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GCC Bugs
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The latest version of this document is always available at
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[1]http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html.
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_________________________________________________________________
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Table of Contents
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* [2]Reporting Bugs
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+ [3]What we need
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+ [4]What we DON'T want
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+ [5]Where to post it
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+ [6]Detailed bug reporting instructions
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+ [7]Detailed bug reporting instructions for GNAT
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+ [8]Detailed bug reporting instructions when using a precompiled
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header
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* [9]Frequently Reported Bugs in GCC
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+ [10]C++
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o [11]Missing features
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o [12]Bugs fixed in the 3.4 series
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+ [13]Fortran
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* [14]Non-bugs
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+ [15]General
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+ [16]C
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+ [17]C++
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o [18]Common problems when upgrading the compiler
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_________________________________________________________________
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Reporting Bugs
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The main purpose of a bug report is to enable us to fix the bug. The most
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important prerequisite for this is that the report must be complete and
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self-contained.
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Before you report a bug, please check the [19]list of well-known bugs and,
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if possible, try a current development snapshot. If you want to report a bug
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with versions of GCC before 3.4 we strongly recommend upgrading to the
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current release first.
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Before reporting that GCC compiles your code incorrectly, please compile it
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with gcc -Wall and see whether this shows anything wrong with your code that
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could be the cause instead of a bug in GCC.
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Summarized bug reporting instructions
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After this summary, you'll find detailed bug reporting instructions, that
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explain how to obtain some of the information requested in this summary.
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What we need
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Please include in your bug report all of the following items, the first
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three of which can be obtained from the output of gcc -v:
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* the exact version of GCC;
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* the system type;
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* the options given when GCC was configured/built;
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* the complete command line that triggers the bug;
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* the compiler output (error messages, warnings, etc.); and
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* the preprocessed file (*.i*) that triggers the bug, generated by adding
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-save-temps to the complete compilation command, or, in the case of a
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bug report for the GNAT front end, a complete set of source files (see
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below).
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What we do not want
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* A source file that #includes header files that are left out of the bug
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report (see above)
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* That source file and a collection of header files.
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* An attached archive (tar, zip, shar, whatever) containing all (or some
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:-) of the above.
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* A code snippet that won't cause the compiler to produce the exact output
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mentioned in the bug report (e.g., a snippet with just a few lines
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around the one that apparently triggers the bug, with some pieces
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replaced with ellipses or comments for extra obfuscation :-)
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* The location (URL) of the package that failed to build (we won't
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download it, anyway, since you've already given us what we need to
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duplicate the bug, haven't you? :-)
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* An error that occurs only some of the times a certain file is compiled,
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such that retrying a sufficient number of times results in a successful
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compilation; this is a symptom of a hardware problem, not of a compiler
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bug (sorry)
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* Assembly files (*.s) produced by the compiler, or any binary files, such
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as object files, executables, core files, or precompiled header files
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* Duplicate bug reports, or reports of bugs already fixed in the
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development tree, especially those that have already been reported as
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fixed last week :-)
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* Bugs in the assembler, the linker or the C library. These are separate
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projects, with separate mailing lists and different bug reporting
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procedures
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* Bugs in releases or snapshots of GCC not issued by the GNU Project.
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Report them to whoever provided you with the release
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* Questions about the correctness or the expected behavior of certain
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constructs that are not GCC extensions. Ask them in forums dedicated to
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the discussion of the programming language
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Where to post it
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Please submit your bug report directly to the [20]GCC bug database.
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Alternatively, you can use the gccbug script that mails your bug report to
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the bug database.
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Only if all this is absolutely impossible, mail all information to
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[21]gcc-bugs@gcc.gnu.org.
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Detailed bug reporting instructions
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Please refer to the [22]next section when reporting bugs in GNAT, the Ada
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compiler, or to the [23]one after that when reporting bugs that appear when
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using a precompiled header.
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In general, all the information we need can be obtained by collecting the
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command line below, as well as its output and the preprocessed file it
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generates.
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gcc -v -save-temps all-your-options source-file
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The only excuses to not send us the preprocessed sources are (i) if you've
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found a bug in the preprocessor, (ii) if you've reduced the testcase to a
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small file that doesn't include any other file or (iii) if the bug appears
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only when using precompiled headers. If you can't post the preprocessed
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sources because they're proprietary code, then try to create a small file
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that triggers the same problem.
