1TOC\s0 and \fB\-mno\-sum\-in\-toc\fR forces \s-1GCC\s0 to |
| generate code to calculate the sum of an address and a constant at |
| run time instead of putting that sum into the \s-1TOC\s0. You may specify one |
| or both of these options. Each causes \s-1GCC\s0 to produce very slightly |
| slower and larger code at the expense of conserving \s-1TOC\s0 space. |
| .Sp |
| If you still run out of space in the \s-1TOC\s0 even when you specify both of |
| these options, specify \fB\-mminimal\-toc\fR instead. This option causes |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 to make only one \s-1TOC\s0 entry for every file. When you specify this |
| option, \s-1GCC\s0 produces code that is slower and larger but which |
| uses extremely little \s-1TOC\s0 space. You may wish to use this option |
| only on files that contain less frequently-executed code. |
| .IP "\fB\-maix64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-maix64" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-maix32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-maix32" |
| .PD |
| Enable 64\-bit \s-1AIX\s0 \s-1ABI\s0 and calling convention: 64\-bit pointers, 64\-bit |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`long\*(C'\fR type, and the infrastructure needed to support them. |
| Specifying \fB\-maix64\fR implies \fB\-mpowerpc64\fR, |
| while \fB\-maix32\fR disables the 64\-bit \s-1ABI\s0 and |
| implies \fB\-mno\-powerpc64\fR. \s-1GCC\s0 defaults to \fB\-maix32\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mxl\-compat\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mxl-compat" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-xl\-compat\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-xl-compat" |
| .PD |
| Produce code that conforms more closely to \s-1IBM\s0 \s-1XL\s0 compiler semantics |
| when using AIX-compatible \s-1ABI\s0. Pass floating-point arguments to |
| prototyped functions beyond the register save area (\s-1RSA\s0) on the stack |
| in addition to argument FPRs. Do not assume that most significant |
| double in 128\-bit long double value is properly rounded when comparing |
| values and converting to double. Use \s-1XL\s0 symbol names for long double |
| support routines. |
| .Sp |
| The \s-1AIX\s0 calling convention was extended but not initially documented to |
| handle an obscure K&R C case of calling a function that takes the |
| address of its arguments with fewer arguments than declared. \s-1IBM\s0 \s-1XL\s0 |
| compilers access floating-point arguments that do not fit in the |
| \&\s-1RSA\s0 from the stack when a subroutine is compiled without |
| optimization. Because always storing floating-point arguments on the |
| stack is inefficient and rarely needed, this option is not enabled by |
| default and only is necessary when calling subroutines compiled by \s-1IBM\s0 |
| \&\s-1XL\s0 compilers without optimization. |
| .IP "\fB\-mpe\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpe" |
| Support \fI\s-1IBM\s0 \s-1RS/6000\s0 \s-1SP\s0\fR \fIParallel Environment\fR (\s-1PE\s0). Link an |
| application written to use message passing with special startup code to |
| enable the application to run. The system must have \s-1PE\s0 installed in the |
| standard location (\fI/usr/lpp/ppe.poe/\fR), or the \fIspecs\fR file |
| must be overridden with the \fB\-specs=\fR option to specify the |
| appropriate directory location. The Parallel Environment does not |
| support threads, so the \fB\-mpe\fR option and the \fB\-pthread\fR |
| option are incompatible. |
| .IP "\fB\-malign\-natural\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-malign-natural" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-malign\-power\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-malign-power" |
| .PD |
| On \s-1AIX\s0, 32\-bit Darwin, and 64\-bit PowerPC GNU/Linux, the option |
| \&\fB\-malign\-natural\fR overrides the ABI-defined alignment of larger |
| types, such as floating-point doubles, on their natural size-based boundary. |
| The option \fB\-malign\-power\fR instructs \s-1GCC\s0 to follow the ABI-specified |
| alignment rules. \s-1GCC\s0 defaults to the standard alignment defined in the \s-1ABI\s0. |
| .Sp |
| On 64\-bit Darwin, natural alignment is the default, and \fB\-malign\-power\fR |
| is not supported. |
| .IP "\fB\-msoft\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msoft-float" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mhard\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mhard-float" |
| .PD |
| Generate code that does not use (uses) the floating-point register set. |
| Software floating-point emulation is provided if you use the |
| \&\fB\-msoft\-float\fR option, and pass the option to \s-1GCC\s0 when linking. |
| .IP "\fB\-msingle\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msingle-float" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mdouble\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdouble-float" |
| .PD |
| Generate code for single\- or double-precision floating-point operations. |
| \&\fB\-mdouble\-float\fR implies \fB\-msingle\-float\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-msimple\-fpu\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msimple-fpu" |
| Do not generate \f(CW\*(C`sqrt\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`div\*(C'\fR instructions for hardware |
| floating-point unit. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfpu=\fR\fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfpu=name" |
| Specify type of floating-point unit. Valid values for \fIname\fR are |
| \&\fBsp_lite\fR (equivalent to \fB\-msingle\-float \-msimple\-fpu\fR), |
| \&\fBdp_lite\fR (equivalent to \fB\-mdouble\-float \-msimple\-fpu\fR), |
| \&\fBsp_full\fR (equivalent to \fB\-msingle\-float\fR), |
| and \fBdp_full\fR (equivalent to \fB\-mdouble\-float\fR). |
| .IP "\fB\-mxilinx\-fpu\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mxilinx-fpu" |
| Perform optimizations for the floating-point unit on Xilinx \s-1PPC\s0 405/440. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmultiple\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmultiple" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-multiple\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-multiple" |
| .PD |
| Generate code that uses (does not use) the load multiple word |
| instructions and the store multiple word instructions. These |
| instructions are generated by default on \s-1POWER\s0 systems, and not |
| generated on PowerPC systems. Do not use \fB\-mmultiple\fR on little-endian |
| PowerPC systems, since those instructions do not work when the |
| processor is in little-endian mode. The exceptions are \s-1PPC740\s0 and |
| \&\s-1PPC750\s0 which permit these instructions in little-endian mode. |
| .IP "\fB\-mstring\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mstring" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-string\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-string" |
| .PD |
| Generate code that uses (does not use) the load string instructions |
| and the store string word instructions to save multiple registers and |
| do small block moves. These instructions are generated by default on |
| \&\s-1POWER\s0 systems, and not generated on PowerPC systems. Do not use |
| \&\fB\-mstring\fR on little-endian PowerPC systems, since those |
| instructions do not work when the processor is in little-endian mode. |
| The exceptions are \s-1PPC740\s0 and \s-1PPC750\s0 which permit these instructions |
| in little-endian mode. |
| .IP "\fB\-mupdate\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mupdate" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-update\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-update" |
| .PD |
| Generate code that uses (does not use) the load or store instructions |
| that update the base register to the address of the calculated memory |
| location. These instructions are generated by default. If you use |
| \&\fB\-mno\-update\fR, there is a small window between the time that the |
| stack pointer is updated and the address of the previous frame is |
| stored, which means code that walks the stack frame across interrupts or |
| signals may get corrupted data. |
| .IP "\fB\-mavoid\-indexed\-addresses\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mavoid-indexed-addresses" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-avoid\-indexed\-addresses\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-avoid-indexed-addresses" |
| .PD |
| Generate code that tries to avoid (not avoid) the use of indexed load |
| or store instructions. These instructions can incur a performance |
| penalty on Power6 processors in certain situations, such as when |
| stepping through large arrays that cross a 16M boundary. This option |
| is enabled by default when targeting Power6 and disabled otherwise. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfused\-madd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfused-madd" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fused\-madd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fused-madd" |
| .PD |
| Generate code that uses (does not use) the floating-point multiply and |
| accumulate instructions. These instructions are generated by default |
| if hardware floating point is used. The machine-dependent |
| \&\fB\-mfused\-madd\fR option is now mapped to the machine-independent |
| \&\fB\-ffp\-contract=fast\fR option, and \fB\-mno\-fused\-madd\fR is |
| mapped to \fB\-ffp\-contract=off\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmulhw\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmulhw" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-mulhw\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-mulhw" |
| .PD |
| Generate code that uses (does not use) the half-word multiply and |
| multiply-accumulate instructions on the \s-1IBM\s0 405, 440, 464 and 476 processors. |
| These instructions are generated by default when targeting those |
| processors. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdlmzb\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdlmzb" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-dlmzb\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-dlmzb" |
| .PD |
| Generate code that uses (does not use) the string-search \fBdlmzb\fR |
| instruction on the \s-1IBM\s0 405, 440, 464 and 476 processors. This instruction is |
| generated by default when targeting those processors. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-bit\-align\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-bit-align" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mbit\-align\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbit-align" |
| .PD |
| On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems do not (do) force structures |
| and unions that contain bit-fields to be aligned to the base type of the |
| bit-field. |
| .Sp |
| For example, by default a structure containing nothing but 8 |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`unsigned\*(C'\fR bit-fields of length 1 is aligned to a 4\-byte |
| boundary and has a size of 4 bytes. By using \fB\-mno\-bit\-align\fR, |
| the structure is aligned to a 1\-byte boundary and is 1 byte in |
| size. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-strict\-align\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-strict-align" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mstrict\-align\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mstrict-align" |
| .PD |
| On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems do not (do) assume that |
| unaligned memory references are handled by the system. |
| .IP "\fB\-mrelocatable\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrelocatable" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-relocatable\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-relocatable" |
| .PD |
| Generate code that allows (does not allow) a static executable to be |
| relocated to a different address at run time. A simple embedded |
| PowerPC system loader should relocate the entire contents of |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`.got2\*(C'\fR and 4\-byte locations listed in the \f(CW\*(C`.fixup\*(C'\fR section, |
| a table of 32\-bit addresses generated by this option. For this to |
| work, all objects linked together must be compiled with |
| \&\fB\-mrelocatable\fR or \fB\-mrelocatable\-lib\fR. |
| \&\fB\-mrelocatable\fR code aligns the stack to an 8\-byte boundary. |
| .IP "\fB\-mrelocatable\-lib\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrelocatable-lib" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-relocatable\-lib\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-relocatable-lib" |
| .PD |
| Like \fB\-mrelocatable\fR, \fB\-mrelocatable\-lib\fR generates a |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`.fixup\*(C'\fR section to allow static executables to be relocated at |
| run time, but \fB\-mrelocatable\-lib\fR does not use the smaller stack |
| alignment of \fB\-mrelocatable\fR. Objects compiled with |
| \&\fB\-mrelocatable\-lib\fR may be linked with objects compiled with |
| any combination of the \fB\-mrelocatable\fR options. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-toc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-toc" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mtoc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtoc" |
| .PD |
| On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems do not (do) assume that |
| register 2 contains a pointer to a global area pointing to the addresses |
| used in the program. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlittle\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlittle" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mlittle\-endian\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlittle-endian" |
| .PD |
| On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems compile code for the |
| processor in little-endian mode. The \fB\-mlittle\-endian\fR option is |
| the same as \fB\-mlittle\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbig\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbig" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mbig\-endian\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbig-endian" |
| .PD |
| On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems compile code for the |
| processor in big-endian mode. The \fB\-mbig\-endian\fR option is |
| the same as \fB\-mbig\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdynamic\-no\-pic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdynamic-no-pic" |
| On Darwin and Mac \s-1OS\s0 X systems, compile code so that it is not |
| relocatable, but that its external references are relocatable. The |
| resulting code is suitable for applications, but not shared |
| libraries. |
| .IP "\fB\-msingle\-pic\-base\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msingle-pic-base" |
| Treat the register used for \s-1PIC\s0 addressing as read-only, rather than |
| loading it in the prologue for each function. The runtime system is |
| responsible for initializing this register with an appropriate value |
| before execution begins. |
| .IP "\fB\-mprioritize\-restricted\-insns=\fR\fIpriority\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mprioritize-restricted-insns=priority" |
| This option controls the priority that is assigned to |
| dispatch-slot restricted instructions during the second scheduling |
| pass. The argument \fIpriority\fR takes the value \fB0\fR, \fB1\fR, |
| or \fB2\fR to assign no, highest, or second-highest (respectively) |
| priority to dispatch-slot restricted |
| instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-msched\-costly\-dep=\fR\fIdependence_type\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msched-costly-dep=dependence_type" |
| This option controls which dependences are considered costly |
| by the target during instruction scheduling. The argument |
| \&\fIdependence_type\fR takes one of the following values: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBno\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "no" |
| No dependence is costly. |
| .IP "\fBall\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "all" |
| All dependences are costly. |
| .IP "\fBtrue_store_to_load\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "true_store_to_load" |
| A true dependence from store to load is costly. |
| .IP "\fBstore_to_load\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "store_to_load" |
| Any dependence from store to load is costly. |
| .IP "\fInumber\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "number" |
| Any dependence for which the latency is greater than or equal to |
| \&\fInumber\fR is costly. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-minsert\-sched\-nops=\fR\fIscheme\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-minsert-sched-nops=scheme" |
| This option controls which \s-1NOP\s0 insertion scheme is used during |
| the second scheduling pass. The argument \fIscheme\fR takes one of the |
| following values: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBno\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "no" |
| Don't insert NOPs. |
| .IP "\fBpad\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "pad" |
| Pad with NOPs any dispatch group that has vacant issue slots, |
| according to the scheduler's grouping. |
| .IP "\fBregroup_exact\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "regroup_exact" |
| Insert NOPs to force costly dependent insns into |
| separate groups. Insert exactly as many NOPs as needed to force an insn |
| to a new group, according to the estimated processor grouping. |
| .IP "\fInumber\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "number" |
| Insert NOPs to force costly dependent insns into |
| separate groups. Insert \fInumber\fR NOPs to force an insn to a new group. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-mcall\-sysv\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcall-sysv" |
| On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems compile code using calling |
| conventions that adhere to the March 1995 draft of the System V |
| Application Binary Interface, PowerPC processor supplement. This is the |
| default unless you configured \s-1GCC\s0 using \fBpowerpc\-*\-eabiaix\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcall\-sysv\-eabi\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcall-sysv-eabi" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mcall\-eabi\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcall-eabi" |
| .PD |
| Specify both \fB\-mcall\-sysv\fR and \fB\-meabi\fR options. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcall\-sysv\-noeabi\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcall-sysv-noeabi" |
| Specify both \fB\-mcall\-sysv\fR and \fB\-mno\-eabi\fR options. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcall\-aixdesc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcall-aixdesc" |
| On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems compile code for the \s-1AIX\s0 |
| operating system. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcall\-linux\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcall-linux" |
| On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems compile code for the |
| Linux-based \s-1GNU\s0 system. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcall\-freebsd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcall-freebsd" |
| On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems compile code for the |
| FreeBSD operating system. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcall\-netbsd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcall-netbsd" |
| On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems compile code for the |
| NetBSD operating system. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcall\-openbsd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcall-openbsd" |
| On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems compile code for the |
| OpenBSD operating system. |
| .IP "\fB\-maix\-struct\-return\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-maix-struct-return" |
| Return all structures in memory (as specified by the \s-1AIX\s0 \s-1ABI\s0). |
| .IP "\fB\-msvr4\-struct\-return\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msvr4-struct-return" |
| Return structures smaller than 8 bytes in registers (as specified by the |
| \&\s-1SVR4\s0 \s-1ABI\s0). |
| .IP "\fB\-mabi=\fR\fIabi-type\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mabi=abi-type" |
| Extend the current \s-1ABI\s0 with a particular extension, or remove such extension. |
| Valid values are \fIaltivec\fR, \fIno-altivec\fR, \fIspe\fR, |
| \&\fIno-spe\fR, \fIibmlongdouble\fR, \fIieeelongdouble\fR, |
| \&\fIelfv1\fR, \fIelfv2\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mabi=spe\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mabi=spe" |
| Extend the current \s-1ABI\s0 with \s-1SPE\s0 \s-1ABI\s0 extensions. This does not change |
| the default \s-1ABI\s0, instead it adds the \s-1SPE\s0 \s-1ABI\s0 extensions to the current |
| \&\s-1ABI\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-mabi=no\-spe\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mabi=no-spe" |
| Disable Book-E \s-1SPE\s0 \s-1ABI\s0 extensions for the current \s-1ABI\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-mabi=ibmlongdouble\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mabi=ibmlongdouble" |
| Change the current \s-1ABI\s0 to use \s-1IBM\s0 extended-precision long double. |
| This is a PowerPC 32\-bit \s-1SYSV\s0 \s-1ABI\s0 option. |
| .IP "\fB\-mabi=ieeelongdouble\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mabi=ieeelongdouble" |
| Change the current \s-1ABI\s0 to use \s-1IEEE\s0 extended-precision long double. |
| This is a PowerPC 32\-bit Linux \s-1ABI\s0 option. |
| .IP "\fB\-mabi=elfv1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mabi=elfv1" |
| Change the current \s-1ABI\s0 to use the ELFv1 \s-1ABI\s0. |
| This is the default \s-1ABI\s0 for big-endian PowerPC 64\-bit Linux. |
| Overriding the default \s-1ABI\s0 requires special system support and is |
| likely to fail in spectacular ways. |
| .IP "\fB\-mabi=elfv2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mabi=elfv2" |
| Change the current \s-1ABI\s0 to use the ELFv2 \s-1ABI\s0. |
| This is the default \s-1ABI\s0 for little-endian PowerPC 64\-bit Linux. |
| Overriding the default \s-1ABI\s0 requires special system support and is |
| likely to fail in spectacular ways. |
| .IP "\fB\-mprototype\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mprototype" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-prototype\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-prototype" |
| .PD |
| On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems assume that all calls to |
| variable argument functions are properly prototyped. Otherwise, the |
| compiler must insert an instruction before every non-prototyped call to |
| set or clear bit 6 of the condition code register (\fI\s-1CR\s0\fR) to |
| indicate whether floating-point values are passed in the floating-point |
| registers in case the function takes variable arguments. With |
| \&\fB\-mprototype\fR, only calls to prototyped variable argument functions |
| set or clear the bit. |
| .IP "\fB\-msim\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msim" |
| On embedded PowerPC systems, assume that the startup module is called |
| \&\fIsim\-crt0.o\fR and that the standard C libraries are \fIlibsim.a\fR and |
| \&\fIlibc.a\fR. This is the default for \fBpowerpc\-*\-eabisim\fR |
| configurations. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmvme\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmvme" |
| On embedded PowerPC systems, assume that the startup module is called |
| \&\fIcrt0.o\fR and the standard C libraries are \fIlibmvme.a\fR and |
| \&\fIlibc.a\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mads\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mads" |
| On embedded PowerPC systems, assume that the startup module is called |
| \&\fIcrt0.o\fR and the standard C libraries are \fIlibads.a\fR and |
| \&\fIlibc.a\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-myellowknife\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-myellowknife" |
| On embedded PowerPC systems, assume that the startup module is called |
| \&\fIcrt0.o\fR and the standard C libraries are \fIlibyk.a\fR and |