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Since we're supposed to be able to re-create the assembly output (extension
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.s), you usually should not include it in the bug report, although you may
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want to post parts of it to point out assembly code you consider to be
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wrong.
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Please avoid posting an archive (.tar, .shar or .zip); we generally need
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just a single file to reproduce the bug (the .i/.ii/.f preprocessed file),
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and, by storing it in an archive, you're just making our volunteers' jobs
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harder. Only when your bug report requires multiple source files to be
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reproduced should you use an archive. This is, for example, the case if you
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are using INCLUDE directives in Fortran code, which are not processed by the
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preprocessor, but the compiler. In that case, we need the main file and all
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INCLUDEd files. In any case, make sure the compiler version, error message,
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etc, are included in the body of your bug report as plain text, even if
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needlessly duplicated as part of an archive.
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Detailed bug reporting instructions for GNAT
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See the [24]previous section for bug reporting instructions for GCC language
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implementations other than Ada.
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Bug reports have to contain at least the following information in order to
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be useful:
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* the exact version of GCC, as shown by "gcc -v";
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* the system type;
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* the options when GCC was configured/built;
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* the exact command line passed to the gcc program triggering the bug (not
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just the flags passed to gnatmake, but gnatmake prints the parameters it
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passed to gcc)
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* a collection of source files for reproducing the bug, preferably a
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minimal set (see below);
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* a description of the expected behavior;
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* a description of actual behavior.
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If your code depends on additional source files (usually package
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specifications), submit the source code for these compilation units in a
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single file that is acceptable input to gnatchop, i.e. contains no non-Ada
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text. If the compilation terminated normally, you can usually obtain a list
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of dependencies using the "gnatls -d main_unit" command, where main_unit is
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the file name of the main compilation unit (which is also passed to gcc).
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If you report a bug which causes the compiler to print a bug box, include
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that bug box in your report, and do not forget to send all the source files
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listed after the bug box along with your report.
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If you use gnatprep, be sure to send in preprocessed sources (unless you
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have to report a bug in gnatprep).
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When you have checked that your report meets these criteria, please submit
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it according to our [25]generic instructions. (If you use a mailing list for
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reporting, please include an "[Ada]" tag in the subject.)
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Detailed bug reporting instructions when using a precompiled header
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If you're encountering a bug when using a precompiled header, the first
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thing to do is to delete the precompiled header, and try running the same
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GCC command again. If the bug happens again, the bug doesn't really involve
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precompiled headers, please report it without using them by following the
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instructions [26]above.
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If you've found a bug while building a precompiled header (for instance, the
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compiler crashes), follow the usual instructions [27]above.
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If you've found a real precompiled header bug, what we'll need to reproduce
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it is the sources to build the precompiled header (as a single .i file), the
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source file that uses the precompiled header, any other headers that source
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file includes, and the command lines that you used to build the precompiled
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header and to use it.
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Please don't send us the actual precompiled header. It is likely to be very
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large and we can't use it to reproduce the problem.
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_________________________________________________________________
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Frequently Reported Bugs in GCC
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This is a list of bugs in GCC that are reported very often, but not yet
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fixed. While it is certainly better to fix bugs instead of documenting them,
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this document might save people the effort of writing a bug report when the
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bug is already well-known.
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There are many reasons why a reported bug doesn't get fixed. It might be
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difficult to fix, or fixing it might break compatibility. Often, reports get
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a low priority when there is a simple work-around. In particular, bugs
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caused by invalid code have a simple work-around: fix the code.
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_________________________________________________________________
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C++
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Missing features
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The export keyword is not implemented.
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Most C++ compilers (G++ included) do not yet implement export, which
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is necessary for separate compilation of template declarations and
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definitions. Without export, a template definition must be in scope
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to be used. The obvious workaround is simply to place all definitions
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in the header itself. Alternatively, the compilation unit containing
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template definitions may be included from the header.
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Bugs fixed in the 3.4 series
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The following bugs are present up to (and including) GCC 3.3.x. They have
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been fixed in 3.4.0.
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Two-stage name-lookup.