| \&\fIlibc.a\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mvxworks\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mvxworks" |
| On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems, specify that you are |
| compiling for a VxWorks system. |
| .IP "\fB\-memb\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-memb" |
| On embedded PowerPC systems, set the \fI\s-1PPC_EMB\s0\fR bit in the \s-1ELF\s0 flags |
| header to indicate that \fBeabi\fR extended relocations are used. |
| .IP "\fB\-meabi\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-meabi" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-eabi\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-eabi" |
| .PD |
| On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems do (do not) adhere to the |
| Embedded Applications Binary Interface (\s-1EABI\s0), which is a set of |
| modifications to the System V.4 specifications. Selecting \fB\-meabi\fR |
| means that the stack is aligned to an 8\-byte boundary, a function |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_eabi\*(C'\fR is called from \f(CW\*(C`main\*(C'\fR to set up the \s-1EABI\s0 |
| environment, and the \fB\-msdata\fR option can use both \f(CW\*(C`r2\*(C'\fR and |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`r13\*(C'\fR to point to two separate small data areas. Selecting |
| \&\fB\-mno\-eabi\fR means that the stack is aligned to a 16\-byte boundary, |
| no \s-1EABI\s0 initialization function is called from \f(CW\*(C`main\*(C'\fR, and the |
| \&\fB\-msdata\fR option only uses \f(CW\*(C`r13\*(C'\fR to point to a single |
| small data area. The \fB\-meabi\fR option is on by default if you |
| configured \s-1GCC\s0 using one of the \fBpowerpc*\-*\-eabi*\fR options. |
| .IP "\fB\-msdata=eabi\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msdata=eabi" |
| On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems, put small initialized |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`const\*(C'\fR global and static data in the \fB.sdata2\fR section, which |
| is pointed to by register \f(CW\*(C`r2\*(C'\fR. Put small initialized |
| non\-\f(CW\*(C`const\*(C'\fR global and static data in the \fB.sdata\fR section, |
| which is pointed to by register \f(CW\*(C`r13\*(C'\fR. Put small uninitialized |
| global and static data in the \fB.sbss\fR section, which is adjacent to |
| the \fB.sdata\fR section. The \fB\-msdata=eabi\fR option is |
| incompatible with the \fB\-mrelocatable\fR option. The |
| \&\fB\-msdata=eabi\fR option also sets the \fB\-memb\fR option. |
| .IP "\fB\-msdata=sysv\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msdata=sysv" |
| On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems, put small global and static |
| data in the \fB.sdata\fR section, which is pointed to by register |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`r13\*(C'\fR. Put small uninitialized global and static data in the |
| \&\fB.sbss\fR section, which is adjacent to the \fB.sdata\fR section. |
| The \fB\-msdata=sysv\fR option is incompatible with the |
| \&\fB\-mrelocatable\fR option. |
| .IP "\fB\-msdata=default\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msdata=default" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-msdata\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msdata" |
| .PD |
| On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems, if \fB\-meabi\fR is used, |
| compile code the same as \fB\-msdata=eabi\fR, otherwise compile code the |
| same as \fB\-msdata=sysv\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-msdata=data\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msdata=data" |
| On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems, put small global |
| data in the \fB.sdata\fR section. Put small uninitialized global |
| data in the \fB.sbss\fR section. Do not use register \f(CW\*(C`r13\*(C'\fR |
| to address small data however. This is the default behavior unless |
| other \fB\-msdata\fR options are used. |
| .IP "\fB\-msdata=none\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msdata=none" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sdata\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sdata" |
| .PD |
| On embedded PowerPC systems, put all initialized global and static data |
| in the \fB.data\fR section, and all uninitialized data in the |
| \&\fB.bss\fR section. |
| .IP "\fB\-mblock\-move\-inline\-limit=\fR\fInum\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mblock-move-inline-limit=num" |
| Inline all block moves (such as calls to \f(CW\*(C`memcpy\*(C'\fR or structure |
| copies) less than or equal to \fInum\fR bytes. The minimum value for |
| \&\fInum\fR is 32 bytes on 32\-bit targets and 64 bytes on 64\-bit |
| targets. The default value is target-specific. |
| .IP "\fB\-G\fR \fInum\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-G num" |
| On embedded PowerPC systems, put global and static items less than or |
| equal to \fInum\fR bytes into the small data or \s-1BSS\s0 sections instead of |
| the normal data or \s-1BSS\s0 section. By default, \fInum\fR is 8. The |
| \&\fB\-G\fR \fInum\fR switch is also passed to the linker. |
| All modules should be compiled with the same \fB\-G\fR \fInum\fR value. |
| .IP "\fB\-mregnames\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mregnames" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-regnames\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-regnames" |
| .PD |
| On System V.4 and embedded PowerPC systems do (do not) emit register |
| names in the assembly language output using symbolic forms. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlongcall\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlongcall" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-longcall\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-longcall" |
| .PD |
| By default assume that all calls are far away so that a longer and more |
| expensive calling sequence is required. This is required for calls |
| farther than 32 megabytes (33,554,432 bytes) from the current location. |
| A short call is generated if the compiler knows |
| the call cannot be that far away. This setting can be overridden by |
| the \f(CW\*(C`shortcall\*(C'\fR function attribute, or by \f(CW\*(C`#pragma |
| longcall(0)\*(C'\fR. |
| .Sp |
| Some linkers are capable of detecting out-of-range calls and generating |
| glue code on the fly. On these systems, long calls are unnecessary and |
| generate slower code. As of this writing, the \s-1AIX\s0 linker can do this, |
| as can the \s-1GNU\s0 linker for PowerPC/64. It is planned to add this feature |
| to the \s-1GNU\s0 linker for 32\-bit PowerPC systems as well. |
| .Sp |
| On Darwin/PPC systems, \f(CW\*(C`#pragma longcall\*(C'\fR generates \f(CW\*(C`jbsr |
| callee, L42\*(C'\fR, plus a \fIbranch island\fR (glue code). The two target |
| addresses represent the callee and the branch island. The |
| Darwin/PPC linker prefers the first address and generates a \f(CW\*(C`bl |
| callee\*(C'\fR if the \s-1PPC\s0 \f(CW\*(C`bl\*(C'\fR instruction reaches the callee directly; |
| otherwise, the linker generates \f(CW\*(C`bl L42\*(C'\fR to call the branch |
| island. The branch island is appended to the body of the |
| calling function; it computes the full 32\-bit address of the callee |
| and jumps to it. |
| .Sp |
| On Mach-O (Darwin) systems, this option directs the compiler emit to |
| the glue for every direct call, and the Darwin linker decides whether |
| to use or discard it. |
| .Sp |
| In the future, \s-1GCC\s0 may ignore all longcall specifications |
| when the linker is known to generate glue. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtls\-markers\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtls-markers" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-tls\-markers\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-tls-markers" |
| .PD |
| Mark (do not mark) calls to \f(CW\*(C`_\|_tls_get_addr\*(C'\fR with a relocation |
| specifying the function argument. The relocation allows the linker to |
| reliably associate function call with argument setup instructions for |
| \&\s-1TLS\s0 optimization, which in turn allows \s-1GCC\s0 to better schedule the |
| sequence. |
| .IP "\fB\-pthread\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-pthread" |
| Adds support for multithreading with the \fIpthreads\fR library. |
| This option sets flags for both the preprocessor and linker. |
| .IP "\fB\-mrecip\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrecip" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-recip\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-recip" |
| .PD |
| This option enables use of the reciprocal estimate and |
| reciprocal square root estimate instructions with additional |
| Newton-Raphson steps to increase precision instead of doing a divide or |
| square root and divide for floating-point arguments. You should use |
| the \fB\-ffast\-math\fR option when using \fB\-mrecip\fR (or at |
| least \fB\-funsafe\-math\-optimizations\fR, |
| \&\fB\-finite\-math\-only\fR, \fB\-freciprocal\-math\fR and |
| \&\fB\-fno\-trapping\-math\fR). Note that while the throughput of the |
| sequence is generally higher than the throughput of the non-reciprocal |
| instruction, the precision of the sequence can be decreased by up to 2 |
| ulp (i.e. the inverse of 1.0 equals 0.99999994) for reciprocal square |
| roots. |
| .IP "\fB\-mrecip=\fR\fIopt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrecip=opt" |
| This option controls which reciprocal estimate instructions |
| may be used. \fIopt\fR is a comma-separated list of options, which may |
| be preceded by a \f(CW\*(C`!\*(C'\fR to invert the option: |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`all\*(C'\fR: enable all estimate instructions, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`default\*(C'\fR: enable the default instructions, equivalent to \fB\-mrecip\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`none\*(C'\fR: disable all estimate instructions, equivalent to \fB\-mno\-recip\fR; |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`div\*(C'\fR: enable the reciprocal approximation instructions for both single and double precision; |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`divf\*(C'\fR: enable the single-precision reciprocal approximation instructions; |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`divd\*(C'\fR: enable the double-precision reciprocal approximation instructions; |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`rsqrt\*(C'\fR: enable the reciprocal square root approximation instructions for both single and double precision; |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`rsqrtf\*(C'\fR: enable the single-precision reciprocal square root approximation instructions; |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`rsqrtd\*(C'\fR: enable the double-precision reciprocal square root approximation instructions; |
| .Sp |
| So, for example, \fB\-mrecip=all,!rsqrtd\fR enables |
| all of the reciprocal estimate instructions, except for the |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`FRSQRTE\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`XSRSQRTEDP\*(C'\fR, and \f(CW\*(C`XVRSQRTEDP\*(C'\fR instructions |
| which handle the double-precision reciprocal square root calculations. |
| .IP "\fB\-mrecip\-precision\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrecip-precision" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-recip\-precision\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-recip-precision" |
| .PD |
| Assume (do not assume) that the reciprocal estimate instructions |
| provide higher-precision estimates than is mandated by the PowerPC |
| \&\s-1ABI\s0. Selecting \fB\-mcpu=power6\fR, \fB\-mcpu=power7\fR or |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=power8\fR automatically selects \fB\-mrecip\-precision\fR. |
| The double-precision square root estimate instructions are not generated by |
| default on low-precision machines, since they do not provide an |
| estimate that converges after three steps. |
| .IP "\fB\-mveclibabi=\fR\fItype\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mveclibabi=type" |
| Specifies the \s-1ABI\s0 type to use for vectorizing intrinsics using an |
| external library. The only type supported at present is \f(CW\*(C`mass\*(C'\fR, |
| which specifies to use \s-1IBM\s0's Mathematical Acceleration Subsystem |
| (\s-1MASS\s0) libraries for vectorizing intrinsics using external libraries. |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 currently emits calls to \f(CW\*(C`acosd2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`acosf4\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`acoshd2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`acoshf4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`asind2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`asinf4\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`asinhd2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`asinhf4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atan2d2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atan2f4\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`atand2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atanf4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atanhd2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`atanhf4\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`cbrtd2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`cbrtf4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`cosd2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`cosf4\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`coshd2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`coshf4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`erfcd2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`erfcf4\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`erfd2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`erff4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`exp2d2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`exp2f4\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`expd2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`expf4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`expm1d2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`expm1f4\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`hypotd2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`hypotf4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`lgammad2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`lgammaf4\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`log10d2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`log10f4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`log1pd2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`log1pf4\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`log2d2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`log2f4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`logd2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`logf4\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`powd2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`powf4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`sind2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`sinf4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`sinhd2\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`sinhf4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`sqrtd2\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`sqrtf4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`tand2\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`tanf4\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`tanhd2\*(C'\fR, and \f(CW\*(C`tanhf4\*(C'\fR when generating code |
| for power7. Both \fB\-ftree\-vectorize\fR and |
| \&\fB\-funsafe\-math\-optimizations\fR must also be enabled. The \s-1MASS\s0 |
| libraries must be specified at link time. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfriz\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfriz" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-friz\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-friz" |
| .PD |
| Generate (do not generate) the \f(CW\*(C`friz\*(C'\fR instruction when the |
| \&\fB\-funsafe\-math\-optimizations\fR option is used to optimize |
| rounding of floating-point values to 64\-bit integer and back to floating |
| point. The \f(CW\*(C`friz\*(C'\fR instruction does not return the same value if |
| the floating-point number is too large to fit in an integer. |
| .IP "\fB\-mpointers\-to\-nested\-functions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpointers-to-nested-functions" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-pointers\-to\-nested\-functions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-pointers-to-nested-functions" |
| .PD |
| Generate (do not generate) code to load up the static chain register |
| (\fIr11\fR) when calling through a pointer on \s-1AIX\s0 and 64\-bit Linux |
| systems where a function pointer points to a 3\-word descriptor giving |
| the function address, \s-1TOC\s0 value to be loaded in register \fIr2\fR, and |
| static chain value to be loaded in register \fIr11\fR. The |
| \&\fB\-mpointers\-to\-nested\-functions\fR is on by default. You cannot |
| call through pointers to nested functions or pointers |
| to functions compiled in other languages that use the static chain if |
| you use the \fB\-mno\-pointers\-to\-nested\-functions\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-msave\-toc\-indirect\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msave-toc-indirect" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-save\-toc\-indirect\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-save-toc-indirect" |
| .PD |
| Generate (do not generate) code to save the \s-1TOC\s0 value in the reserved |
| stack location in the function prologue if the function calls through |
| a pointer on \s-1AIX\s0 and 64\-bit Linux systems. If the \s-1TOC\s0 value is not |
| saved in the prologue, it is saved just before the call through the |
| pointer. The \fB\-mno\-save\-toc\-indirect\fR option is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcompat\-align\-parm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcompat-align-parm" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-compat\-align\-parm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-compat-align-parm" |
| .PD |
| Generate (do not generate) code to pass structure parameters with a |
| maximum alignment of 64 bits, for compatibility with older versions |
| of \s-1GCC\s0. |
| .Sp |
| Older versions of \s-1GCC\s0 (prior to 4.9.0) incorrectly did not align a |
| structure parameter on a 128\-bit boundary when that structure contained |
| a member requiring 128\-bit alignment. This is corrected in more |
| recent versions of \s-1GCC\s0. This option may be used to generate code |
| that is compatible with functions compiled with older versions of |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0. |
| .Sp |
| In this version of the compiler, the \fB\-mcompat\-align\-parm\fR |
| is the default, except when using the Linux ELFv2 \s-1ABI\s0. |
| .PP |
| \fI\s-1RX\s0 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "RX Options" |
| .PP |
| These command-line options are defined for \s-1RX\s0 targets: |
| .IP "\fB\-m64bit\-doubles\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m64bit-doubles" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-m32bit\-doubles\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m32bit-doubles" |
| .PD |
| Make the \f(CW\*(C`double\*(C'\fR data type be 64 bits (\fB\-m64bit\-doubles\fR) |
| or 32 bits (\fB\-m32bit\-doubles\fR) in size. The default is |
| \&\fB\-m32bit\-doubles\fR. \fINote\fR \s-1RX\s0 floating-point hardware only |
| works on 32\-bit values, which is why the default is |
| \&\fB\-m32bit\-doubles\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fpu\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fpu" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-nofpu\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-nofpu" |
| .PD |
| Enables (\fB\-fpu\fR) or disables (\fB\-nofpu\fR) the use of \s-1RX\s0 |
| floating-point hardware. The default is enabled for the \fI\s-1RX600\s0\fR |
| series and disabled for the \fI\s-1RX200\s0\fR series. |
| .Sp |
| Floating-point instructions are only generated for 32\-bit floating-point |
| values, however, so the \s-1FPU\s0 hardware is not used for doubles if the |
| \&\fB\-m64bit\-doubles\fR option is used. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fINote\fR If the \fB\-fpu\fR option is enabled then |
| \&\fB\-funsafe\-math\-optimizations\fR is also enabled automatically. |
| This is because the \s-1RX\s0 \s-1FPU\s0 instructions are themselves unsafe. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcpu=name" |
| Selects the type of \s-1RX\s0 \s-1CPU\s0 to be targeted. Currently three types are |
| supported, the generic \fI\s-1RX600\s0\fR and \fI\s-1RX200\s0\fR series hardware and |
| the specific \fI\s-1RX610\s0\fR \s-1CPU\s0. The default is \fI\s-1RX600\s0\fR. |
| .Sp |
| The only difference between \fI\s-1RX600\s0\fR and \fI\s-1RX610\s0\fR is that the |
| \&\fI\s-1RX610\s0\fR does not support the \f(CW\*(C`MVTIPL\*(C'\fR instruction. |
| .Sp |
| The \fI\s-1RX200\s0\fR series does not have a hardware floating-point unit |
| and so \fB\-nofpu\fR is enabled by default when this type is |
| selected. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbig\-endian\-data\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbig-endian-data" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mlittle\-endian\-data\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlittle-endian-data" |
| .PD |
| Store data (but not code) in the big-endian format. The default is |
| \&\fB\-mlittle\-endian\-data\fR, i.e. to store data in the little-endian |
| format. |
| .IP "\fB\-msmall\-data\-limit=\fR\fIN\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msmall-data-limit=N" |
| Specifies the maximum size in bytes of global and static variables |
| which can be placed into the small data area. Using the small data |
| area can lead to smaller and faster code, but the size of area is |
| limited and it is up to the programmer to ensure that the area does |
| not overflow. Also when the small data area is used one of the \s-1RX\s0's |
| registers (usually \f(CW\*(C`r13\*(C'\fR) is reserved for use pointing to this |
| area, so it is no longer available for use by the compiler. This |
| could result in slower and/or larger code if variables are pushed onto |
| the stack instead of being held in this register. |
| .Sp |
| Note, common variables (variables that have not been initialized) and |
| constants are not placed into the small data area as they are assigned |
| to other sections in the output executable. |
| .Sp |
| The default value is zero, which disables this feature. Note, this |
| feature is not enabled by default with higher optimization levels |
| (\fB\-O2\fR etc) because of the potentially detrimental effects of |
| reserving a register. It is up to the programmer to experiment and |
| discover whether this feature is of benefit to their program. See the |
| description of the \fB\-mpid\fR option for a description of how the |
| actual register to hold the small data area pointer is chosen. |
| .IP "\fB\-msim\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msim" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-sim\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-sim" |
| .PD |
| Use the simulator runtime. The default is to use the libgloss |
| board-specific runtime. |
| .IP "\fB\-mas100\-syntax\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mas100-syntax" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-as100\-syntax\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-as100-syntax" |
| .PD |
| When generating assembler output use a syntax that is compatible with |
| Renesas's \s-1AS100\s0 assembler. This syntax can also be handled by the \s-1GAS\s0 |
| assembler, but it has some restrictions so it is not generated by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmax\-constant\-size=\fR\fIN\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmax-constant-size=N" |
| Specifies the maximum size, in bytes, of a constant that can be used as |
| an operand in a \s-1RX\s0 instruction. Although the \s-1RX\s0 instruction set does |
| allow constants of up to 4 bytes in length to be used in instructions, |
| a longer value equates to a longer instruction. Thus in some |
| circumstances it can be beneficial to restrict the size of constants |