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GCC did not implement two-stage name-lookup (also see [28]below).
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Covariant return types.
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GCC did not implement non-trivial covariant returns.
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Parse errors for "simple" code.
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GCC gave parse errors for seemingly simple code, such as
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struct A
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{
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A();
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A(int);
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};
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struct B
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{
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B(A);
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B(A,A);
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void foo();
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};
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A bar()
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{
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B b(A(),A(1)); // Variable b, initialized with two temporaries
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B(A(2)).foo(); // B temporary, initialized with A temporary
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return (A()); // return A temporary
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}
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Although being valid code, each of the three lines with a comment was
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rejected by GCC. The work-arounds for older compiler versions
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proposed below do not change the semantics of the programs at all.
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The problem in the first case was that GCC started to parse the
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declaration of b as a function called b returning B, taking a
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function returning A as an argument. When it encountered the 1, it
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was too late. To show the compiler that this should be really an
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expression, a comma operator with a dummy argument could be used:
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B b((0,A()),A(1));
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The work-around for simpler cases like the second one was to add
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additional parentheses around the expressions that were mistaken as
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declarations:
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(B(A(2))).foo();
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In the third case, however, additional parentheses were causing the
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problems: The compiler interpreted A() as a function (taking no
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arguments, returning A), and (A()) as a cast lacking an expression to
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be casted, hence the parse error. The work-around was to omit the
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parentheses:
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return A();
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This problem occurred in a number of variants; in throw statements,
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people also frequently put the object in parentheses.
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_________________________________________________________________
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Fortran
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G77 bugs are documented in the G77 manual rather than explicitly listed
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here. Please see [29]Known Causes of Trouble with GNU Fortran in the G77
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manual.
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_________________________________________________________________
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Non-bugs
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The following are not actually bugs, but are reported often enough to
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warrant a mention here.
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It is not always a bug in the compiler, if code which "worked" in a previous
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version, is now rejected. Earlier versions of GCC sometimes were less picky
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about standard conformance and accepted invalid source code. In addition,
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programming languages themselves change, rendering code invalid that used to
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be conforming (this holds especially for C++). In either case, you should
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update your code to match recent language standards.
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_________________________________________________________________
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General
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Problems with floating point numbers - the [30]most often reported non-bug.
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In a number of cases, GCC appears to perform floating point
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computations incorrectly. For example, the C++ program
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#include
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int main()
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{
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double a = 0.5;
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double b = 0.01;
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std::cout << (int)(a / b) << std::endl;
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return 0;
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}
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might print 50 on some systems and optimization levels, and 49 on
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others.
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This is the result of rounding: The computer cannot represent all
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real numbers exactly, so it has to use approximations. When computing
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with approximation, the computer needs to round to the nearest
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representable number.
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This is not a bug in the compiler, but an inherent limitation of the
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floating point types. Please study [31]this paper for more
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information.
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_________________________________________________________________
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C
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Increment/decrement operator (++/--) not working as expected - a [32]problem
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with many variations.
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The following expressions have unpredictable results:
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x[i]=++i
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foo(i,++i)
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i*(++i) /* special case with foo=="operator*" */
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std::cout << i << ++i /* foo(foo(std::cout,i),++i) */
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since the i without increment can be evaluated before or after ++i.
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The C and C++ standards have the notion of "sequence points".
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Everything that happens between two sequence points happens in an
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unspecified order, but it has to happen after the first and before
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the second sequence point. The end of a statement and a function call
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are examples for sequence points, whereas assignments and the comma
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between function arguments are not.
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Modifying a value twice between two sequence points as shown in the
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following examples is even worse:
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i=++i
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foo(++i,++i)
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(++i)*(++i) /* special case with foo=="operator*" */
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std::cout << ++i << ++i /* foo(foo(std::cout,++i),++i) */
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This leads to undefined behavior (i.e. the compiler can do anything).
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Casting does not work as expected when optimization is turned on.