| that are used in instructions. Constants that are too big are instead |
| placed into a constant pool and referenced via register indirection. |
| .Sp |
| The value \fIN\fR can be between 0 and 4. A value of 0 (the default) |
| or 4 means that constants of any size are allowed. |
| .IP "\fB\-mrelax\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrelax" |
| Enable linker relaxation. Linker relaxation is a process whereby the |
| linker attempts to reduce the size of a program by finding shorter |
| versions of various instructions. Disabled by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mint\-register=\fR\fIN\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mint-register=N" |
| Specify the number of registers to reserve for fast interrupt handler |
| functions. The value \fIN\fR can be between 0 and 4. A value of 1 |
| means that register \f(CW\*(C`r13\*(C'\fR is reserved for the exclusive use |
| of fast interrupt handlers. A value of 2 reserves \f(CW\*(C`r13\*(C'\fR and |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`r12\*(C'\fR. A value of 3 reserves \f(CW\*(C`r13\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`r12\*(C'\fR and |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`r11\*(C'\fR, and a value of 4 reserves \f(CW\*(C`r13\*(C'\fR through \f(CW\*(C`r10\*(C'\fR. |
| A value of 0, the default, does not reserve any registers. |
| .IP "\fB\-msave\-acc\-in\-interrupts\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msave-acc-in-interrupts" |
| Specifies that interrupt handler functions should preserve the |
| accumulator register. This is only necessary if normal code might use |
| the accumulator register, for example because it performs 64\-bit |
| multiplications. The default is to ignore the accumulator as this |
| makes the interrupt handlers faster. |
| .IP "\fB\-mpid\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpid" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-pid\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-pid" |
| .PD |
| Enables the generation of position independent data. When enabled any |
| access to constant data is done via an offset from a base address |
| held in a register. This allows the location of constant data to be |
| determined at run time without requiring the executable to be |
| relocated, which is a benefit to embedded applications with tight |
| memory constraints. Data that can be modified is not affected by this |
| option. |
| .Sp |
| Note, using this feature reserves a register, usually \f(CW\*(C`r13\*(C'\fR, for |
| the constant data base address. This can result in slower and/or |
| larger code, especially in complicated functions. |
| .Sp |
| The actual register chosen to hold the constant data base address |
| depends upon whether the \fB\-msmall\-data\-limit\fR and/or the |
| \&\fB\-mint\-register\fR command-line options are enabled. Starting |
| with register \f(CW\*(C`r13\*(C'\fR and proceeding downwards, registers are |
| allocated first to satisfy the requirements of \fB\-mint\-register\fR, |
| then \fB\-mpid\fR and finally \fB\-msmall\-data\-limit\fR. Thus it |
| is possible for the small data area register to be \f(CW\*(C`r8\*(C'\fR if both |
| \&\fB\-mint\-register=4\fR and \fB\-mpid\fR are specified on the |
| command line. |
| .Sp |
| By default this feature is not enabled. The default can be restored |
| via the \fB\-mno\-pid\fR command-line option. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-warn\-multiple\-fast\-interrupts\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-warn-multiple-fast-interrupts" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mwarn\-multiple\-fast\-interrupts\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mwarn-multiple-fast-interrupts" |
| .PD |
| Prevents \s-1GCC\s0 from issuing a warning message if it finds more than one |
| fast interrupt handler when it is compiling a file. The default is to |
| issue a warning for each extra fast interrupt handler found, as the \s-1RX\s0 |
| only supports one such interrupt. |
| .PP |
| \&\fINote:\fR The generic \s-1GCC\s0 command-line option \fB\-ffixed\-\fR\fIreg\fR |
| has special significance to the \s-1RX\s0 port when used with the |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`interrupt\*(C'\fR function attribute. This attribute indicates a |
| function intended to process fast interrupts. \s-1GCC\s0 ensures |
| that it only uses the registers \f(CW\*(C`r10\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`r11\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`r12\*(C'\fR |
| and/or \f(CW\*(C`r13\*(C'\fR and only provided that the normal use of the |
| corresponding registers have been restricted via the |
| \&\fB\-ffixed\-\fR\fIreg\fR or \fB\-mint\-register\fR command-line |
| options. |
| .PP |
| \fIS/390 and zSeries Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "S/390 and zSeries Options" |
| .PP |
| These are the \fB\-m\fR options defined for the S/390 and zSeries architecture. |
| .IP "\fB\-mhard\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mhard-float" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-msoft\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msoft-float" |
| .PD |
| Use (do not use) the hardware floating-point instructions and registers |
| for floating-point operations. When \fB\-msoft\-float\fR is specified, |
| functions in \fIlibgcc.a\fR are used to perform floating-point |
| operations. When \fB\-mhard\-float\fR is specified, the compiler |
| generates \s-1IEEE\s0 floating-point instructions. This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mhard\-dfp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mhard-dfp" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-hard\-dfp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-hard-dfp" |
| .PD |
| Use (do not use) the hardware decimal-floating-point instructions for |
| decimal-floating-point operations. When \fB\-mno\-hard\-dfp\fR is |
| specified, functions in \fIlibgcc.a\fR are used to perform |
| decimal-floating-point operations. When \fB\-mhard\-dfp\fR is |
| specified, the compiler generates decimal-floating-point hardware |
| instructions. This is the default for \fB\-march=z9\-ec\fR or higher. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlong\-double\-64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlong-double-64" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mlong\-double\-128\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlong-double-128" |
| .PD |
| These switches control the size of \f(CW\*(C`long double\*(C'\fR type. A size |
| of 64 bits makes the \f(CW\*(C`long double\*(C'\fR type equivalent to the \f(CW\*(C`double\*(C'\fR |
| type. This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbackchain\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbackchain" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-backchain\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-backchain" |
| .PD |
| Store (do not store) the address of the caller's frame as backchain pointer |
| into the callee's stack frame. |
| A backchain may be needed to allow debugging using tools that do not understand |
| \&\s-1DWARF\s0 2 call frame information. |
| When \fB\-mno\-packed\-stack\fR is in effect, the backchain pointer is stored |
| at the bottom of the stack frame; when \fB\-mpacked\-stack\fR is in effect, |
| the backchain is placed into the topmost word of the 96/160 byte register |
| save area. |
| .Sp |
| In general, code compiled with \fB\-mbackchain\fR is call-compatible with |
| code compiled with \fB\-mmo\-backchain\fR; however, use of the backchain |
| for debugging purposes usually requires that the whole binary is built with |
| \&\fB\-mbackchain\fR. Note that the combination of \fB\-mbackchain\fR, |
| \&\fB\-mpacked\-stack\fR and \fB\-mhard\-float\fR is not supported. In order |
| to build a linux kernel use \fB\-msoft\-float\fR. |
| .Sp |
| The default is to not maintain the backchain. |
| .IP "\fB\-mpacked\-stack\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpacked-stack" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-packed\-stack\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-packed-stack" |
| .PD |
| Use (do not use) the packed stack layout. When \fB\-mno\-packed\-stack\fR is |
| specified, the compiler uses the all fields of the 96/160 byte register save |
| area only for their default purpose; unused fields still take up stack space. |
| When \fB\-mpacked\-stack\fR is specified, register save slots are densely |
| packed at the top of the register save area; unused space is reused for other |
| purposes, allowing for more efficient use of the available stack space. |
| However, when \fB\-mbackchain\fR is also in effect, the topmost word of |
| the save area is always used to store the backchain, and the return address |
| register is always saved two words below the backchain. |
| .Sp |
| As long as the stack frame backchain is not used, code generated with |
| \&\fB\-mpacked\-stack\fR is call-compatible with code generated with |
| \&\fB\-mno\-packed\-stack\fR. Note that some non-FSF releases of \s-1GCC\s0 2.95 for |
| S/390 or zSeries generated code that uses the stack frame backchain at run |
| time, not just for debugging purposes. Such code is not call-compatible |
| with code compiled with \fB\-mpacked\-stack\fR. Also, note that the |
| combination of \fB\-mbackchain\fR, |
| \&\fB\-mpacked\-stack\fR and \fB\-mhard\-float\fR is not supported. In order |
| to build a linux kernel use \fB\-msoft\-float\fR. |
| .Sp |
| The default is to not use the packed stack layout. |
| .IP "\fB\-msmall\-exec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msmall-exec" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-small\-exec\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-small-exec" |
| .PD |
| Generate (or do not generate) code using the \f(CW\*(C`bras\*(C'\fR instruction |
| to do subroutine calls. |
| This only works reliably if the total executable size does not |
| exceed 64k. The default is to use the \f(CW\*(C`basr\*(C'\fR instruction instead, |
| which does not have this limitation. |
| .IP "\fB\-m64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m64" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-m31\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m31" |
| .PD |
| When \fB\-m31\fR is specified, generate code compliant to the |
| GNU/Linux for S/390 \s-1ABI\s0. When \fB\-m64\fR is specified, generate |
| code compliant to the GNU/Linux for zSeries \s-1ABI\s0. This allows \s-1GCC\s0 in |
| particular to generate 64\-bit instructions. For the \fBs390\fR |
| targets, the default is \fB\-m31\fR, while the \fBs390x\fR |
| targets default to \fB\-m64\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mzarch\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mzarch" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mesa\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mesa" |
| .PD |
| When \fB\-mzarch\fR is specified, generate code using the |
| instructions available on z/Architecture. |
| When \fB\-mesa\fR is specified, generate code using the |
| instructions available on \s-1ESA/390\s0. Note that \fB\-mesa\fR is |
| not possible with \fB\-m64\fR. |
| When generating code compliant to the GNU/Linux for S/390 \s-1ABI\s0, |
| the default is \fB\-mesa\fR. When generating code compliant |
| to the GNU/Linux for zSeries \s-1ABI\s0, the default is \fB\-mzarch\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmvcle\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmvcle" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-mvcle\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-mvcle" |
| .PD |
| Generate (or do not generate) code using the \f(CW\*(C`mvcle\*(C'\fR instruction |
| to perform block moves. When \fB\-mno\-mvcle\fR is specified, |
| use a \f(CW\*(C`mvc\*(C'\fR loop instead. This is the default unless optimizing for |
| size. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdebug\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdebug" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-debug\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-debug" |
| .PD |
| Print (or do not print) additional debug information when compiling. |
| The default is to not print debug information. |
| .IP "\fB\-march=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-march=cpu-type" |
| Generate code that runs on \fIcpu-type\fR, which is the name of a system |
| representing a certain processor type. Possible values for |
| \&\fIcpu-type\fR are \fBg5\fR, \fBg6\fR, \fBz900\fR, \fBz990\fR, |
| \&\fBz9\-109\fR, \fBz9\-ec\fR and \fBz10\fR. |
| When generating code using the instructions available on z/Architecture, |
| the default is \fB\-march=z900\fR. Otherwise, the default is |
| \&\fB\-march=g5\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtune=\fR\fIcpu-type\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtune=cpu-type" |
| Tune to \fIcpu-type\fR everything applicable about the generated code, |
| except for the \s-1ABI\s0 and the set of available instructions. |
| The list of \fIcpu-type\fR values is the same as for \fB\-march\fR. |
| The default is the value used for \fB\-march\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtpf\-trace\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtpf-trace" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-tpf\-trace\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-tpf-trace" |
| .PD |
| Generate code that adds (does not add) in \s-1TPF\s0 \s-1OS\s0 specific branches to trace |
| routines in the operating system. This option is off by default, even |
| when compiling for the \s-1TPF\s0 \s-1OS\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfused\-madd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfused-madd" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fused\-madd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fused-madd" |
| .PD |
| Generate code that uses (does not use) the floating-point multiply and |
| accumulate instructions. These instructions are generated by default if |
| hardware floating point is used. |
| .IP "\fB\-mwarn\-framesize=\fR\fIframesize\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mwarn-framesize=framesize" |
| Emit a warning if the current function exceeds the given frame size. Because |
| this is a compile-time check it doesn't need to be a real problem when the program |
| runs. It is intended to identify functions that most probably cause |
| a stack overflow. It is useful to be used in an environment with limited stack |
| size e.g. the linux kernel. |
| .IP "\fB\-mwarn\-dynamicstack\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mwarn-dynamicstack" |
| Emit a warning if the function calls \f(CW\*(C`alloca\*(C'\fR or uses dynamically-sized |
| arrays. This is generally a bad idea with a limited stack size. |
| .IP "\fB\-mstack\-guard=\fR\fIstack-guard\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mstack-guard=stack-guard" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mstack\-size=\fR\fIstack-size\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mstack-size=stack-size" |
| .PD |
| If these options are provided the S/390 back end emits additional instructions in |
| the function prologue that trigger a trap if the stack size is \fIstack-guard\fR |
| bytes above the \fIstack-size\fR (remember that the stack on S/390 grows downward). |
| If the \fIstack-guard\fR option is omitted the smallest power of 2 larger than |
| the frame size of the compiled function is chosen. |
| These options are intended to be used to help debugging stack overflow problems. |
| The additionally emitted code causes only little overhead and hence can also be |
| used in production-like systems without greater performance degradation. The given |
| values have to be exact powers of 2 and \fIstack-size\fR has to be greater than |
| \&\fIstack-guard\fR without exceeding 64k. |
| In order to be efficient the extra code makes the assumption that the stack starts |
| at an address aligned to the value given by \fIstack-size\fR. |
| The \fIstack-guard\fR option can only be used in conjunction with \fIstack-size\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mhotpatch[=\fR\fIhalfwords\fR\fB]\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mhotpatch[=halfwords]" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-hotpatch\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-hotpatch" |
| .PD |
| If the hotpatch option is enabled, a \*(L"hot-patching\*(R" function |
| prologue is generated for all functions in the compilation unit. |
| The funtion label is prepended with the given number of two-byte |
| Nop instructions (\fIhalfwords\fR, maximum 1000000) or 12 Nop |
| instructions if no argument is present. Functions with a |
| hot-patching prologue are never inlined automatically, and a |
| hot-patching prologue is never generated for functions functions |
| that are explicitly inline. |
| .Sp |
| This option can be overridden for individual functions with the |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`hotpatch\*(C'\fR attribute. |
| .PP |
| \fIScore Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "Score Options" |
| .PP |
| These options are defined for Score implementations: |
| .IP "\fB\-meb\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-meb" |
| Compile code for big-endian mode. This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mel\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mel" |
| Compile code for little-endian mode. |
| .IP "\fB\-mnhwloop\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mnhwloop" |
| Disable generation of \f(CW\*(C`bcnz\*(C'\fR instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-muls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-muls" |
| Enable generation of unaligned load and store instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmac\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmac" |
| Enable the use of multiply-accumulate instructions. Disabled by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mscore5\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mscore5" |
| Specify the \s-1SCORE5\s0 as the target architecture. |
| .IP "\fB\-mscore5u\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mscore5u" |
| Specify the \s-1SCORE5U\s0 of the target architecture. |
| .IP "\fB\-mscore7\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mscore7" |
| Specify the \s-1SCORE7\s0 as the target architecture. This is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mscore7d\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mscore7d" |
| Specify the \s-1SCORE7D\s0 as the target architecture. |
| .PP |
| \fI\s-1SH\s0 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "SH Options" |
| .PP |
| These \fB\-m\fR options are defined for the \s-1SH\s0 implementations: |
| .IP "\fB\-m1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m1" |
| Generate code for the \s-1SH1\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-m2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m2" |
| Generate code for the \s-1SH2\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-m2e\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m2e" |
| Generate code for the SH2e. |
| .IP "\fB\-m2a\-nofpu\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m2a-nofpu" |
| Generate code for the SH2a without \s-1FPU\s0, or for a SH2a\-FPU in such a way |
| that the floating-point unit is not used. |
| .IP "\fB\-m2a\-single\-only\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m2a-single-only" |
| Generate code for the SH2a\-FPU, in such a way that no double-precision |
| floating-point operations are used. |
| .IP "\fB\-m2a\-single\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m2a-single" |
| Generate code for the SH2a\-FPU assuming the floating-point unit is in |
| single-precision mode by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-m2a\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m2a" |
| Generate code for the SH2a\-FPU assuming the floating-point unit is in |
| double-precision mode by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-m3\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m3" |
| Generate code for the \s-1SH3\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-m3e\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m3e" |
| Generate code for the SH3e. |
| .IP "\fB\-m4\-nofpu\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m4-nofpu" |
| Generate code for the \s-1SH4\s0 without a floating-point unit. |
| .IP "\fB\-m4\-single\-only\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m4-single-only" |
| Generate code for the \s-1SH4\s0 with a floating-point unit that only |
| supports single-precision arithmetic. |
| .IP "\fB\-m4\-single\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m4-single" |
| Generate code for the \s-1SH4\s0 assuming the floating-point unit is in |
| single-precision mode by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-m4\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m4" |
| Generate code for the \s-1SH4\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-m4a\-nofpu\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m4a-nofpu" |
| Generate code for the SH4al\-dsp, or for a SH4a in such a way that the |
| floating-point unit is not used. |
| .IP "\fB\-m4a\-single\-only\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m4a-single-only" |
| Generate code for the SH4a, in such a way that no double-precision |
| floating-point operations are used. |
| .IP "\fB\-m4a\-single\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m4a-single" |
| Generate code for the SH4a assuming the floating-point unit is in |
| single-precision mode by default. |
| .IP "\fB\-m4a\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m4a" |
| Generate code for the SH4a. |
| .IP "\fB\-m4al\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m4al" |
| Same as \fB\-m4a\-nofpu\fR, except that it implicitly passes |
| \&\fB\-dsp\fR to the assembler. \s-1GCC\s0 doesn't generate any \s-1DSP\s0 |
| instructions at the moment. |
| .IP "\fB\-mb\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mb" |
| Compile code for the processor in big-endian mode. |
| .IP "\fB\-ml\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ml" |
| Compile code for the processor in little-endian mode. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdalign\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdalign" |
| Align doubles at 64\-bit boundaries. Note that this changes the calling |
| conventions, and thus some functions from the standard C library do |
| not work unless you recompile it first with \fB\-mdalign\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mrelax\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrelax" |
| Shorten some address references at link time, when possible; uses the |
| linker option \fB\-relax\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbigtable\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbigtable" |
| Use 32\-bit offsets in \f(CW\*(C`switch\*(C'\fR tables. The default is to use |
| 16\-bit offsets. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbitops\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbitops" |
| Enable the use of bit manipulation instructions on \s-1SH2A\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfmovd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfmovd" |
| Enable the use of the instruction \f(CW\*(C`fmovd\*(C'\fR. Check \fB\-mdalign\fR for |
| alignment constraints. |
| .IP "\fB\-mhitachi\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mhitachi" |
| Comply with the calling conventions defined by Renesas. |
| .IP "\fB\-mrenesas\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrenesas" |
| Comply with the calling conventions defined by Renesas. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-renesas\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-renesas" |
| Comply with the calling conventions defined for \s-1GCC\s0 before the Renesas |
| conventions were available. This option is the default for all |
| targets of the \s-1SH\s0 toolchain. |
| .IP "\fB\-mnomacsave\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mnomacsave" |
| Mark the \f(CW\*(C`MAC\*(C'\fR register as call-clobbered, even if |
| \&\fB\-mhitachi\fR is given. |
| .IP "\fB\-mieee\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mieee" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-ieee\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-ieee" |
| .PD |
| Control the \s-1IEEE\s0 compliance of floating-point comparisons, which affects the |
| handling of cases where the result of a comparison is unordered. By default |
| \&\fB\-mieee\fR is implicitly enabled. If \fB\-ffinite\-math\-only\fR is |
| enabled \fB\-mno\-ieee\fR is implicitly set, which results in faster |
| floating-point greater-equal and less-equal comparisons. The implcit settings |
| can be overridden by specifying either \fB\-mieee\fR or \fB\-mno\-ieee\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-minline\-ic_invalidate\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-minline-ic_invalidate" |
| Inline code to invalidate instruction cache entries after setting up |
| nested function trampolines. |
| This option has no effect if \fB\-musermode\fR is in effect and the selected |
| code generation option (e.g. \fB\-m4\fR) does not allow the use of the \f(CW\*(C`icbi\*(C'\fR |
| instruction. |
| If the selected code generation option does not allow the use of the \f(CW\*(C`icbi\*(C'\fR |
| instruction, and \fB\-musermode\fR is not in effect, the inlined code |
| manipulates the instruction cache address array directly with an associative |
| write. This not only requires privileged mode at run time, but it also |
| fails if the cache line had been mapped via the \s-1TLB\s0 and has become unmapped. |
| .IP "\fB\-misize\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-misize" |
| Dump instruction size and location in the assembly code. |
| .IP "\fB\-mpadstruct\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpadstruct" |
| This option is deprecated. It pads structures to multiple of 4 bytes, |
| which is incompatible with the \s-1SH\s0 \s-1ABI\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-matomic\-model=\fR\fImodel\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-matomic-model=model" |
| Sets the model of atomic operations and additional parameters as a comma |
| separated list. For details on the atomic built-in functions see |
| \&\fB_\|_atomic Builtins\fR. The following models and parameters are supported: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBnone\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "none" |
| Disable compiler generated atomic sequences and emit library calls for atomic |
| operations. This is the default if the target is not \f(CW\*(C`sh\-*\-linux*\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fBsoft-gusa\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "soft-gusa" |
| Generate GNU/Linux compatible gUSA software atomic sequences for the atomic |
| built-in functions. The generated atomic sequences require additional support |
| from the interrupt/exception handling code of the system and are only suitable |
| for SH3* and SH4* single-core systems. This option is enabled by default when |
| the target is \f(CW\*(C`sh\-*\-linux*\*(C'\fR and SH3* or SH4*. When the target is \s-1SH4A\s0, |
| this option will also partially utilize the hardware atomic instructions |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`movli.l\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`movco.l\*(C'\fR to create more efficient code, unless |
| \&\fBstrict\fR is specified. |
| .IP "\fBsoft-tcb\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "soft-tcb" |
| Generate software atomic sequences that use a variable in the thread control |
| block. This is a variation of the gUSA sequences which can also be used on |
| SH1* and SH2* targets. The generated atomic sequences require additional |
| support from the interrupt/exception handling code of the system and are only |
| suitable for single-core systems. When using this model, the \fBgbr\-offset=\fR |
| parameter has to be specified as well. |
| .IP "\fBsoft-imask\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "soft-imask" |
| Generate software atomic sequences that temporarily disable interrupts by |
| setting \f(CW\*(C`SR.IMASK = 1111\*(C'\fR. This model works only when the program runs |
| in privileged mode and is only suitable for single-core systems. Additional |
| support from the interrupt/exception handling code of the system is not |
| required. This model is enabled by default when the target is |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`sh\-*\-linux*\*(C'\fR and SH1* or SH2*. |
| .IP "\fBhard-llcs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "hard-llcs" |
| Generate hardware atomic sequences using the \f(CW\*(C`movli.l\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`movco.l\*(C'\fR |
| instructions only. This is only available on \s-1SH4A\s0 and is suitable for |
| multi-core systems. Since the hardware instructions support only 32 bit atomic |
| variables access to 8 or 16 bit variables is emulated with 32 bit accesses. |
| Code compiled with this option will also be compatible with other software |
| atomic model interrupt/exception handling systems if executed on an \s-1SH4A\s0 |
| system. Additional support from the interrupt/exception handling code of the |
| system is not required for this model. |
| .IP "\fBgbr\-offset=\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "gbr-offset=" |
| This parameter specifies the offset in bytes of the variable in the thread |
| control block structure that should be used by the generated atomic sequences |
| when the \fBsoft-tcb\fR model has been selected. For other models this |
| parameter is ignored. The specified value must be an integer multiple of four |
| and in the range 0\-1020. |
| .IP "\fBstrict\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "strict" |
| This parameter prevents mixed usage of multiple atomic models, even though they |
| would be compatible, and will make the compiler generate atomic sequences of the |
| specified model only. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-mtas\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtas" |
| Generate the \f(CW\*(C`tas.b\*(C'\fR opcode for \f(CW\*(C`_\|_atomic_test_and_set\*(C'\fR. |
| Notice that depending on the particular hardware and software configuration |
| this can degrade overall performance due to the operand cache line flushes |
| that are implied by the \f(CW\*(C`tas.b\*(C'\fR instruction. On multi-core \s-1SH4A\s0 |
| processors the \f(CW\*(C`tas.b\*(C'\fR instruction must be used with caution since it |
| can result in data corruption for certain cache configurations. |
| .IP "\fB\-mspace\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mspace" |
| Optimize for space instead of speed. Implied by \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mprefergot\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mprefergot" |
| When generating position-independent code, emit function calls using |
| the Global Offset Table instead of the Procedure Linkage Table. |
| .IP "\fB\-musermode\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-musermode" |
| Don't generate privileged mode only code. This option |
| implies \fB\-mno\-inline\-ic_invalidate\fR |
| if the inlined code would not work in user mode. |
| This is the default when the target is \f(CW\*(C`sh\-*\-linux*\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-multcost=\fR\fInumber\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-multcost=number" |
| Set the cost to assume for a multiply insn. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdiv=\fR\fIstrategy\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdiv=strategy" |
| Set the division strategy to be used for integer division operations. |
| For SHmedia \fIstrategy\fR can be one of: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBfp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "fp" |
| Performs the operation in floating point. This has a very high latency, |
| but needs only a few instructions, so it might be a good choice if |
| your code has enough easily-exploitable \s-1ILP\s0 to allow the compiler to |
| schedule the floating-point instructions together with other instructions. |
| Division by zero causes a floating-point exception. |
| .IP "\fBinv\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "inv" |
| Uses integer operations to calculate the inverse of the divisor, |
| and then multiplies the dividend with the inverse. This strategy allows |
| \&\s-1CSE\s0 and hoisting of the inverse calculation. Division by zero calculates |
| an unspecified result, but does not trap. |
| .IP "\fBinv:minlat\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "inv:minlat" |
| A variant of \fBinv\fR where, if no \s-1CSE\s0 or hoisting opportunities |
| have been found, or if the entire operation has been hoisted to the same |
| place, the last stages of the inverse calculation are intertwined with the |
| final multiply to reduce the overall latency, at the expense of using a few |
| more instructions, and thus offering fewer scheduling opportunities with |
| other code. |
| .IP "\fBcall\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "call" |
| Calls a library function that usually implements the \fBinv:minlat\fR |
| strategy. |
| This gives high code density for \f(CW\*(C`m5\-*media\-nofpu\*(C'\fR compilations. |
| .IP "\fBcall2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "call2" |
| Uses a different entry point of the same library function, where it |
| assumes that a pointer to a lookup table has already been set up, which |
| exposes the pointer load to \s-1CSE\s0 and code hoisting optimizations. |
| .IP "\fBinv:call\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "inv:call" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBinv:call2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "inv:call2" |
| .IP "\fBinv:fp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "inv:fp" |
| .PD |
| Use the \fBinv\fR algorithm for initial |
| code generation, but if the code stays unoptimized, revert to the \fBcall\fR, |
| \&\fBcall2\fR, or \fBfp\fR strategies, respectively. Note that the |
| potentially-trapping side effect of division by zero is carried by a |
| separate instruction, so it is possible that all the integer instructions |
| are hoisted out, but the marker for the side effect stays where it is. |
| A recombination to floating-point operations or a call is not possible |
| in that case. |
| .IP "\fBinv20u\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "inv20u" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBinv20l\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "inv20l" |
| .PD |
| Variants of the \fBinv:minlat\fR strategy. In the case |
| that the inverse calculation is not separated from the multiply, they speed |
| up division where the dividend fits into 20 bits (plus sign where applicable) |
| by inserting a test to skip a number of operations in this case; this test |
| slows down the case of larger dividends. \fBinv20u\fR assumes the case of a such |
| a small dividend to be unlikely, and \fBinv20l\fR assumes it to be likely. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| For targets other than SHmedia \fIstrategy\fR can be one of: |
| .IP "\fBcall\-div1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "call-div1" |
| Calls a library function that uses the single-step division instruction |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`div1\*(C'\fR to perform the operation. Division by zero calculates an |
| unspecified result and does not trap. This is the default except for \s-1SH4\s0, |
| \&\s-1SH2A\s0 and SHcompact. |
| .IP "\fBcall-fp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "call-fp" |
| Calls a library function that performs the operation in double precision |
| floating point. Division by zero causes a floating-point exception. This is |
| the default for SHcompact with \s-1FPU\s0. Specifying this for targets that do not |
| have a double precision \s-1FPU\s0 will default to \f(CW\*(C`call\-div1\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fBcall-table\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "call-table" |
| Calls a library function that uses a lookup table for small divisors and |
| the \f(CW\*(C`div1\*(C'\fR instruction with case distinction for larger divisors. Division |
| by zero calculates an unspecified result and does not trap. This is the default |
| for \s-1SH4\s0. Specifying this for targets that do not have dynamic shift |
| instructions will default to \f(CW\*(C`call\-div1\*(C'\fR. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| When a division strategy has not been specified the default strategy will be |
| selected based on the current target. For \s-1SH2A\s0 the default strategy is to |
| use the \f(CW\*(C`divs\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`divu\*(C'\fR instructions instead of library function |
| calls. |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-maccumulate\-outgoing\-args\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-maccumulate-outgoing-args" |
| Reserve space once for outgoing arguments in the function prologue rather |
| than around each call. Generally beneficial for performance and size. Also |
| needed for unwinding to avoid changing the stack frame around conditional code. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdivsi3_libfunc=\fR\fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdivsi3_libfunc=name" |
| Set the name of the library function used for 32\-bit signed division to |
| \&\fIname\fR. |
| This only affects the name used in the \fBcall\fR and \fBinv:call\fR |
| division strategies, and the compiler still expects the same |
| sets of input/output/clobbered registers as if this option were not present. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfixed\-range=\fR\fIregister-range\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfixed-range=register-range" |
| Generate code treating the given register range as fixed registers. |
| A fixed register is one that the register allocator can not use. This is |
| useful when compiling kernel code. A register range is specified as |
| two registers separated by a dash. Multiple register ranges can be |
| specified separated by a comma. |
| .IP "\fB\-mindexed\-addressing\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mindexed-addressing" |
| Enable the use of the indexed addressing mode for SHmedia32/SHcompact. |
| This is only safe if the hardware and/or \s-1OS\s0 implement 32\-bit wrap-around |
| semantics for the indexed addressing mode. The architecture allows the |
| implementation of processors with 64\-bit \s-1MMU\s0, which the \s-1OS\s0 could use to |
| get 32\-bit addressing, but since no current hardware implementation supports |
| this or any other way to make the indexed addressing mode safe to use in |
| the 32\-bit \s-1ABI\s0, the default is \fB\-mno\-indexed\-addressing\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mgettrcost=\fR\fInumber\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mgettrcost=number" |
| Set the cost assumed for the \f(CW\*(C`gettr\*(C'\fR instruction to \fInumber\fR. |
| The default is 2 if \fB\-mpt\-fixed\fR is in effect, 100 otherwise. |
| .IP "\fB\-mpt\-fixed\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpt-fixed" |
| Assume \f(CW\*(C`pt*\*(C'\fR instructions won't trap. This generally generates |
| better-scheduled code, but is unsafe on current hardware. |
| The current architecture |
| definition says that \f(CW\*(C`ptabs\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`ptrel\*(C'\fR trap when the target |
| anded with 3 is 3. |
| This has the unintentional effect of making it unsafe to schedule these |
| instructions before a branch, or hoist them out of a loop. For example, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_do_global_ctors\*(C'\fR, a part of \fIlibgcc\fR |
| that runs constructors at program |
| startup, calls functions in a list which is delimited by \-1. With the |
| \&\fB\-mpt\-fixed\fR option, the \f(CW\*(C`ptabs\*(C'\fR is done before testing against \-1. |
| That means that all the constructors run a bit more quickly, but when |
| the loop comes to the end of the list, the program crashes because \f(CW\*(C`ptabs\*(C'\fR |
| loads \-1 into a target register. |
| .Sp |
| Since this option is unsafe for any |
| hardware implementing the current architecture specification, the default |
| is \fB\-mno\-pt\-fixed\fR. Unless specified explicitly with |
| \&\fB\-mgettrcost\fR, \fB\-mno\-pt\-fixed\fR also implies \fB\-mgettrcost=100\fR; |
| this deters register allocation from using target registers for storing |
| ordinary integers. |
| .IP "\fB\-minvalid\-symbols\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-minvalid-symbols" |
| Assume symbols might be invalid. Ordinary function symbols generated by |
| the compiler are always valid to load with |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`movi\*(C'\fR/\f(CW\*(C`shori\*(C'\fR/\f(CW\*(C`ptabs\*(C'\fR or |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`movi\*(C'\fR/\f(CW\*(C`shori\*(C'\fR/\f(CW\*(C`ptrel\*(C'\fR, |
| but with assembler and/or linker tricks it is possible |
| to generate symbols that cause \f(CW\*(C`ptabs\*(C'\fR or \f(CW\*(C`ptrel\*(C'\fR to trap. |
| This option is only meaningful when \fB\-mno\-pt\-fixed\fR is in effect. |
| It prevents cross-basic-block \s-1CSE\s0, hoisting and most scheduling |
| of symbol loads. The default is \fB\-mno\-invalid\-symbols\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbranch\-cost=\fR\fInum\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbranch-cost=num" |
| Assume \fInum\fR to be the cost for a branch instruction. Higher numbers |
| make the compiler try to generate more branch-free code if possible. |
| If not specified the value is selected depending on the processor type that |
| is being compiled for. |
| .IP "\fB\-mzdcbranch\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mzdcbranch" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-zdcbranch\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-zdcbranch" |
| .PD |
| Assume (do not assume) that zero displacement conditional branch instructions |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`bt\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`bf\*(C'\fR are fast. If \fB\-mzdcbranch\fR is specified, the |
| compiler will try to prefer zero displacement branch code sequences. This is |
| enabled by default when generating code for \s-1SH4\s0 and \s-1SH4A\s0. It can be explicitly |
| disabled by specifying \fB\-mno\-zdcbranch\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcbranchdi\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcbranchdi" |
| Enable the \f(CW\*(C`cbranchdi4\*(C'\fR instruction pattern. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcmpeqdi\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcmpeqdi" |
| Emit the \f(CW\*(C`cmpeqdi_t\*(C'\fR instruction pattern even when \fB\-mcbranchdi\fR |
| is in effect. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfused\-madd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfused-madd" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fused\-madd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fused-madd" |
| .PD |
| Generate code that uses (does not use) the floating-point multiply and |
| accumulate instructions. These instructions are generated by default |
| if hardware floating point is used. The machine-dependent |
| \&\fB\-mfused\-madd\fR option is now mapped to the machine-independent |
| \&\fB\-ffp\-contract=fast\fR option, and \fB\-mno\-fused\-madd\fR is |
| mapped to \fB\-ffp\-contract=off\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfsca\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfsca" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fsca\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fsca" |
| .PD |
| Allow or disallow the compiler to emit the \f(CW\*(C`fsca\*(C'\fR instruction for sine |
| and cosine approximations. The option \f(CW\*(C`\-mfsca\*(C'\fR must be used in |
| combination with \f(CW\*(C`\-funsafe\-math\-optimizations\*(C'\fR. It is enabled by default |
| when generating code for \s-1SH4A\s0. Using \f(CW\*(C`\-mno\-fsca\*(C'\fR disables sine and cosine |
| approximations even if \f(CW\*(C`\-funsafe\-math\-optimizations\*(C'\fR is in effect. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfsrra\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfsrra" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fsrra\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fsrra" |
| .PD |
| Allow or disallow the compiler to emit the \f(CW\*(C`fsrra\*(C'\fR instruction for |
| reciprocal square root approximations. The option \f(CW\*(C`\-mfsrra\*(C'\fR must be used |
| in combination with \f(CW\*(C`\-funsafe\-math\-optimizations\*(C'\fR and |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`\-ffinite\-math\-only\*(C'\fR. It is enabled by default when generating code for |
| \&\s-1SH4A\s0. Using \f(CW\*(C`\-mno\-fsrra\*(C'\fR disables reciprocal square root approximations |
| even if \f(CW\*(C`\-funsafe\-math\-optimizations\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`\-ffinite\-math\-only\*(C'\fR are |
| in effect. |
| .IP "\fB\-mpretend\-cmove\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpretend-cmove" |
| Prefer zero-displacement conditional branches for conditional move instruction |
| patterns. This can result in faster code on the \s-1SH4\s0 processor. |
| .PP |
| \fISolaris 2 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "Solaris 2 Options" |
| .PP |
| These \fB\-m\fR options are supported on Solaris 2: |
| .IP "\fB\-mimpure\-text\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mimpure-text" |
| \&\fB\-mimpure\-text\fR, used in addition to \fB\-shared\fR, tells |
| the compiler to not pass \fB\-z text\fR to the linker when linking a |
| shared object. Using this option, you can link position-dependent |
| code into a shared object. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-mimpure\-text\fR suppresses the \*(L"relocations remain against |
| allocatable but non-writable sections\*(R" linker error message. |
| However, the necessary relocations trigger copy-on-write, and the |
| shared object is not actually shared across processes. Instead of |
| using \fB\-mimpure\-text\fR, you should compile all source code with |
| \&\fB\-fpic\fR or \fB\-fPIC\fR. |
| .PP |
| These switches are supported in addition to the above on Solaris 2: |
| .IP "\fB\-pthreads\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-pthreads" |
| Add support for multithreading using the \s-1POSIX\s0 threads library. This |
| option sets flags for both the preprocessor and linker. This option does |
| not affect the thread safety of object code produced by the compiler or |
| that of libraries supplied with it. |
| .IP "\fB\-pthread\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-pthread" |
| This is a synonym for \fB\-pthreads\fR. |
| .PP |
| \fI\s-1SPARC\s0 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "SPARC Options" |
| .PP |
| These \fB\-m\fR options are supported on the \s-1SPARC:\s0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-app\-regs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-app-regs" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mapp\-regs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mapp-regs" |
| .PD |
| Specify \fB\-mapp\-regs\fR to generate output using the global registers |
| 2 through 4, which the \s-1SPARC\s0 \s-1SVR4\s0 \s-1ABI\s0 reserves for applications. Like the |
| global register 1, each global register 2 through 4 is then treated as an |
| allocable register that is clobbered by function calls. This is the default. |
| .Sp |
| To be fully \s-1SVR4\s0 ABI-compliant at the cost of some performance loss, |
| specify \fB\-mno\-app\-regs\fR. You should compile libraries and system |
| software with this option. |
| .IP "\fB\-mflat\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mflat" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-flat\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-flat" |
| .PD |
| With \fB\-mflat\fR, the compiler does not generate save/restore instructions |
| and uses a \*(L"flat\*(R" or single register window model. This model is compatible |
| with the regular register window model. The local registers and the input |
| registers (0\-\-5) are still treated as \*(L"call-saved\*(R" registers and are |
| saved on the stack as needed. |
| .Sp |
| With \fB\-mno\-flat\fR (the default), the compiler generates save/restore |
| instructions (except for leaf functions). This is the normal operating mode. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfpu\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfpu" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mhard\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mhard-float" |