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This is often caused by a violation of aliasing rules, which are part
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of the ISO C standard. These rules say that a program is invalid if
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you try to access a variable through a pointer of an incompatible
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type. This is happening in the following example where a short is
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accessed through a pointer to integer (the code assumes 16-bit shorts
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and 32-bit ints):
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#include
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int main()
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{
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short a[2];
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a[0]=0x1111;
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a[1]=0x1111;
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*(int *)a = 0x22222222; /* violation of aliasing rules */
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printf("%x %x\n", a[0], a[1]);
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return 0;
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}
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The aliasing rules were designed to allow compilers more aggressive
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optimization. Basically, a compiler can assume that all changes to
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variables happen through pointers or references to variables of a
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type compatible to the accessed variable. Dereferencing a pointer
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that violates the aliasing rules results in undefined behavior.
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In the case above, the compiler may assume that no access through an
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integer pointer can change the array a, consisting of shorts. Thus,
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printf may be called with the original values of a[0] and a[1]. What
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really happens is up to the compiler and may change with architecture
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and optimization level.
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Recent versions of GCC turn on the option -fstrict-aliasing (which
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allows alias-based optimizations) by default with -O2. And some
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architectures then really print "1111 1111" as result. Without
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optimization the executable will generate the "expected" output "2222
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2222".
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To disable optimizations based on alias-analysis for faulty legacy
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code, the option -fno-strict-aliasing can be used as a work-around.
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The option -Wstrict-aliasing (which is included in -Wall) warns about
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some - but not all - cases of violation of aliasing rules when
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-fstrict-aliasing is active.
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To fix the code above, you can use a union instead of a cast (note
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that this is a GCC extension which might not work with other
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compilers):
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#include
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int main()
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{
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union
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{
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short a[2];
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int i;
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} u;
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u.a[0]=0x1111;
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u.a[1]=0x1111;
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u.i = 0x22222222;
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printf("%x %x\n", u.a[0], u.a[1]);
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return 0;
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}
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Now the result will always be "2222 2222".
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For some more insight into the subject, please have a look at
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[33]this article.
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Cannot use preprocessor directive in macro arguments.
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Let me guess... you used an older version of GCC to compile code that
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looks something like this:
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memcpy(dest, src,
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#ifdef PLATFORM1
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12
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#else
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24
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#endif
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);
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and you got a whole pile of error messages:
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test.c:11: warning: preprocessing directive not recognized within macro arg
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test.c:11: warning: preprocessing directive not recognized within macro arg
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test.c:11: warning: preprocessing directive not recognized within macro arg
|
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test.c: In function `foo':
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test.c:6: undefined or invalid # directive
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test.c:8: undefined or invalid # directive
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test.c:9: parse error before `24'
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test.c:10: undefined or invalid # directive
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This is because your C library's happens to define memcpy
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as a macro - which is perfectly legitimate. In recent versions of
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glibc, for example, printf is among those functions which are
|
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implemented as macros.
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Versions of GCC prior to 3.3 did not allow you to put #ifdef (or any
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other preprocessor directive) inside the arguments of a macro. The
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code therefore would not compile.
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As of GCC 3.3 this kind of construct is always accepted and the
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preprocessor will probably do what you expect, but see the manual for
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detailed semantics.
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However, this kind of code is not portable. It is "undefined
|
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behavior" according to the C standard; that means different compilers
|
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may do different things with it. It is always possible to rewrite
|
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code which uses conditionals inside macros so that it doesn't. You
|
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could write the above example
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#ifdef PLATFORM1
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memcpy(dest, src, 12);
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#else
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memcpy(dest, src, 24);
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#endif
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This is a bit more typing, but I personally think it's better style
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in addition to being more portable.
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Cannot initialize a static variable with stdin.
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This has nothing to do with GCC, but people ask us about it a lot.
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Code like this:
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#include
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FILE *yyin = stdin;
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will not compile with GNU libc, because stdin is not a constant. This
|
|
was done deliberately, to make it easier to maintain binary
|
|
compatibility when the type FILE needs to be changed. It is
|
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surprising for people used to traditional Unix C libraries, but it is
|
|
permitted by the C standard.