| .PD |
| Generate output containing floating-point instructions. This is the |
| default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fpu\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fpu" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-msoft\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msoft-float" |
| .PD |
| Generate output containing library calls for floating point. |
| \&\fBWarning:\fR the requisite libraries are not available for all \s-1SPARC\s0 |
| targets. Normally the facilities of the machine's usual C compiler are |
| used, but this cannot be done directly in cross-compilation. You must make |
| your own arrangements to provide suitable library functions for |
| cross-compilation. The embedded targets \fBsparc\-*\-aout\fR and |
| \&\fBsparclite\-*\-*\fR do provide software floating-point support. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-msoft\-float\fR changes the calling convention in the output file; |
| therefore, it is only useful if you compile \fIall\fR of a program with |
| this option. In particular, you need to compile \fIlibgcc.a\fR, the |
| library that comes with \s-1GCC\s0, with \fB\-msoft\-float\fR in order for |
| this to work. |
| .IP "\fB\-mhard\-quad\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mhard-quad-float" |
| Generate output containing quad-word (long double) floating-point |
| instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-msoft\-quad\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msoft-quad-float" |
| Generate output containing library calls for quad-word (long double) |
| floating-point instructions. The functions called are those specified |
| in the \s-1SPARC\s0 \s-1ABI\s0. This is the default. |
| .Sp |
| As of this writing, there are no \s-1SPARC\s0 implementations that have hardware |
| support for the quad-word floating-point instructions. They all invoke |
| a trap handler for one of these instructions, and then the trap handler |
| emulates the effect of the instruction. Because of the trap handler overhead, |
| this is much slower than calling the \s-1ABI\s0 library routines. Thus the |
| \&\fB\-msoft\-quad\-float\fR option is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-unaligned\-doubles\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-unaligned-doubles" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-munaligned\-doubles\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-munaligned-doubles" |
| .PD |
| Assume that doubles have 8\-byte alignment. This is the default. |
| .Sp |
| With \fB\-munaligned\-doubles\fR, \s-1GCC\s0 assumes that doubles have 8\-byte |
| alignment only if they are contained in another type, or if they have an |
| absolute address. Otherwise, it assumes they have 4\-byte alignment. |
| Specifying this option avoids some rare compatibility problems with code |
| generated by other compilers. It is not the default because it results |
| in a performance loss, especially for floating-point code. |
| .IP "\fB\-muser\-mode\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-muser-mode" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-user\-mode\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-user-mode" |
| .PD |
| Do not generate code that can only run in supervisor mode. This is relevant |
| only for the \f(CW\*(C`casa\*(C'\fR instruction emitted for the \s-1LEON3\s0 processor. The |
| default is \fB\-mno\-user\-mode\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-faster\-structs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-faster-structs" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mfaster\-structs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfaster-structs" |
| .PD |
| With \fB\-mfaster\-structs\fR, the compiler assumes that structures |
| should have 8\-byte alignment. This enables the use of pairs of |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`ldd\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`std\*(C'\fR instructions for copies in structure |
| assignment, in place of twice as many \f(CW\*(C`ld\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`st\*(C'\fR pairs. |
| However, the use of this changed alignment directly violates the \s-1SPARC\s0 |
| \&\s-1ABI\s0. Thus, it's intended only for use on targets where the developer |
| acknowledges that their resulting code is not directly in line with |
| the rules of the \s-1ABI\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu_type\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcpu=cpu_type" |
| Set the instruction set, register set, and instruction scheduling parameters |
| for machine type \fIcpu_type\fR. Supported values for \fIcpu_type\fR are |
| \&\fBv7\fR, \fBcypress\fR, \fBv8\fR, \fBsupersparc\fR, \fBhypersparc\fR, |
| \&\fBleon\fR, \fBleon3\fR, \fBsparclite\fR, \fBf930\fR, \fBf934\fR, |
| \&\fBsparclite86x\fR, \fBsparclet\fR, \fBtsc701\fR, \fBv9\fR, |
| \&\fBultrasparc\fR, \fBultrasparc3\fR, \fBniagara\fR, \fBniagara2\fR, |
| \&\fBniagara3\fR and \fBniagara4\fR. |
| .Sp |
| Native Solaris and GNU/Linux toolchains also support the value \fBnative\fR, |
| which selects the best architecture option for the host processor. |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=native\fR has no effect if \s-1GCC\s0 does not recognize |
| the processor. |
| .Sp |
| Default instruction scheduling parameters are used for values that select |
| an architecture and not an implementation. These are \fBv7\fR, \fBv8\fR, |
| \&\fBsparclite\fR, \fBsparclet\fR, \fBv9\fR. |
| .Sp |
| Here is a list of each supported architecture and their supported |
| implementations. |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "v7" 4 |
| .IX Item "v7" |
| cypress |
| .IP "v8" 4 |
| .IX Item "v8" |
| supersparc, hypersparc, leon, leon3 |
| .IP "sparclite" 4 |
| .IX Item "sparclite" |
| f930, f934, sparclite86x |
| .IP "sparclet" 4 |
| .IX Item "sparclet" |
| tsc701 |
| .IP "v9" 4 |
| .IX Item "v9" |
| ultrasparc, ultrasparc3, niagara, niagara2, niagara3, niagara4 |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| By default (unless configured otherwise), \s-1GCC\s0 generates code for the V7 |
| variant of the \s-1SPARC\s0 architecture. With \fB\-mcpu=cypress\fR, the compiler |
| additionally optimizes it for the Cypress \s-1CY7C602\s0 chip, as used in the |
| SPARCStation/SPARCServer 3xx series. This is also appropriate for the older |
| SPARCStation 1, 2, \s-1IPX\s0 etc. |
| .Sp |
| With \fB\-mcpu=v8\fR, \s-1GCC\s0 generates code for the V8 variant of the \s-1SPARC\s0 |
| architecture. The only difference from V7 code is that the compiler emits |
| the integer multiply and integer divide instructions which exist in \s-1SPARC\-V8\s0 |
| but not in \s-1SPARC\-V7\s0. With \fB\-mcpu=supersparc\fR, the compiler additionally |
| optimizes it for the SuperSPARC chip, as used in the SPARCStation 10, 1000 and |
| 2000 series. |
| .Sp |
| With \fB\-mcpu=sparclite\fR, \s-1GCC\s0 generates code for the SPARClite variant of |
| the \s-1SPARC\s0 architecture. This adds the integer multiply, integer divide step |
| and scan (\f(CW\*(C`ffs\*(C'\fR) instructions which exist in SPARClite but not in \s-1SPARC\-V7\s0. |
| With \fB\-mcpu=f930\fR, the compiler additionally optimizes it for the |
| Fujitsu \s-1MB86930\s0 chip, which is the original SPARClite, with no \s-1FPU\s0. With |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=f934\fR, the compiler additionally optimizes it for the Fujitsu |
| \&\s-1MB86934\s0 chip, which is the more recent SPARClite with \s-1FPU\s0. |
| .Sp |
| With \fB\-mcpu=sparclet\fR, \s-1GCC\s0 generates code for the SPARClet variant of |
| the \s-1SPARC\s0 architecture. This adds the integer multiply, multiply/accumulate, |
| integer divide step and scan (\f(CW\*(C`ffs\*(C'\fR) instructions which exist in SPARClet |
| but not in \s-1SPARC\-V7\s0. With \fB\-mcpu=tsc701\fR, the compiler additionally |
| optimizes it for the \s-1TEMIC\s0 SPARClet chip. |
| .Sp |
| With \fB\-mcpu=v9\fR, \s-1GCC\s0 generates code for the V9 variant of the \s-1SPARC\s0 |
| architecture. This adds 64\-bit integer and floating-point move instructions, |
| 3 additional floating-point condition code registers and conditional move |
| instructions. With \fB\-mcpu=ultrasparc\fR, the compiler additionally |
| optimizes it for the Sun UltraSPARC I/II/IIi chips. With |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=ultrasparc3\fR, the compiler additionally optimizes it for the |
| Sun UltraSPARC III/III+/IIIi/IIIi+/IV/IV+ chips. With |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=niagara\fR, the compiler additionally optimizes it for |
| Sun UltraSPARC T1 chips. With \fB\-mcpu=niagara2\fR, the compiler |
| additionally optimizes it for Sun UltraSPARC T2 chips. With |
| \&\fB\-mcpu=niagara3\fR, the compiler additionally optimizes it for Sun |
| UltraSPARC T3 chips. With \fB\-mcpu=niagara4\fR, the compiler |
| additionally optimizes it for Sun UltraSPARC T4 chips. |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-mtune=\fR\fIcpu_type\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtune=cpu_type" |
| Set the instruction scheduling parameters for machine type |
| \&\fIcpu_type\fR, but do not set the instruction set or register set that the |
| option \fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu_type\fR does. |
| .Sp |
| The same values for \fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIcpu_type\fR can be used for |
| \&\fB\-mtune=\fR\fIcpu_type\fR, but the only useful values are those |
| that select a particular \s-1CPU\s0 implementation. Those are \fBcypress\fR, |
| \&\fBsupersparc\fR, \fBhypersparc\fR, \fBleon\fR, \fBleon3\fR, \fBf930\fR, |
| \&\fBf934\fR, \fBsparclite86x\fR, \fBtsc701\fR, \fBultrasparc\fR, |
| \&\fBultrasparc3\fR, \fBniagara\fR, \fBniagara2\fR, \fBniagara3\fR and |
| \&\fBniagara4\fR. With native Solaris and GNU/Linux toolchains, \fBnative\fR |
| can also be used. |
| .IP "\fB\-mv8plus\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mv8plus" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-v8plus\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-v8plus" |
| .PD |
| With \fB\-mv8plus\fR, \s-1GCC\s0 generates code for the \s-1SPARC\-V8+\s0 \s-1ABI\s0. The |
| difference from the V8 \s-1ABI\s0 is that the global and out registers are |
| considered 64 bits wide. This is enabled by default on Solaris in 32\-bit |
| mode for all \s-1SPARC\-V9\s0 processors. |
| .IP "\fB\-mvis\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mvis" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-vis\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-vis" |
| .PD |
| With \fB\-mvis\fR, \s-1GCC\s0 generates code that takes advantage of the UltraSPARC |
| Visual Instruction Set extensions. The default is \fB\-mno\-vis\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mvis2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mvis2" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-vis2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-vis2" |
| .PD |
| With \fB\-mvis2\fR, \s-1GCC\s0 generates code that takes advantage of |
| version 2.0 of the UltraSPARC Visual Instruction Set extensions. The |
| default is \fB\-mvis2\fR when targeting a cpu that supports such |
| instructions, such as UltraSPARC-III and later. Setting \fB\-mvis2\fR |
| also sets \fB\-mvis\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mvis3\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mvis3" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-vis3\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-vis3" |
| .PD |
| With \fB\-mvis3\fR, \s-1GCC\s0 generates code that takes advantage of |
| version 3.0 of the UltraSPARC Visual Instruction Set extensions. The |
| default is \fB\-mvis3\fR when targeting a cpu that supports such |
| instructions, such as niagara\-3 and later. Setting \fB\-mvis3\fR |
| also sets \fB\-mvis2\fR and \fB\-mvis\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcbcond\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcbcond" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-cbcond\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-cbcond" |
| .PD |
| With \fB\-mcbcond\fR, \s-1GCC\s0 generates code that takes advantage of |
| compare-and-branch instructions, as defined in the Sparc Architecture 2011. |
| The default is \fB\-mcbcond\fR when targeting a cpu that supports such |
| instructions, such as niagara\-4 and later. |
| .IP "\fB\-mpopc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpopc" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-popc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-popc" |
| .PD |
| With \fB\-mpopc\fR, \s-1GCC\s0 generates code that takes advantage of the UltraSPARC |
| population count instruction. The default is \fB\-mpopc\fR |
| when targeting a cpu that supports such instructions, such as Niagara\-2 and |
| later. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfmaf\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfmaf" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fmaf\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fmaf" |
| .PD |
| With \fB\-mfmaf\fR, \s-1GCC\s0 generates code that takes advantage of the UltraSPARC |
| Fused Multiply-Add Floating-point extensions. The default is \fB\-mfmaf\fR |
| when targeting a cpu that supports such instructions, such as Niagara\-3 and |
| later. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfix\-at697f\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfix-at697f" |
| Enable the documented workaround for the single erratum of the Atmel \s-1AT697F\s0 |
| processor (which corresponds to erratum #13 of the \s-1AT697E\s0 processor). |
| .IP "\fB\-mfix\-ut699\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfix-ut699" |
| Enable the documented workarounds for the floating-point errata and the data |
| cache nullify errata of the \s-1UT699\s0 processor. |
| .PP |
| These \fB\-m\fR options are supported in addition to the above |
| on \s-1SPARC\-V9\s0 processors in 64\-bit environments: |
| .IP "\fB\-m32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m32" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-m64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m64" |
| .PD |
| Generate code for a 32\-bit or 64\-bit environment. |
| The 32\-bit environment sets int, long and pointer to 32 bits. |
| The 64\-bit environment sets int to 32 bits and long and pointer |
| to 64 bits. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcmodel=\fR\fIwhich\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcmodel=which" |
| Set the code model to one of |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBmedlow\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "medlow" |
| The Medium/Low code model: 64\-bit addresses, programs |
| must be linked in the low 32 bits of memory. Programs can be statically |
| or dynamically linked. |
| .IP "\fBmedmid\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "medmid" |
| The Medium/Middle code model: 64\-bit addresses, programs |
| must be linked in the low 44 bits of memory, the text and data segments must |
| be less than 2GB in size and the data segment must be located within 2GB of |
| the text segment. |
| .IP "\fBmedany\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "medany" |
| The Medium/Anywhere code model: 64\-bit addresses, programs |
| may be linked anywhere in memory, the text and data segments must be less |
| than 2GB in size and the data segment must be located within 2GB of the |
| text segment. |
| .IP "\fBembmedany\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "embmedany" |
| The Medium/Anywhere code model for embedded systems: |
| 64\-bit addresses, the text and data segments must be less than 2GB in |
| size, both starting anywhere in memory (determined at link time). The |
| global register \f(CW%g4\fR points to the base of the data segment. Programs |
| are statically linked and \s-1PIC\s0 is not supported. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-mmemory\-model=\fR\fImem-model\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmemory-model=mem-model" |
| Set the memory model in force on the processor to one of |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBdefault\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "default" |
| The default memory model for the processor and operating system. |
| .IP "\fBrmo\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "rmo" |
| Relaxed Memory Order |
| .IP "\fBpso\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "pso" |
| Partial Store Order |
| .IP "\fBtso\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "tso" |
| Total Store Order |
| .IP "\fBsc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "sc" |
| Sequential Consistency |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| These memory models are formally defined in Appendix D of the Sparc V9 |
| architecture manual, as set in the processor's \f(CW\*(C`PSTATE.MM\*(C'\fR field. |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-mstack\-bias\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mstack-bias" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-stack\-bias\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-stack-bias" |
| .PD |
| With \fB\-mstack\-bias\fR, \s-1GCC\s0 assumes that the stack pointer, and |
| frame pointer if present, are offset by \-2047 which must be added back |
| when making stack frame references. This is the default in 64\-bit mode. |
| Otherwise, assume no such offset is present. |
| .PP |
| \fI\s-1SPU\s0 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "SPU Options" |
| .PP |
| These \fB\-m\fR options are supported on the \s-1SPU:\s0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mwarn\-reloc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mwarn-reloc" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-merror\-reloc\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-merror-reloc" |
| .PD |
| The loader for \s-1SPU\s0 does not handle dynamic relocations. By default, \s-1GCC\s0 |
| gives an error when it generates code that requires a dynamic |
| relocation. \fB\-mno\-error\-reloc\fR disables the error, |
| \&\fB\-mwarn\-reloc\fR generates a warning instead. |
| .IP "\fB\-msafe\-dma\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msafe-dma" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-munsafe\-dma\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-munsafe-dma" |
| .PD |
| Instructions that initiate or test completion of \s-1DMA\s0 must not be |
| reordered with respect to loads and stores of the memory that is being |
| accessed. |
| With \fB\-munsafe\-dma\fR you must use the \f(CW\*(C`volatile\*(C'\fR keyword to protect |
| memory accesses, but that can lead to inefficient code in places where the |
| memory is known to not change. Rather than mark the memory as volatile, |
| you can use \fB\-msafe\-dma\fR to tell the compiler to treat |
| the \s-1DMA\s0 instructions as potentially affecting all memory. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbranch\-hints\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbranch-hints" |
| By default, \s-1GCC\s0 generates a branch hint instruction to avoid |
| pipeline stalls for always-taken or probably-taken branches. A hint |
| is not generated closer than 8 instructions away from its branch. |
| There is little reason to disable them, except for debugging purposes, |
| or to make an object a little bit smaller. |
| .IP "\fB\-msmall\-mem\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msmall-mem" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mlarge\-mem\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlarge-mem" |
| .PD |
| By default, \s-1GCC\s0 generates code assuming that addresses are never larger |
| than 18 bits. With \fB\-mlarge\-mem\fR code is generated that assumes |
| a full 32\-bit address. |
| .IP "\fB\-mstdmain\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mstdmain" |
| By default, \s-1GCC\s0 links against startup code that assumes the SPU-style |
| main function interface (which has an unconventional parameter list). |
| With \fB\-mstdmain\fR, \s-1GCC\s0 links your program against startup |
| code that assumes a C99\-style interface to \f(CW\*(C`main\*(C'\fR, including a |
| local copy of \f(CW\*(C`argv\*(C'\fR strings. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfixed\-range=\fR\fIregister-range\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfixed-range=register-range" |
| Generate code treating the given register range as fixed registers. |
| A fixed register is one that the register allocator cannot use. This is |
| useful when compiling kernel code. A register range is specified as |
| two registers separated by a dash. Multiple register ranges can be |
| specified separated by a comma. |
| .IP "\fB\-mea32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mea32" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mea64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mea64" |
| .PD |
| Compile code assuming that pointers to the \s-1PPU\s0 address space accessed |
| via the \f(CW\*(C`_\|_ea\*(C'\fR named address space qualifier are either 32 or 64 |
| bits wide. The default is 32 bits. As this is an ABI-changing option, |
| all object code in an executable must be compiled with the same setting. |
| .IP "\fB\-maddress\-space\-conversion\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-maddress-space-conversion" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-address\-space\-conversion\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-address-space-conversion" |
| .PD |
| Allow/disallow treating the \f(CW\*(C`_\|_ea\*(C'\fR address space as superset |
| of the generic address space. This enables explicit type casts |
| between \f(CW\*(C`_\|_ea\*(C'\fR and generic pointer as well as implicit |
| conversions of generic pointers to \f(CW\*(C`_\|_ea\*(C'\fR pointers. The |
| default is to allow address space pointer conversions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcache\-size=\fR\fIcache-size\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcache-size=cache-size" |
| This option controls the version of libgcc that the compiler links to an |
| executable and selects a software-managed cache for accessing variables |
| in the \f(CW\*(C`_\|_ea\*(C'\fR address space with a particular cache size. Possible |
| options for \fIcache-size\fR are \fB8\fR, \fB16\fR, \fB32\fR, \fB64\fR |
| and \fB128\fR. The default cache size is 64KB. |
| .IP "\fB\-matomic\-updates\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-matomic-updates" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-atomic\-updates\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-atomic-updates" |
| .PD |
| This option controls the version of libgcc that the compiler links to an |
| executable and selects whether atomic updates to the software-managed |
| cache of PPU-side variables are used. If you use atomic updates, changes |
| to a \s-1PPU\s0 variable from \s-1SPU\s0 code using the \f(CW\*(C`_\|_ea\*(C'\fR named address space |
| qualifier do not interfere with changes to other \s-1PPU\s0 variables residing |
| in the same cache line from \s-1PPU\s0 code. If you do not use atomic updates, |
| such interference may occur; however, writing back cache lines is |
| more efficient. The default behavior is to use atomic updates. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdual\-nops\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdual-nops" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mdual\-nops=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdual-nops=n" |
| .PD |
| By default, \s-1GCC\s0 inserts nops to increase dual issue when it expects |
| it to increase performance. \fIn\fR can be a value from 0 to 10. A |
| smaller \fIn\fR inserts fewer nops. 10 is the default, 0 is the |
| same as \fB\-mno\-dual\-nops\fR. Disabled with \fB\-Os\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-mhint\-max\-nops=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mhint-max-nops=n" |
| Maximum number of nops to insert for a branch hint. A branch hint must |
| be at least 8 instructions away from the branch it is affecting. \s-1GCC\s0 |
| inserts up to \fIn\fR nops to enforce this, otherwise it does not |
| generate the branch hint. |
| .IP "\fB\-mhint\-max\-distance=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mhint-max-distance=n" |
| The encoding of the branch hint instruction limits the hint to be within |
| 256 instructions of the branch it is affecting. By default, \s-1GCC\s0 makes |
| sure it is within 125. |
| .IP "\fB\-msafe\-hints\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msafe-hints" |
| Work around a hardware bug that causes the \s-1SPU\s0 to stall indefinitely. |
| By default, \s-1GCC\s0 inserts the \f(CW\*(C`hbrp\*(C'\fR instruction to make sure |
| this stall won't happen. |
| .PP |
| \fIOptions for System V\fR |
| .IX Subsection "Options for System V" |
| .PP |
| These additional options are available on System V Release 4 for |
| compatibility with other compilers on those systems: |
| .IP "\fB\-G\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-G" |
| Create a shared object. |
| It is recommended that \fB\-symbolic\fR or \fB\-shared\fR be used instead. |
| .IP "\fB\-Qy\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Qy" |
| Identify the versions of each tool used by the compiler, in a |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`.ident\*(C'\fR assembler directive in the output. |
| .IP "\fB\-Qn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Qn" |
| Refrain from adding \f(CW\*(C`.ident\*(C'\fR directives to the output file (this is |
| the default). |
| .IP "\fB\-YP,\fR\fIdirs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-YP,dirs" |
| Search the directories \fIdirs\fR, and no others, for libraries |
| specified with \fB\-l\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-Ym,\fR\fIdir\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Ym,dir" |
| Look in the directory \fIdir\fR to find the M4 preprocessor. |
| The assembler uses this option. |
| .PP |
| \fITILE-Gx Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "TILE-Gx Options" |
| .PP |
| These \fB\-m\fR options are supported on the TILE-Gx: |
| .IP "\fB\-mcmodel=small\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcmodel=small" |
| Generate code for the small model. The distance for direct calls is |
| limited to 500M in either direction. PC-relative addresses are 32 |
| bits. Absolute addresses support the full address range. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcmodel=large\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcmodel=large" |
| Generate code for the large model. There is no limitation on call |
| distance, pc-relative addresses, or absolute addresses. |
| .IP "\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcpu=name" |
| Selects the type of \s-1CPU\s0 to be targeted. Currently the only supported |
| type is \fBtilegx\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-m32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m32" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-m64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m64" |
| .PD |
| Generate code for a 32\-bit or 64\-bit environment. The 32\-bit |
| environment sets int, long, and pointer to 32 bits. The 64\-bit |
| environment sets int to 32 bits and long and pointer to 64 bits. |
| .PP |
| \fITILEPro Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "TILEPro Options" |
| .PP |
| These \fB\-m\fR options are supported on the TILEPro: |
| .IP "\fB\-mcpu=\fR\fIname\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mcpu=name" |
| Selects the type of \s-1CPU\s0 to be targeted. Currently the only supported |
| type is \fBtilepro\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-m32\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m32" |
| Generate code for a 32\-bit environment, which sets int, long, and |
| pointer to 32 bits. This is the only supported behavior so the flag |
| is essentially ignored. |
| .PP |
| \fIV850 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "V850 Options" |
| .PP |
| These \fB\-m\fR options are defined for V850 implementations: |
| .IP "\fB\-mlong\-calls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlong-calls" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-long\-calls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-long-calls" |
| .PD |
| Treat all calls as being far away (near). If calls are assumed to be |
| far away, the compiler always loads the function's address into a |
| register, and calls indirect through the pointer. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-ep\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-ep" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mep\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mep" |
| .PD |
| Do not optimize (do optimize) basic blocks that use the same index |
| pointer 4 or more times to copy pointer into the \f(CW\*(C`ep\*(C'\fR register, and |
| use the shorter \f(CW\*(C`sld\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`sst\*(C'\fR instructions. The \fB\-mep\fR |
| option is on by default if you optimize. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-prolog\-function\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-prolog-function" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mprolog\-function\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mprolog-function" |
| .PD |
| Do not use (do use) external functions to save and restore registers |
| at the prologue and epilogue of a function. The external functions |
| are slower, but use less code space if more than one function saves |
| the same number of registers. The \fB\-mprolog\-function\fR option |
| is on by default if you optimize. |
| .IP "\fB\-mspace\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mspace" |
| Try to make the code as small as possible. At present, this just turns |
| on the \fB\-mep\fR and \fB\-mprolog\-function\fR options. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtda=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtda=n" |
| Put static or global variables whose size is \fIn\fR bytes or less into |
| the tiny data area that register \f(CW\*(C`ep\*(C'\fR points to. The tiny data |
| area can hold up to 256 bytes in total (128 bytes for byte references). |
| .IP "\fB\-msda=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msda=n" |
| Put static or global variables whose size is \fIn\fR bytes or less into |
| the small data area that register \f(CW\*(C`gp\*(C'\fR points to. The small data |
| area can hold up to 64 kilobytes. |
| .IP "\fB\-mzda=\fR\fIn\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mzda=n" |
| Put static or global variables whose size is \fIn\fR bytes or less into |
| the first 32 kilobytes of memory. |
| .IP "\fB\-mv850\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mv850" |
| Specify that the target processor is the V850. |
| .IP "\fB\-mv850e3v5\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mv850e3v5" |
| Specify that the target processor is the V850E3V5. The preprocessor |
| constant \fB_\|_v850e3v5_\|_\fR is defined if this option is used. |
| .IP "\fB\-mv850e2v4\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mv850e2v4" |
| Specify that the target processor is the V850E3V5. This is an alias for |
| the \fB\-mv850e3v5\fR option. |
| .IP "\fB\-mv850e2v3\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mv850e2v3" |
| Specify that the target processor is the V850E2V3. The preprocessor |
| constant \fB_\|_v850e2v3_\|_\fR is defined if this option is used. |
| .IP "\fB\-mv850e2\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mv850e2" |
| Specify that the target processor is the V850E2. The preprocessor |
| constant \fB_\|_v850e2_\|_\fR is defined if this option is used. |
| .IP "\fB\-mv850e1\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mv850e1" |
| Specify that the target processor is the V850E1. The preprocessor |
| constants \fB_\|_v850e1_\|_\fR and \fB_\|_v850e_\|_\fR are defined if |
| this option is used. |
| .IP "\fB\-mv850es\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mv850es" |
| Specify that the target processor is the V850ES. This is an alias for |
| the \fB\-mv850e1\fR option. |
| .IP "\fB\-mv850e\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mv850e" |
| Specify that the target processor is the V850E. The preprocessor |
| constant \fB_\|_v850e_\|_\fR is defined if this option is used. |
| .Sp |
| If neither \fB\-mv850\fR nor \fB\-mv850e\fR nor \fB\-mv850e1\fR |
| nor \fB\-mv850e2\fR nor \fB\-mv850e2v3\fR nor \fB\-mv850e3v5\fR |
| are defined then a default target processor is chosen and the |
| relevant \fB_\|_v850*_\|_\fR preprocessor constant is defined. |
| .Sp |
| The preprocessor constants \fB_\|_v850\fR and \fB_\|_v851_\|_\fR are always |
| defined, regardless of which processor variant is the target. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdisable\-callt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdisable-callt" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-disable\-callt\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-disable-callt" |
| .PD |
| This option suppresses generation of the \f(CW\*(C`CALLT\*(C'\fR instruction for the |
| v850e, v850e1, v850e2, v850e2v3 and v850e3v5 flavors of the v850 |
| architecture. |
| .Sp |
| This option is enabled by default when the \s-1RH850\s0 \s-1ABI\s0 is |
| in use (see \fB\-mrh850\-abi\fR), and disabled by default when the |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 \s-1ABI\s0 is in use. If \f(CW\*(C`CALLT\*(C'\fR instructions are being generated |
| then the C preprocessor symbol \f(CW\*(C`_\|_V850_CALLT_\|_\*(C'\fR will be defined. |
| .IP "\fB\-mrelax\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrelax" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-relax\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-relax" |
| .PD |
| Pass on (or do not pass on) the \fB\-mrelax\fR command line option |
| to the assembler. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlong\-jumps\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlong-jumps" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-long\-jumps\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-long-jumps" |
| .PD |
| Disable (or re-enable) the generation of PC-relative jump instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-msoft\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msoft-float" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mhard\-float\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mhard-float" |
| .PD |
| Disable (or re-enable) the generation of hardware floating point |
| instructions. This option is only significant when the target |
| architecture is \fBV850E2V3\fR or higher. If hardware floating point |
| instructions are being generated then the C preprocessor symbol |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_FPU_OK_\|_\*(C'\fR will be defined, otherwise the symbol |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_NO_FPU_\|_\*(C'\fR will be defined. |
| .IP "\fB\-mloop\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mloop" |
| Enables the use of the e3v5 \s-1LOOP\s0 instruction. The use of this |
| instruction is not enabled by default when the e3v5 architecture is |
| selected because its use is still experimental. |
| .IP "\fB\-mrh850\-abi\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrh850-abi" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mghs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mghs" |
| .PD |
| Enables support for the \s-1RH850\s0 version of the V850 \s-1ABI\s0. This is the |
| default. With this version of the \s-1ABI\s0 the following rules apply: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Integer sized structures and unions are returned via a memory pointer |
| rather than a register. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Large structures and unions (more than 8 bytes in size) are passed by |
| value. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Functions are aligned to 16\-bit boundaries. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| The \fB\-m8byte\-align\fR command line option is supported. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| The \fB\-mdisable\-callt\fR command line option is enabled by |
| default. The \fB\-mno\-disable\-callt\fR command line option is not |
| supported. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| When this version of the \s-1ABI\s0 is enabled the C preprocessor symbol |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_V850_RH850_ABI_\|_\*(C'\fR is defined. |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-mgcc\-abi\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mgcc-abi" |
| Enables support for the old \s-1GCC\s0 version of the V850 \s-1ABI\s0. With this |
| version of the \s-1ABI\s0 the following rules apply: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Integer sized structures and unions are returned in register \f(CW\*(C`r10\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Large structures and unions (more than 8 bytes in size) are passed by |
| reference. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| Functions are aligned to 32\-bit boundaries, unless optimizing for |
| size. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| The \fB\-m8byte\-align\fR command line option is not supported. |
| .IP "\(bu" 4 |
| The \fB\-mdisable\-callt\fR command line option is supported but not |
| enabled by default. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| When this version of the \s-1ABI\s0 is enabled the C preprocessor symbol |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_V850_GCC_ABI_\|_\*(C'\fR is defined. |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-m8byte\-align\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-m8byte-align" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-8byte\-align\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-8byte-align" |
| .PD |
| Enables support for \f(CW\*(C`doubles\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`long long\*(C'\fR types to be |
| aligned on 8\-byte boundaries. The default is to restrict the |
| alignment of all objects to at most 4\-bytes. When |
| \&\fB\-m8byte\-align\fR is in effect the C preprocessor symbol |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_V850_8BYTE_ALIGN_\|_\*(C'\fR will be defined. |
| .IP "\fB\-mbig\-switch\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mbig-switch" |
| Generate code suitable for big switch tables. Use this option only if |
| the assembler/linker complain about out of range branches within a switch |
| table. |
| .IP "\fB\-mapp\-regs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mapp-regs" |
| This option causes r2 and r5 to be used in the code generated by |
| the compiler. This setting is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-app\-regs\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-app-regs" |
| This option causes r2 and r5 to be treated as fixed registers. |
| .PP |
| \fI\s-1VAX\s0 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "VAX Options" |
| .PP |
| These \fB\-m\fR options are defined for the \s-1VAX:\s0 |
| .IP "\fB\-munix\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-munix" |
| Do not output certain jump instructions (\f(CW\*(C`aobleq\*(C'\fR and so on) |
| that the Unix assembler for the \s-1VAX\s0 cannot handle across long |
| ranges. |
| .IP "\fB\-mgnu\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mgnu" |
| Do output those jump instructions, on the assumption that the |
| \&\s-1GNU\s0 assembler is being used. |
| .IP "\fB\-mg\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mg" |
| Output code for G\-format floating-point numbers instead of D\-format. |
| .PP |
| \fI\s-1VMS\s0 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "VMS Options" |
| .PP |
| These \fB\-m\fR options are defined for the \s-1VMS\s0 implementations: |
| .IP "\fB\-mvms\-return\-codes\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mvms-return-codes" |
| Return \s-1VMS\s0 condition codes from \f(CW\*(C`main\*(C'\fR. The default is to return POSIX-style |
| condition (e.g. error) codes. |
| .IP "\fB\-mdebug\-main=\fR\fIprefix\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mdebug-main=prefix" |
| Flag the first routine whose name starts with \fIprefix\fR as the main |
| routine for the debugger. |
| .IP "\fB\-mmalloc64\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mmalloc64" |
| Default to 64\-bit memory allocation routines. |
| .IP "\fB\-mpointer\-size=\fR\fIsize\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mpointer-size=size" |
| Set the default size of pointers. Possible options for \fIsize\fR are |
| \&\fB32\fR or \fBshort\fR for 32 bit pointers, \fB64\fR or \fBlong\fR |
| for 64 bit pointers, and \fBno\fR for supporting only 32 bit pointers. |
| The later option disables \f(CW\*(C`pragma pointer_size\*(C'\fR. |
| .PP |
| \fIVxWorks Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "VxWorks Options" |
| .PP |
| The options in this section are defined for all VxWorks targets. |
| Options specific to the target hardware are listed with the other |
| options for that target. |
| .IP "\fB\-mrtp\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mrtp" |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 can generate code for both VxWorks kernels and real time processes |
| (RTPs). This option switches from the former to the latter. It also |
| defines the preprocessor macro \f(CW\*(C`_\|_RTP_\|_\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-non\-static\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-non-static" |
| Link an \s-1RTP\s0 executable against shared libraries rather than static |
| libraries. The options \fB\-static\fR and \fB\-shared\fR can |
| also be used for RTPs; \fB\-static\fR |
| is the default. |
| .IP "\fB\-Bstatic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Bstatic" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-Bdynamic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Bdynamic" |
| .PD |
| These options are passed down to the linker. They are defined for |
| compatibility with Diab. |
| .IP "\fB\-Xbind\-lazy\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Xbind-lazy" |
| Enable lazy binding of function calls. This option is equivalent to |
| \&\fB\-Wl,\-z,now\fR and is defined for compatibility with Diab. |
| .IP "\fB\-Xbind\-now\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-Xbind-now" |
| Disable lazy binding of function calls. This option is the default and |
| is defined for compatibility with Diab. |
| .PP |
| \fIx86\-64 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "x86-64 Options" |
| .PP |
| These are listed under |
| .PP |
| \fIXstormy16 Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "Xstormy16 Options" |
| .PP |
| These options are defined for Xstormy16: |
| .IP "\fB\-msim\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-msim" |
| Choose startup files and linker script suitable for the simulator. |
| .PP |
| \fIXtensa Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "Xtensa Options" |
| .PP |
| These options are supported for Xtensa targets: |
| .IP "\fB\-mconst16\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mconst16" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-const16\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-const16" |
| .PD |
| Enable or disable use of \f(CW\*(C`CONST16\*(C'\fR instructions for loading |
| constant values. The \f(CW\*(C`CONST16\*(C'\fR instruction is currently not a |
| standard option from Tensilica. When enabled, \f(CW\*(C`CONST16\*(C'\fR |
| instructions are always used in place of the standard \f(CW\*(C`L32R\*(C'\fR |
| instructions. The use of \f(CW\*(C`CONST16\*(C'\fR is enabled by default only if |
| the \f(CW\*(C`L32R\*(C'\fR instruction is not available. |
| .IP "\fB\-mfused\-madd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mfused-madd" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-fused\-madd\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-fused-madd" |
| .PD |
| Enable or disable use of fused multiply/add and multiply/subtract |
| instructions in the floating-point option. This has no effect if the |
| floating-point option is not also enabled. Disabling fused multiply/add |
| and multiply/subtract instructions forces the compiler to use separate |
| instructions for the multiply and add/subtract operations. This may be |
| desirable in some cases where strict \s-1IEEE\s0 754\-compliant results are |
| required: the fused multiply add/subtract instructions do not round the |
| intermediate result, thereby producing results with \fImore\fR bits of |
| precision than specified by the \s-1IEEE\s0 standard. Disabling fused multiply |
| add/subtract instructions also ensures that the program output is not |
| sensitive to the compiler's ability to combine multiply and add/subtract |
| operations. |
| .IP "\fB\-mserialize\-volatile\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mserialize-volatile" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-serialize\-volatile\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-serialize-volatile" |
| .PD |
| When this option is enabled, \s-1GCC\s0 inserts \f(CW\*(C`MEMW\*(C'\fR instructions before |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`volatile\*(C'\fR memory references to guarantee sequential consistency. |
| The default is \fB\-mserialize\-volatile\fR. Use |
| \&\fB\-mno\-serialize\-volatile\fR to omit the \f(CW\*(C`MEMW\*(C'\fR instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mforce\-no\-pic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mforce-no-pic" |
| For targets, like GNU/Linux, where all user-mode Xtensa code must be |
| position-independent code (\s-1PIC\s0), this option disables \s-1PIC\s0 for compiling |
| kernel code. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtext\-section\-literals\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtext-section-literals" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-text\-section\-literals\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-text-section-literals" |
| .PD |
| Control the treatment of literal pools. The default is |
| \&\fB\-mno\-text\-section\-literals\fR, which places literals in a separate |
| section in the output file. This allows the literal pool to be placed |
| in a data \s-1RAM/ROM\s0, and it also allows the linker to combine literal |
| pools from separate object files to remove redundant literals and |
| improve code size. With \fB\-mtext\-section\-literals\fR, the literals |
| are interspersed in the text section in order to keep them as close as |
| possible to their references. This may be necessary for large assembly |
| files. |
| .IP "\fB\-mtarget\-align\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mtarget-align" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-target\-align\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-target-align" |
| .PD |
| When this option is enabled, \s-1GCC\s0 instructs the assembler to |
| automatically align instructions to reduce branch penalties at the |
| expense of some code density. The assembler attempts to widen density |
| instructions to align branch targets and the instructions following call |
| instructions. If there are not enough preceding safe density |
| instructions to align a target, no widening is performed. The |
| default is \fB\-mtarget\-align\fR. These options do not affect the |
| treatment of auto-aligned instructions like \f(CW\*(C`LOOP\*(C'\fR, which the |
| assembler always aligns, either by widening density instructions or |
| by inserting \s-1NOP\s0 instructions. |
| .IP "\fB\-mlongcalls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mlongcalls" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-mno\-longcalls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-mno-longcalls" |
| .PD |
| When this option is enabled, \s-1GCC\s0 instructs the assembler to translate |
| direct calls to indirect calls unless it can determine that the target |
| of a direct call is in the range allowed by the call instruction. This |
| translation typically occurs for calls to functions in other source |
| files. Specifically, the assembler translates a direct \f(CW\*(C`CALL\*(C'\fR |
| instruction into an \f(CW\*(C`L32R\*(C'\fR followed by a \f(CW\*(C`CALLX\*(C'\fR instruction. |
| The default is \fB\-mno\-longcalls\fR. This option should be used in |
| programs where the call target can potentially be out of range. This |
| option is implemented in the assembler, not the compiler, so the |
| assembly code generated by \s-1GCC\s0 still shows direct call |
| instructions\-\-\-look at the disassembled object code to see the actual |
| instructions. Note that the assembler uses an indirect call for |
| every cross-file call, not just those that really are out of range. |
| .PP |
| \fIzSeries Options\fR |
| .IX Subsection "zSeries Options" |
| .PP |
| These are listed under |
| .SS "Options for Code Generation Conventions" |
| .IX Subsection "Options for Code Generation Conventions" |