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This construct commonly occurs in code generated by old versions of
|
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lex or yacc. We suggest you try regenerating the parser with a
|
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current version of flex or bison, respectively. In your own code, the
|
|
appropriate fix is to move the initialization to the beginning of
|
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main.
|
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|
|
There is a common misconception that the GCC developers are
|
|
responsible for GNU libc. These are in fact two entirely separate
|
|
projects; please check the [34]GNU libc web pages for details.
|
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_________________________________________________________________
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C++
|
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|
|
Nested classes can access private members and types of the containing class.
|
|
Defect report 45 clarifies that nested classes are members of the
|
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class they are nested in, and so are granted access to private
|
|
members of that class.
|
|
|
|
G++ emits two copies of constructors and destructors.
|
|
In general there are three types of constructors (and destructors).
|
|
|
|
1. The complete object constructor/destructor.
|
|
2. The base object constructor/destructor.
|
|
3. The allocating constructor/deallocating destructor.
|
|
|
|
The first two are different, when virtual base classes are involved.
|
|
|
|
Global destructors are not run in the correct order.
|
|
Global destructors should be run in the reverse order of their
|
|
constructors completing. In most cases this is the same as the
|
|
reverse order of constructors starting, but sometimes it is
|
|
different, and that is important. You need to compile and link your
|
|
programs with --use-cxa-atexit. We have not turned this switch on by
|
|
default, as it requires a cxa aware runtime library (libc, glibc, or
|
|
equivalent).
|
|
|
|
Classes in exception specifiers must be complete types.
|
|
[15.4]/1 tells you that you cannot have an incomplete type, or
|
|
pointer to incomplete (other than cv void *) in an exception
|
|
specification.
|
|
|
|
Exceptions don't work in multithreaded applications.
|
|
You need to rebuild g++ and libstdc++ with --enable-threads.
|
|
Remember, C++ exceptions are not like hardware interrupts. You cannot
|
|
throw an exception in one thread and catch it in another. You cannot
|
|
throw an exception from a signal handler and catch it in the main
|
|
thread.
|
|
|
|
Templates, scoping, and digraphs.
|
|
If you have a class in the global namespace, say named X, and want to
|
|
give it as a template argument to some other class, say std::vector,
|
|
then std::vector<::X> fails with a parser error.
|
|
|
|
The reason is that the standard mandates that the sequence <: is
|
|
treated as if it were the token [. (There are several such
|
|
combinations of characters - they are called digraphs.) Depending on
|
|
the version, the compiler then reports a parse error before the
|
|
character : (the colon before X) or a missing closing bracket ].
|
|
|
|
The simplest way to avoid this is to write std::vector< ::X>, i.e.
|
|
place a space between the opening angle bracket and the scope
|
|
operator.
|
|
|
|
Copy constructor access check while initializing a reference.
|
|
Consider this code:
|
|
|
|
class A
|
|
{
|
|
public:
|
|
A();
|
|
|
|
private:
|
|
A(const A&); // private copy ctor
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
A makeA(void);
|
|
void foo(const A&);
|
|
|
|
void bar(void)
|
|
{
|
|
foo(A()); // error, copy ctor is not accessible
|
|
foo(makeA()); // error, copy ctor is not accessible
|
|
|
|
A a1;
|
|
foo(a1); // OK, a1 is a lvalue
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
Starting with GCC 3.4.0, binding an rvalue to a const reference
|
|
requires an accessible copy constructor. This might be surprising at
|
|
first sight, especially since most popular compilers do not correctly
|
|
implement this rule.
|
|
|
|
The C++ Standard says that a temporary object should be created in
|
|
this context and its contents filled with a copy of the object we are
|
|
trying to bind to the reference; it also says that the temporary copy
|
|
can be elided, but the semantic constraints (eg. accessibility) of
|
|
the copy constructor still have to be checked.
|
|
|
|
For further information, you can consult the following paragraphs of
|
|
the C++ standard: [dcl.init.ref]/5, bullet 2, sub-bullet 1, and
|
|
[class.temporary]/2.
|
|
|
|
Common problems when upgrading the compiler
|
|
|
|
ABI changes
|
|
|
|
The C++ application binary interface (ABI) consists of two components: the
|
|
first defines how the elements of classes are laid out, how functions are
|
|
called, how function names are mangled, etc; the second part deals with the
|
|
internals of the objects in libstdc++. Although we strive for a non-changing
|
|
ABI, so far we have had to modify it with each major release. If you change
|
|
your compiler to a different major release you must recompile all libraries
|
|
that contain C++ code. If you fail to do so you risk getting linker errors
|
|
or malfunctioning programs. Some of our Java support libraries also contain
|
|
C++ code, so you might want to recompile all libraries to be safe. It should
|
|
not be necessary to recompile if you have changed to a bug-fix release of
|
|
the same version of the compiler; bug-fix releases are careful to avoid ABI
|
|
changes. See also the [35]compatibility section of the GCC manual.