| These machine-independent options control the interface conventions |
| used in code generation. |
| .PP |
| Most of them have both positive and negative forms; the negative form |
| of \fB\-ffoo\fR is \fB\-fno\-foo\fR. In the table below, only |
| one of the forms is listed\-\-\-the one that is not the default. You |
| can figure out the other form by either removing \fBno\-\fR or adding |
| it. |
| .IP "\fB\-fbounds\-check\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fbounds-check" |
| For front ends that support it, generate additional code to check that |
| indices used to access arrays are within the declared range. This is |
| currently only supported by the Java and Fortran front ends, where |
| this option defaults to true and false respectively. |
| .IP "\fB\-fstack\-reuse=\fR\fIreuse-level\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fstack-reuse=reuse-level" |
| This option controls stack space reuse for user declared local/auto variables |
| and compiler generated temporaries. \fIreuse_level\fR can be \fBall\fR, |
| \&\fBnamed_vars\fR, or \fBnone\fR. \fBall\fR enables stack reuse for all |
| local variables and temporaries, \fBnamed_vars\fR enables the reuse only for |
| user defined local variables with names, and \fBnone\fR disables stack reuse |
| completely. The default value is \fBall\fR. The option is needed when the |
| program extends the lifetime of a scoped local variable or a compiler generated |
| temporary beyond the end point defined by the language. When a lifetime of |
| a variable ends, and if the variable lives in memory, the optimizing compiler |
| has the freedom to reuse its stack space with other temporaries or scoped |
| local variables whose live range does not overlap with it. Legacy code extending |
| local lifetime will likely to break with the stack reuse optimization. |
| .Sp |
| For example, |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 3 |
| \& int *p; |
| \& { |
| \& int local1; |
| \& |
| \& p = &local1; |
| \& local1 = 10; |
| \& .... |
| \& } |
| \& { |
| \& int local2; |
| \& local2 = 20; |
| \& ... |
| \& } |
| \& |
| \& if (*p == 10) // out of scope use of local1 |
| \& { |
| \& |
| \& } |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| Another example: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 6 |
| \& struct A |
| \& { |
| \& A(int k) : i(k), j(k) { } |
| \& int i; |
| \& int j; |
| \& }; |
| \& |
| \& A *ap; |
| \& |
| \& void foo(const A& ar) |
| \& { |
| \& ap = &ar; |
| \& } |
| \& |
| \& void bar() |
| \& { |
| \& foo(A(10)); // temp object\*(Aqs lifetime ends when foo returns |
| \& |
| \& { |
| \& A a(20); |
| \& .... |
| \& } |
| \& ap\->i+= 10; // ap references out of scope temp whose space |
| \& // is reused with a. What is the value of ap\->i? |
| \& } |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| The lifetime of a compiler generated temporary is well defined by the \*(C+ |
| standard. When a lifetime of a temporary ends, and if the temporary lives |
| in memory, the optimizing compiler has the freedom to reuse its stack |
| space with other temporaries or scoped local variables whose live range |
| does not overlap with it. However some of the legacy code relies on |
| the behavior of older compilers in which temporaries' stack space is |
| not reused, the aggressive stack reuse can lead to runtime errors. This |
| option is used to control the temporary stack reuse optimization. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftrapv\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftrapv" |
| This option generates traps for signed overflow on addition, subtraction, |
| multiplication operations. |
| .IP "\fB\-fwrapv\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fwrapv" |
| This option instructs the compiler to assume that signed arithmetic |
| overflow of addition, subtraction and multiplication wraps around |
| using twos-complement representation. This flag enables some optimizations |
| and disables others. This option is enabled by default for the Java |
| front end, as required by the Java language specification. |
| .IP "\fB\-fexceptions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fexceptions" |
| Enable exception handling. Generates extra code needed to propagate |
| exceptions. For some targets, this implies \s-1GCC\s0 generates frame |
| unwind information for all functions, which can produce significant data |
| size overhead, although it does not affect execution. If you do not |
| specify this option, \s-1GCC\s0 enables it by default for languages like |
| \&\*(C+ that normally require exception handling, and disables it for |
| languages like C that do not normally require it. However, you may need |
| to enable this option when compiling C code that needs to interoperate |
| properly with exception handlers written in \*(C+. You may also wish to |
| disable this option if you are compiling older \*(C+ programs that don't |
| use exception handling. |
| .IP "\fB\-fnon\-call\-exceptions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fnon-call-exceptions" |
| Generate code that allows trapping instructions to throw exceptions. |
| Note that this requires platform-specific runtime support that does |
| not exist everywhere. Moreover, it only allows \fItrapping\fR |
| instructions to throw exceptions, i.e. memory references or floating-point |
| instructions. It does not allow exceptions to be thrown from |
| arbitrary signal handlers such as \f(CW\*(C`SIGALRM\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fdelete\-dead\-exceptions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fdelete-dead-exceptions" |
| Consider that instructions that may throw exceptions but don't otherwise |
| contribute to the execution of the program can be optimized away. |
| This option is enabled by default for the Ada front end, as permitted by |
| the Ada language specification. |
| Optimization passes that cause dead exceptions to be removed are enabled independently at different optimization levels. |
| .IP "\fB\-funwind\-tables\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-funwind-tables" |
| Similar to \fB\-fexceptions\fR, except that it just generates any needed |
| static data, but does not affect the generated code in any other way. |
| You normally do not need to enable this option; instead, a language processor |
| that needs this handling enables it on your behalf. |
| .IP "\fB\-fasynchronous\-unwind\-tables\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fasynchronous-unwind-tables" |
| Generate unwind table in \s-1DWARF\s0 2 format, if supported by target machine. The |
| table is exact at each instruction boundary, so it can be used for stack |
| unwinding from asynchronous events (such as debugger or garbage collector). |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-gnu\-unique\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-gnu-unique" |
| On systems with recent \s-1GNU\s0 assembler and C library, the \*(C+ compiler |
| uses the \f(CW\*(C`STB_GNU_UNIQUE\*(C'\fR binding to make sure that definitions |
| of template static data members and static local variables in inline |
| functions are unique even in the presence of \f(CW\*(C`RTLD_LOCAL\*(C'\fR; this |
| is necessary to avoid problems with a library used by two different |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`RTLD_LOCAL\*(C'\fR plugins depending on a definition in one of them and |
| therefore disagreeing with the other one about the binding of the |
| symbol. But this causes \f(CW\*(C`dlclose\*(C'\fR to be ignored for affected |
| DSOs; if your program relies on reinitialization of a \s-1DSO\s0 via |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`dlclose\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`dlopen\*(C'\fR, you can use |
| \&\fB\-fno\-gnu\-unique\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fpcc\-struct\-return\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fpcc-struct-return" |
| Return \*(L"short\*(R" \f(CW\*(C`struct\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`union\*(C'\fR values in memory like |
| longer ones, rather than in registers. This convention is less |
| efficient, but it has the advantage of allowing intercallability between |
| GCC-compiled files and files compiled with other compilers, particularly |
| the Portable C Compiler (pcc). |
| .Sp |
| The precise convention for returning structures in memory depends |
| on the target configuration macros. |
| .Sp |
| Short structures and unions are those whose size and alignment match |
| that of some integer type. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fBWarning:\fR code compiled with the \fB\-fpcc\-struct\-return\fR |
| switch is not binary compatible with code compiled with the |
| \&\fB\-freg\-struct\-return\fR switch. |
| Use it to conform to a non-default application binary interface. |
| .IP "\fB\-freg\-struct\-return\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-freg-struct-return" |
| Return \f(CW\*(C`struct\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`union\*(C'\fR values in registers when possible. |
| This is more efficient for small structures than |
| \&\fB\-fpcc\-struct\-return\fR. |
| .Sp |
| If you specify neither \fB\-fpcc\-struct\-return\fR nor |
| \&\fB\-freg\-struct\-return\fR, \s-1GCC\s0 defaults to whichever convention is |
| standard for the target. If there is no standard convention, \s-1GCC\s0 |
| defaults to \fB\-fpcc\-struct\-return\fR, except on targets where \s-1GCC\s0 is |
| the principal compiler. In those cases, we can choose the standard, and |
| we chose the more efficient register return alternative. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fBWarning:\fR code compiled with the \fB\-freg\-struct\-return\fR |
| switch is not binary compatible with code compiled with the |
| \&\fB\-fpcc\-struct\-return\fR switch. |
| Use it to conform to a non-default application binary interface. |
| .IP "\fB\-fshort\-enums\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fshort-enums" |
| Allocate to an \f(CW\*(C`enum\*(C'\fR type only as many bytes as it needs for the |
| declared range of possible values. Specifically, the \f(CW\*(C`enum\*(C'\fR type |
| is equivalent to the smallest integer type that has enough room. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fBWarning:\fR the \fB\-fshort\-enums\fR switch causes \s-1GCC\s0 to generate |
| code that is not binary compatible with code generated without that switch. |
| Use it to conform to a non-default application binary interface. |
| .IP "\fB\-fshort\-double\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fshort-double" |
| Use the same size for \f(CW\*(C`double\*(C'\fR as for \f(CW\*(C`float\*(C'\fR. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fBWarning:\fR the \fB\-fshort\-double\fR switch causes \s-1GCC\s0 to generate |
| code that is not binary compatible with code generated without that switch. |
| Use it to conform to a non-default application binary interface. |
| .IP "\fB\-fshort\-wchar\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fshort-wchar" |
| Override the underlying type for \fBwchar_t\fR to be \fBshort |
| unsigned int\fR instead of the default for the target. This option is |
| useful for building programs to run under \s-1WINE\s0. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fBWarning:\fR the \fB\-fshort\-wchar\fR switch causes \s-1GCC\s0 to generate |
| code that is not binary compatible with code generated without that switch. |
| Use it to conform to a non-default application binary interface. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-common\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-common" |
| In C code, controls the placement of uninitialized global variables. |
| Unix C compilers have traditionally permitted multiple definitions of |
| such variables in different compilation units by placing the variables |
| in a common block. |
| This is the behavior specified by \fB\-fcommon\fR, and is the default |
| for \s-1GCC\s0 on most targets. |
| On the other hand, this behavior is not required by \s-1ISO\s0 C, and on some |
| targets may carry a speed or code size penalty on variable references. |
| The \fB\-fno\-common\fR option specifies that the compiler should place |
| uninitialized global variables in the data section of the object file, |
| rather than generating them as common blocks. |
| This has the effect that if the same variable is declared |
| (without \f(CW\*(C`extern\*(C'\fR) in two different compilations, |
| you get a multiple-definition error when you link them. |
| In this case, you must compile with \fB\-fcommon\fR instead. |
| Compiling with \fB\-fno\-common\fR is useful on targets for which |
| it provides better performance, or if you wish to verify that the |
| program will work on other systems that always treat uninitialized |
| variable declarations this way. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-ident\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-ident" |
| Ignore the \fB#ident\fR directive. |
| .IP "\fB\-finhibit\-size\-directive\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-finhibit-size-directive" |
| Don't output a \f(CW\*(C`.size\*(C'\fR assembler directive, or anything else that |
| would cause trouble if the function is split in the middle, and the |
| two halves are placed at locations far apart in memory. This option is |
| used when compiling \fIcrtstuff.c\fR; you should not need to use it |
| for anything else. |
| .IP "\fB\-fverbose\-asm\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fverbose-asm" |
| Put extra commentary information in the generated assembly code to |
| make it more readable. This option is generally only of use to those |
| who actually need to read the generated assembly code (perhaps while |
| debugging the compiler itself). |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-fno\-verbose\-asm\fR, the default, causes the |
| extra information to be omitted and is useful when comparing two assembler |
| files. |
| .IP "\fB\-frecord\-gcc\-switches\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-frecord-gcc-switches" |
| This switch causes the command line used to invoke the |
| compiler to be recorded into the object file that is being created. |
| This switch is only implemented on some targets and the exact format |
| of the recording is target and binary file format dependent, but it |
| usually takes the form of a section containing \s-1ASCII\s0 text. This |
| switch is related to the \fB\-fverbose\-asm\fR switch, but that |
| switch only records information in the assembler output file as |
| comments, so it never reaches the object file. |
| See also \fB\-grecord\-gcc\-switches\fR for another |
| way of storing compiler options into the object file. |
| .IP "\fB\-fpic\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fpic" |
| Generate position-independent code (\s-1PIC\s0) suitable for use in a shared |
| library, if supported for the target machine. Such code accesses all |
| constant addresses through a global offset table (\s-1GOT\s0). The dynamic |
| loader resolves the \s-1GOT\s0 entries when the program starts (the dynamic |
| loader is not part of \s-1GCC\s0; it is part of the operating system). If |
| the \s-1GOT\s0 size for the linked executable exceeds a machine-specific |
| maximum size, you get an error message from the linker indicating that |
| \&\fB\-fpic\fR does not work; in that case, recompile with \fB\-fPIC\fR |
| instead. (These maximums are 8k on the \s-1SPARC\s0 and 32k |
| on the m68k and \s-1RS/6000\s0. The 386 has no such limit.) |
| .Sp |
| Position-independent code requires special support, and therefore works |
| only on certain machines. For the 386, \s-1GCC\s0 supports \s-1PIC\s0 for System V |
| but not for the Sun 386i. Code generated for the \s-1IBM\s0 \s-1RS/6000\s0 is always |
| position-independent. |
| .Sp |
| When this flag is set, the macros \f(CW\*(C`_\|_pic_\|_\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`_\|_PIC_\|_\*(C'\fR |
| are defined to 1. |
| .IP "\fB\-fPIC\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fPIC" |
| If supported for the target machine, emit position-independent code, |
| suitable for dynamic linking and avoiding any limit on the size of the |
| global offset table. This option makes a difference on the m68k, |
| PowerPC and \s-1SPARC\s0. |
| .Sp |
| Position-independent code requires special support, and therefore works |
| only on certain machines. |
| .Sp |
| When this flag is set, the macros \f(CW\*(C`_\|_pic_\|_\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`_\|_PIC_\|_\*(C'\fR |
| are defined to 2. |
| .IP "\fB\-fpie\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fpie" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fPIE\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fPIE" |
| .PD |
| These options are similar to \fB\-fpic\fR and \fB\-fPIC\fR, but |
| generated position independent code can be only linked into executables. |
| Usually these options are used when \fB\-pie\fR \s-1GCC\s0 option is |
| used during linking. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\-fpie\fR and \fB\-fPIE\fR both define the macros |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_pie_\|_\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`_\|_PIE_\|_\*(C'\fR. The macros have the value 1 |
| for \fB\-fpie\fR and 2 for \fB\-fPIE\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-jump\-tables\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-jump-tables" |
| Do not use jump tables for switch statements even where it would be |
| more efficient than other code generation strategies. This option is |
| of use in conjunction with \fB\-fpic\fR or \fB\-fPIC\fR for |
| building code that forms part of a dynamic linker and cannot |
| reference the address of a jump table. On some targets, jump tables |
| do not require a \s-1GOT\s0 and this option is not needed. |
| .IP "\fB\-ffixed\-\fR\fIreg\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ffixed-reg" |
| Treat the register named \fIreg\fR as a fixed register; generated code |
| should never refer to it (except perhaps as a stack pointer, frame |
| pointer or in some other fixed role). |
| .Sp |
| \&\fIreg\fR must be the name of a register. The register names accepted |
| are machine-specific and are defined in the \f(CW\*(C`REGISTER_NAMES\*(C'\fR |
| macro in the machine description macro file. |
| .Sp |
| This flag does not have a negative form, because it specifies a |
| three-way choice. |
| .IP "\fB\-fcall\-used\-\fR\fIreg\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fcall-used-reg" |
| Treat the register named \fIreg\fR as an allocable register that is |
| clobbered by function calls. It may be allocated for temporaries or |
| variables that do not live across a call. Functions compiled this way |
| do not save and restore the register \fIreg\fR. |
| .Sp |
| It is an error to use this flag with the frame pointer or stack pointer. |
| Use of this flag for other registers that have fixed pervasive roles in |
| the machine's execution model produces disastrous results. |
| .Sp |
| This flag does not have a negative form, because it specifies a |
| three-way choice. |
| .IP "\fB\-fcall\-saved\-\fR\fIreg\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fcall-saved-reg" |
| Treat the register named \fIreg\fR as an allocable register saved by |
| functions. It may be allocated even for temporaries or variables that |
| live across a call. Functions compiled this way save and restore |
| the register \fIreg\fR if they use it. |
| .Sp |
| It is an error to use this flag with the frame pointer or stack pointer. |
| Use of this flag for other registers that have fixed pervasive roles in |
| the machine's execution model produces disastrous results. |
| .Sp |
| A different sort of disaster results from the use of this flag for |
| a register in which function values may be returned. |
| .Sp |
| This flag does not have a negative form, because it specifies a |
| three-way choice. |
| .IP "\fB\-fpack\-struct[=\fR\fIn\fR\fB]\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fpack-struct[=n]" |
| Without a value specified, pack all structure members together without |
| holes. When a value is specified (which must be a small power of two), pack |
| structure members according to this value, representing the maximum |
| alignment (that is, objects with default alignment requirements larger than |
| this are output potentially unaligned at the next fitting location. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fBWarning:\fR the \fB\-fpack\-struct\fR switch causes \s-1GCC\s0 to generate |
| code that is not binary compatible with code generated without that switch. |
| Additionally, it makes the code suboptimal. |
| Use it to conform to a non-default application binary interface. |
| .IP "\fB\-finstrument\-functions\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-finstrument-functions" |
| Generate instrumentation calls for entry and exit to functions. Just |
| after function entry and just before function exit, the following |
| profiling functions are called with the address of the current |
| function and its call site. (On some platforms, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_builtin_return_address\*(C'\fR does not work beyond the current |
| function, so the call site information may not be available to the |
| profiling functions otherwise.) |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 4 |
| \& void _\|_cyg_profile_func_enter (void *this_fn, |
| \& void *call_site); |
| \& void _\|_cyg_profile_func_exit (void *this_fn, |
| \& void *call_site); |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| The first argument is the address of the start of the current function, |
| which may be looked up exactly in the symbol table. |
| .Sp |
| This instrumentation is also done for functions expanded inline in other |
| functions. The profiling calls indicate where, conceptually, the |
| inline function is entered and exited. This means that addressable |
| versions of such functions must be available. If all your uses of a |
| function are expanded inline, this may mean an additional expansion of |
| code size. If you use \fBextern inline\fR in your C code, an |
| addressable version of such functions must be provided. (This is |
| normally the case anyway, but if you get lucky and the optimizer always |
| expands the functions inline, you might have gotten away without |
| providing static copies.) |
| .Sp |
| A function may be given the attribute \f(CW\*(C`no_instrument_function\*(C'\fR, in |
| which case this instrumentation is not done. This can be used, for |
| example, for the profiling functions listed above, high-priority |
| interrupt routines, and any functions from which the profiling functions |
| cannot safely be called (perhaps signal handlers, if the profiling |
| routines generate output or allocate memory). |
| .IP "\fB\-finstrument\-functions\-exclude\-file\-list=\fR\fIfile\fR\fB,\fR\fIfile\fR\fB,...\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-finstrument-functions-exclude-file-list=file,file,..." |
| Set the list of functions that are excluded from instrumentation (see |
| the description of \f(CW\*(C`\-finstrument\-functions\*(C'\fR). If the file that |
| contains a function definition matches with one of \fIfile\fR, then |
| that function is not instrumented. The match is done on substrings: |
| if the \fIfile\fR parameter is a substring of the file name, it is |
| considered to be a match. |
| .Sp |
| For example: |
| .Sp |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& \-finstrument\-functions\-exclude\-file\-list=/bits/stl,include/sys |
| .Ve |
| .Sp |
| excludes any inline function defined in files whose pathnames |
| contain \f(CW\*(C`/bits/stl\*(C'\fR or \f(CW\*(C`include/sys\*(C'\fR. |
| .Sp |
| If, for some reason, you want to include letter \f(CW\*(Aq,\*(Aq\fR in one of |
| \&\fIsym\fR, write \f(CW\*(Aq,\*(Aq\fR. For example, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`\-finstrument\-functions\-exclude\-file\-list=\*(Aq,,tmp\*(Aq\*(C'\fR |
| (note the single quote surrounding the option). |
| .IP "\fB\-finstrument\-functions\-exclude\-function\-list=\fR\fIsym\fR\fB,\fR\fIsym\fR\fB,...\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-finstrument-functions-exclude-function-list=sym,sym,..." |
| This is similar to \f(CW\*(C`\-finstrument\-functions\-exclude\-file\-list\*(C'\fR, |
| but this option sets the list of function names to be excluded from |
| instrumentation. The function name to be matched is its user-visible |
| name, such as \f(CW\*(C`vector<int> blah(const vector<int> &)\*(C'\fR, not the |
| internal mangled name (e.g., \f(CW\*(C`_Z4blahRSt6vectorIiSaIiEE\*(C'\fR). The |
| match is done on substrings: if the \fIsym\fR parameter is a substring |
| of the function name, it is considered to be a match. For C99 and \*(C+ |
| extended identifiers, the function name must be given in \s-1UTF\-8\s0, not |
| using universal character names. |
| .IP "\fB\-fstack\-check\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fstack-check" |
| Generate code to verify that you do not go beyond the boundary of the |
| stack. You should specify this flag if you are running in an |
| environment with multiple threads, but you only rarely need to specify it in |
| a single-threaded environment since stack overflow is automatically |
| detected on nearly all systems if there is only one stack. |
| .Sp |
| Note that this switch does not actually cause checking to be done; the |
| operating system or the language runtime must do that. The switch causes |
| generation of code to ensure that they see the stack being extended. |
| .Sp |
| You can additionally specify a string parameter: \f(CW\*(C`no\*(C'\fR means no |
| checking, \f(CW\*(C`generic\*(C'\fR means force the use of old-style checking, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`specific\*(C'\fR means use the best checking method and is equivalent |
| to bare \fB\-fstack\-check\fR. |
| .Sp |
| Old-style checking is a generic mechanism that requires no specific |
| target support in the compiler but comes with the following drawbacks: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "1." 4 |
| Modified allocation strategy for large objects: they are always |
| allocated dynamically if their size exceeds a fixed threshold. |
| .IP "2." 4 |
| Fixed limit on the size of the static frame of functions: when it is |
| topped by a particular function, stack checking is not reliable and |
| a warning is issued by the compiler. |
| .IP "3." 4 |
| Inefficiency: because of both the modified allocation strategy and the |
| generic implementation, code performance is hampered. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| Note that old-style stack checking is also the fallback method for |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`specific\*(C'\fR if no target support has been added in the compiler. |
| .RE |
| .IP "\fB\-fstack\-limit\-register=\fR\fIreg\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fstack-limit-register=reg" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\-fstack\-limit\-symbol=\fR\fIsym\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fstack-limit-symbol=sym" |
| .IP "\fB\-fno\-stack\-limit\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fno-stack-limit" |
| .PD |
| Generate code to ensure that the stack does not grow beyond a certain value, |
| either the value of a register or the address of a symbol. If a larger |
| stack is required, a signal is raised at run time. For most targets, |
| the signal is raised before the stack overruns the boundary, so |
| it is possible to catch the signal without taking special precautions. |
| .Sp |
| For instance, if the stack starts at absolute address \fB0x80000000\fR |
| and grows downwards, you can use the flags |
| \&\fB\-fstack\-limit\-symbol=_\|_stack_limit\fR and |
| \&\fB\-Wl,\-\-defsym,_\|_stack_limit=0x7ffe0000\fR to enforce a stack limit |
| of 128KB. Note that this may only work with the \s-1GNU\s0 linker. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsplit\-stack\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsplit-stack" |
| Generate code to automatically split the stack before it overflows. |
| The resulting program has a discontiguous stack which can only |
| overflow if the program is unable to allocate any more memory. This |
| is most useful when running threaded programs, as it is no longer |
| necessary to calculate a good stack size to use for each thread. This |
| is currently only implemented for the i386 and x86_64 back ends running |
| GNU/Linux. |
| .Sp |
| When code compiled with \fB\-fsplit\-stack\fR calls code compiled |
| without \fB\-fsplit\-stack\fR, there may not be much stack space |
| available for the latter code to run. If compiling all code, |
| including library code, with \fB\-fsplit\-stack\fR is not an option, |
| then the linker can fix up these calls so that the code compiled |
| without \fB\-fsplit\-stack\fR always has a large stack. Support for |
| this is implemented in the gold linker in \s-1GNU\s0 binutils release 2.21 |
| and later. |
| .IP "\fB\-fleading\-underscore\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fleading-underscore" |
| This option and its counterpart, \fB\-fno\-leading\-underscore\fR, forcibly |
| change the way C symbols are represented in the object file. One use |
| is to help link with legacy assembly code. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fBWarning:\fR the \fB\-fleading\-underscore\fR switch causes \s-1GCC\s0 to |
| generate code that is not binary compatible with code generated without that |
| switch. Use it to conform to a non-default application binary interface. |
| Not all targets provide complete support for this switch. |
| .IP "\fB\-ftls\-model=\fR\fImodel\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-ftls-model=model" |
| Alter the thread-local storage model to be used. |
| The \fImodel\fR argument should be one of \f(CW\*(C`global\-dynamic\*(C'\fR, |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`local\-dynamic\*(C'\fR, \f(CW\*(C`initial\-exec\*(C'\fR or \f(CW\*(C`local\-exec\*(C'\fR. |
| .Sp |
| The default without \fB\-fpic\fR is \f(CW\*(C`initial\-exec\*(C'\fR; with |
| \&\fB\-fpic\fR the default is \f(CW\*(C`global\-dynamic\*(C'\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\-fvisibility=\fR\fIdefault|internal|hidden|protected\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fvisibility=default|internal|hidden|protected" |
| Set the default \s-1ELF\s0 image symbol visibility to the specified option\-\-\-all |
| symbols are marked with this unless overridden within the code. |
| Using this feature can very substantially improve linking and |
| load times of shared object libraries, produce more optimized |
| code, provide near-perfect \s-1API\s0 export and prevent symbol clashes. |
| It is \fBstrongly\fR recommended that you use this in any shared objects |
| you distribute. |
| .Sp |
| Despite the nomenclature, \f(CW\*(C`default\*(C'\fR always means public; i.e., |
| available to be linked against from outside the shared object. |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`protected\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`internal\*(C'\fR are pretty useless in real-world |
| usage so the only other commonly used option is \f(CW\*(C`hidden\*(C'\fR. |
| The default if \fB\-fvisibility\fR isn't specified is |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`default\*(C'\fR, i.e., make every |
| symbol public\-\-\-this causes the same behavior as previous versions of |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0. |
| .Sp |
| A good explanation of the benefits offered by ensuring \s-1ELF\s0 |
| symbols have the correct visibility is given by \*(L"How To Write |
| Shared Libraries\*(R" by Ulrich Drepper (which can be found at |
| <\fBhttp://people.redhat.com/~drepper/\fR>)\-\-\-however a superior |
| solution made possible by this option to marking things hidden when |
| the default is public is to make the default hidden and mark things |
| public. This is the norm with DLLs on Windows and with \fB\-fvisibility=hidden\fR |
| and \f(CW\*(C`_\|_attribute_\|_ ((visibility("default")))\*(C'\fR instead of |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`_\|_declspec(dllexport)\*(C'\fR you get almost identical semantics with |
| identical syntax. This is a great boon to those working with |
| cross-platform projects. |
| .Sp |
| For those adding visibility support to existing code, you may find |
| \&\fB#pragma \s-1GCC\s0 visibility\fR of use. This works by you enclosing |
| the declarations you wish to set visibility for with (for example) |
| \&\fB#pragma \s-1GCC\s0 visibility push(hidden)\fR and |
| \&\fB#pragma \s-1GCC\s0 visibility pop\fR. |
| Bear in mind that symbol visibility should be viewed \fBas |
| part of the \s-1API\s0 interface contract\fR and thus all new code should |
| always specify visibility when it is not the default; i.e., declarations |
| only for use within the local \s-1DSO\s0 should \fBalways\fR be marked explicitly |
| as hidden as so to avoid \s-1PLT\s0 indirection overheads\-\-\-making this |
| abundantly clear also aids readability and self-documentation of the code. |
| Note that due to \s-1ISO\s0 \*(C+ specification requirements, \f(CW\*(C`operator new\*(C'\fR and |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`operator delete\*(C'\fR must always be of default visibility. |
| .Sp |
| Be aware that headers from outside your project, in particular system |
| headers and headers from any other library you use, may not be |
| expecting to be compiled with visibility other than the default. You |
| may need to explicitly say \fB#pragma \s-1GCC\s0 visibility push(default)\fR |
| before including any such headers. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fBextern\fR declarations are not affected by \fB\-fvisibility\fR, so |
| a lot of code can be recompiled with \fB\-fvisibility=hidden\fR with |
| no modifications. However, this means that calls to \f(CW\*(C`extern\*(C'\fR |
| functions with no explicit visibility use the \s-1PLT\s0, so it is more |
| effective to use \f(CW\*(C`_\|_attribute ((visibility))\*(C'\fR and/or |
| \&\f(CW\*(C`#pragma GCC visibility\*(C'\fR to tell the compiler which \f(CW\*(C`extern\*(C'\fR |
| declarations should be treated as hidden. |
| .Sp |
| Note that \fB\-fvisibility\fR does affect \*(C+ vague linkage |
| entities. This means that, for instance, an exception class that is |
| be thrown between DSOs must be explicitly marked with default |
| visibility so that the \fBtype_info\fR nodes are unified between |
| the DSOs. |
| .Sp |
| An overview of these techniques, their benefits and how to use them |
| is at <\fBhttp://gcc.gnu.org/wiki/Visibility\fR>. |
| .IP "\fB\-fstrict\-volatile\-bitfields\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fstrict-volatile-bitfields" |
| This option should be used if accesses to volatile bit-fields (or other |
| structure fields, although the compiler usually honors those types |
| anyway) should use a single access of the width of the |
| field's type, aligned to a natural alignment if possible. For |
| example, targets with memory-mapped peripheral registers might require |
| all such accesses to be 16 bits wide; with this flag you can |
| declare all peripheral bit-fields as \f(CW\*(C`unsigned short\*(C'\fR (assuming short |
| is 16 bits on these targets) to force \s-1GCC\s0 to use 16\-bit accesses |
| instead of, perhaps, a more efficient 32\-bit access. |
| .Sp |
| If this option is disabled, the compiler uses the most efficient |
| instruction. In the previous example, that might be a 32\-bit load |
| instruction, even though that accesses bytes that do not contain |
| any portion of the bit-field, or memory-mapped registers unrelated to |
| the one being updated. |
| .Sp |
| If the target requires strict alignment, and honoring the field |
| type would require violating this alignment, a warning is issued. |
| If the field has \f(CW\*(C`packed\*(C'\fR attribute, the access is done without |
| honoring the field type. If the field doesn't have \f(CW\*(C`packed\*(C'\fR |
| attribute, the access is done honoring the field type. In both cases, |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 assumes that the user knows something about the target hardware |
| that it is unaware of. |
| .Sp |
| The default value of this option is determined by the application binary |
| interface for the target processor. |
| .IP "\fB\-fsync\-libcalls\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "-fsync-libcalls" |
| This option controls whether any out-of-line instance of the \f(CW\*(C`_\|_sync\*(C'\fR |
| family of functions may be used to implement the \*(C+11 \f(CW\*(C`_\|_atomic\*(C'\fR |
| family of functions. |
| .Sp |
| The default value of this option is enabled, thus the only useful form |
| of the option is \fB\-fno\-sync\-libcalls\fR. This option is used in |
| the implementation of the \fIlibatomic\fR runtime library. |
| .SH "ENVIRONMENT" |
| .IX Header "ENVIRONMENT" |
| This section describes several environment variables that affect how \s-1GCC\s0 |
| operates. Some of them work by specifying directories or prefixes to use |
| when searching for various kinds of files. Some are used to specify other |
| aspects of the compilation environment. |
| .PP |
| Note that you can also specify places to search using options such as |
| \&\fB\-B\fR, \fB\-I\fR and \fB\-L\fR. These |
| take precedence over places specified using environment variables, which |
| in turn take precedence over those specified by the configuration of \s-1GCC\s0. |
| .IP "\fB\s-1LANG\s0\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "LANG" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fB\s-1LC_CTYPE\s0\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "LC_CTYPE" |
| .IP "\fB\s-1LC_MESSAGES\s0\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "LC_MESSAGES" |
| .IP "\fB\s-1LC_ALL\s0\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "LC_ALL" |
| .PD |
| These environment variables control the way that \s-1GCC\s0 uses |
| localization information which allows \s-1GCC\s0 to work with different |
| national conventions. \s-1GCC\s0 inspects the locale categories |
| \&\fB\s-1LC_CTYPE\s0\fR and \fB\s-1LC_MESSAGES\s0\fR if it has been configured to do |
| so. These locale categories can be set to any value supported by your |
| installation. A typical value is \fBen_GB.UTF\-8\fR for English in the United |
| Kingdom encoded in \s-1UTF\-8\s0. |
| .Sp |
| The \fB\s-1LC_CTYPE\s0\fR environment variable specifies character |
| classification. \s-1GCC\s0 uses it to determine the character boundaries in |
| a string; this is needed for some multibyte encodings that contain quote |
| and escape characters that are otherwise interpreted as a string |
| end or escape. |
| .Sp |
| The \fB\s-1LC_MESSAGES\s0\fR environment variable specifies the language to |
| use in diagnostic messages. |
| .Sp |
| If the \fB\s-1LC_ALL\s0\fR environment variable is set, it overrides the value |
| of \fB\s-1LC_CTYPE\s0\fR and \fB\s-1LC_MESSAGES\s0\fR; otherwise, \fB\s-1LC_CTYPE\s0\fR |
| and \fB\s-1LC_MESSAGES\s0\fR default to the value of the \fB\s-1LANG\s0\fR |
| environment variable. If none of these variables are set, \s-1GCC\s0 |
| defaults to traditional C English behavior. |
| .IP "\fB\s-1TMPDIR\s0\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "TMPDIR" |
| If \fB\s-1TMPDIR\s0\fR is set, it specifies the directory to use for temporary |
| files. \s-1GCC\s0 uses temporary files to hold the output of one stage of |
| compilation which is to be used as input to the next stage: for example, |
| the output of the preprocessor, which is the input to the compiler |
| proper. |
| .IP "\fB\s-1GCC_COMPARE_DEBUG\s0\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "GCC_COMPARE_DEBUG" |
| Setting \fB\s-1GCC_COMPARE_DEBUG\s0\fR is nearly equivalent to passing |
| \&\fB\-fcompare\-debug\fR to the compiler driver. See the documentation |
| of this option for more details. |
| .IP "\fB\s-1GCC_EXEC_PREFIX\s0\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "GCC_EXEC_PREFIX" |
| If \fB\s-1GCC_EXEC_PREFIX\s0\fR is set, it specifies a prefix to use in the |
| names of the subprograms executed by the compiler. No slash is added |
| when this prefix is combined with the name of a subprogram, but you can |
| specify a prefix that ends with a slash if you wish. |
| .Sp |
| If \fB\s-1GCC_EXEC_PREFIX\s0\fR is not set, \s-1GCC\s0 attempts to figure out |
| an appropriate prefix to use based on the pathname it is invoked with. |
| .Sp |
| If \s-1GCC\s0 cannot find the subprogram using the specified prefix, it |
| tries looking in the usual places for the subprogram. |
| .Sp |
| The default value of \fB\s-1GCC_EXEC_PREFIX\s0\fR is |
| \&\fI\fIprefix\fI/lib/gcc/\fR where \fIprefix\fR is the prefix to |
| the installed compiler. In many cases \fIprefix\fR is the value |
| of \f(CW\*(C`prefix\*(C'\fR when you ran the \fIconfigure\fR script. |
| .Sp |
| Other prefixes specified with \fB\-B\fR take precedence over this prefix. |
| .Sp |
| This prefix is also used for finding files such as \fIcrt0.o\fR that are |
| used for linking. |
| .Sp |
| In addition, the prefix is used in an unusual way in finding the |
| directories to search for header files. For each of the standard |
| directories whose name normally begins with \fB/usr/local/lib/gcc\fR |
| (more precisely, with the value of \fB\s-1GCC_INCLUDE_DIR\s0\fR), \s-1GCC\s0 tries |
| replacing that beginning with the specified prefix to produce an |
| alternate directory name. Thus, with \fB\-Bfoo/\fR, \s-1GCC\s0 searches |
| \&\fIfoo/bar\fR just before it searches the standard directory |
| \&\fI/usr/local/lib/bar\fR. |
| If a standard directory begins with the configured |
| \&\fIprefix\fR then the value of \fIprefix\fR is replaced by |
| \&\fB\s-1GCC_EXEC_PREFIX\s0\fR when looking for header files. |
| .IP "\fB\s-1COMPILER_PATH\s0\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "COMPILER_PATH" |
| The value of \fB\s-1COMPILER_PATH\s0\fR is a colon-separated list of |
| directories, much like \fB\s-1PATH\s0\fR. \s-1GCC\s0 tries the directories thus |
| specified when searching for subprograms, if it can't find the |
| subprograms using \fB\s-1GCC_EXEC_PREFIX\s0\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\s-1LIBRARY_PATH\s0\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "LIBRARY_PATH" |
| The value of \fB\s-1LIBRARY_PATH\s0\fR is a colon-separated list of |
| directories, much like \fB\s-1PATH\s0\fR. When configured as a native compiler, |
| \&\s-1GCC\s0 tries the directories thus specified when searching for special |
| linker files, if it can't find them using \fB\s-1GCC_EXEC_PREFIX\s0\fR. Linking |
| using \s-1GCC\s0 also uses these directories when searching for ordinary |
| libraries for the \fB\-l\fR option (but directories specified with |
| \&\fB\-L\fR come first). |
| .IP "\fB\s-1LANG\s0\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "LANG" |
| This variable is used to pass locale information to the compiler. One way in |
| which this information is used is to determine the character set to be used |
| when character literals, string literals and comments are parsed in C and \*(C+. |
| When the compiler is configured to allow multibyte characters, |
| the following values for \fB\s-1LANG\s0\fR are recognized: |
| .RS 4 |
| .IP "\fBC\-JIS\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "C-JIS" |
| Recognize \s-1JIS\s0 characters. |
| .IP "\fBC\-SJIS\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "C-SJIS" |
| Recognize \s-1SJIS\s0 characters. |
| .IP "\fBC\-EUCJP\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "C-EUCJP" |
| Recognize \s-1EUCJP\s0 characters. |
| .RE |
| .RS 4 |
| .Sp |
| If \fB\s-1LANG\s0\fR is not defined, or if it has some other value, then the |
| compiler uses \f(CW\*(C`mblen\*(C'\fR and \f(CW\*(C`mbtowc\*(C'\fR as defined by the default locale to |
| recognize and translate multibyte characters. |
| .RE |
| .PP |
| Some additional environment variables affect the behavior of the |
| preprocessor. |
| .IP "\fB\s-1CPATH\s0\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "CPATH" |
| .PD 0 |
| .IP "\fBC_INCLUDE_PATH\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "C_INCLUDE_PATH" |
| .IP "\fB\s-1CPLUS_INCLUDE_PATH\s0\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "CPLUS_INCLUDE_PATH" |
| .IP "\fB\s-1OBJC_INCLUDE_PATH\s0\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "OBJC_INCLUDE_PATH" |
| .PD |
| Each variable's value is a list of directories separated by a special |
| character, much like \fB\s-1PATH\s0\fR, in which to look for header files. |
| The special character, \f(CW\*(C`PATH_SEPARATOR\*(C'\fR, is target-dependent and |
| determined at \s-1GCC\s0 build time. For Microsoft Windows-based targets it is a |
| semicolon, and for almost all other targets it is a colon. |
| .Sp |
| \&\fB\s-1CPATH\s0\fR specifies a list of directories to be searched as if |
| specified with \fB\-I\fR, but after any paths given with \fB\-I\fR |
| options on the command line. This environment variable is used |
| regardless of which language is being preprocessed. |
| .Sp |
| The remaining environment variables apply only when preprocessing the |
| particular language indicated. Each specifies a list of directories |
| to be searched as if specified with \fB\-isystem\fR, but after any |
| paths given with \fB\-isystem\fR options on the command line. |
| .Sp |
| In all these variables, an empty element instructs the compiler to |
| search its current working directory. Empty elements can appear at the |
| beginning or end of a path. For instance, if the value of |
| \&\fB\s-1CPATH\s0\fR is \f(CW\*(C`:/special/include\*(C'\fR, that has the same |
| effect as \fB\-I.\ \-I/special/include\fR. |
| .IP "\fB\s-1DEPENDENCIES_OUTPUT\s0\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "DEPENDENCIES_OUTPUT" |
| If this variable is set, its value specifies how to output |
| dependencies for Make based on the non-system header files processed |
| by the compiler. System header files are ignored in the dependency |
| output. |
| .Sp |
| The value of \fB\s-1DEPENDENCIES_OUTPUT\s0\fR can be just a file name, in |
| which case the Make rules are written to that file, guessing the target |
| name from the source file name. Or the value can have the form |
| \&\fIfile\fR\fB \fR\fItarget\fR, in which case the rules are written to |
| file \fIfile\fR using \fItarget\fR as the target name. |
| .Sp |
| In other words, this environment variable is equivalent to combining |
| the options \fB\-MM\fR and \fB\-MF\fR, |
| with an optional \fB\-MT\fR switch too. |
| .IP "\fB\s-1SUNPRO_DEPENDENCIES\s0\fR" 4 |
| .IX Item "SUNPRO_DEPENDENCIES" |
| This variable is the same as \fB\s-1DEPENDENCIES_OUTPUT\s0\fR (see above), |
| except that system header files are not ignored, so it implies |
| \&\fB\-M\fR rather than \fB\-MM\fR. However, the dependence on the |
| main input file is omitted. |
| .SH "BUGS" |
| .IX Header "BUGS" |
| For instructions on reporting bugs, see |
| <\fBfile:///opt/toolchains/stbgcc\-4.8\-1.0/info/README.Bugs\fR>. |
| .SH "FOOTNOTES" |
| .IX Header "FOOTNOTES" |
| .IP "1." 4 |
| On some systems, \fBgcc \-shared\fR |
| needs to build supplementary stub code for constructors to work. On |
| multi-libbed systems, \fBgcc \-shared\fR must select the correct support |
| libraries to link against. Failing to supply the correct flags may lead |
| to subtle defects. Supplying them in cases where they are not necessary |
| is innocuous. |
| .SH "SEE ALSO" |
| .IX Header "SEE ALSO" |
| \&\fIgpl\fR\|(7), \fIgfdl\fR\|(7), \fIfsf\-funding\fR\|(7), |
| \&\fIcpp\fR\|(1), \fIgcov\fR\|(1), \fIas\fR\|(1), \fIld\fR\|(1), \fIgdb\fR\|(1), \fIadb\fR\|(1), \fIdbx\fR\|(1), \fIsdb\fR\|(1) |
| and the Info entries for \fIgcc\fR, \fIcpp\fR, \fIas\fR, |
| \&\fIld\fR, \fIbinutils\fR and \fIgdb\fR. |
| .SH "AUTHOR" |
| .IX Header "AUTHOR" |
| See the Info entry for \fBgcc\fR, or |
| <\fBhttp://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Contributors.html\fR>, |
| for contributors to \s-1GCC\s0. |
| .SH "COPYRIGHT" |
| .IX Header "COPYRIGHT" |
| Copyright (c) 1988\-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc. |
| .PP |
| Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document |
| under the terms of the \s-1GNU\s0 Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or |
| any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with the |
| Invariant Sections being \*(L"\s-1GNU\s0 General Public License\*(R" and \*(L"Funding |
| Free Software\*(R", the Front-Cover texts being (a) (see below), and with |
| the Back-Cover Texts being (b) (see below). A copy of the license is |
| included in the \fIgfdl\fR\|(7) man page. |
| .PP |
| (a) The \s-1FSF\s0's Front-Cover Text is: |
| .PP |
| .Vb 1 |
| \& A GNU Manual |
| .Ve |
| .PP |
| (b) The \s-1FSF\s0's Back-Cover Text is: |
| .PP |
| .Vb 3 |
| \& You have freedom to copy and modify this GNU Manual, like GNU |
| \& software. Copies published by the Free Software Foundation raise |
| \& funds for GNU development. |
| .Ve |