|
|
|
|
Remark: A major release is designated by a change to the first or second
|
|
component of the two- or three-part version number. A minor (bug-fix)
|
|
release is designated by a change to the third component only. Thus GCC 3.2
|
|
and 3.3 are major releases, while 3.3.1 and 3.3.2 are bug-fix releases for
|
|
GCC 3.3. With the 3.4 series we are introducing a new naming scheme; the
|
|
first release of this series is 3.4.0 instead of just 3.4.
|
|
|
|
Standard conformance
|
|
|
|
With each release, we try to make G++ conform closer to the ISO C++ standard
|
|
(available at [36]http://www.ncits.org/cplusplus.htm). We have also
|
|
implemented some of the core and library defect reports (available at
|
|
[37]http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/cwg_defects.html &
|
|
[38]http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/lwg-defects.html
|
|
respectively).
|
|
|
|
Non-conforming legacy code that worked with older versions of GCC may be
|
|
rejected by more recent compilers. There is no command-line switch to ensure
|
|
compatibility in general, because trying to parse standard-conforming and
|
|
old-style code at the same time would render the C++ frontend
|
|
unmaintainable. However, some non-conforming constructs are allowed when the
|
|
command-line option -fpermissive is used.
|
|
|
|
Two milestones in standard conformance are GCC 3.0 (including a major
|
|
overhaul of the standard library) and the 3.4.0 version (with its new C++
|
|
parser).
|
|
|
|
New in GCC 3.0
|
|
|
|
* The standard library is much more conformant, and uses the std::
|
|
namespace (which is now a real namespace, not an alias for ::).
|
|
* The standard header files for the c library don't end with .h, but begin
|
|
with c (i.e. rather than ). The .h names are still
|
|
available, but are deprecated.
|
|
* is deprecated, use instead.
|
|
* streambuf::seekoff & streambuf::seekpos are private, instead use
|
|
streambuf::pubseekoff & streambuf::pubseekpos respectively.
|
|
* If std::operator << (std::ostream &, long long) doesn't exist, you need
|
|
to recompile libstdc++ with --enable-long-long.
|
|
|
|
If you get lots of errors about things like cout not being found, you've
|
|
most likely forgotten to tell the compiler to look in the std:: namespace.
|
|
There are several ways to do this:
|
|
* Say std::cout at the call. This is the most explicit way of saying what
|
|
you mean.
|
|
* Say using std::cout; somewhere before the call. You will need to do this
|
|
for each function or type you wish to use from the standard library.
|
|
* Say using namespace std; somewhere before the call. This is the
|
|
quick-but-dirty fix. This brings the whole of the std:: namespace into
|
|
scope. Never do this in a header file, as every user of your header file
|
|
will be affected by this decision.
|
|
|
|
New in GCC 3.4.0
|
|
|
|
The new parser brings a lot of improvements, especially concerning
|
|
name-lookup.
|
|
* The "implicit typename" extension got removed (it was already deprecated
|
|
since GCC 3.1), so that the following code is now rejected, see [14.6]:
|
|
|
|
template struct A
|
|
{
|
|
typedef int X;
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
template struct B
|
|
{
|
|
A::X x; // error
|
|
typename A::X y; // OK
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
B b;
|
|
|
|
* For similar reasons, the following code now requires the template
|
|
keyword, see [14.2]:
|
|
|
|
template struct A
|
|
{
|
|
template struct X {};
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
template struct B
|
|
{
|
|
typename A::X<0> x; // error
|
|
typename A::template X<0> y; // OK
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
B b;
|
|
|
|
* We now have two-stage name-lookup, so that the following code is
|
|
rejected, see [14.6]/9:
|
|
|
|
template int foo()
|
|
{
|
|
return i; // error
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
* This also affects members of base classes, see [14.6.2]:
|
|
|
|
template struct A
|
|
{
|
|
int i, j;
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
template struct B : A
|
|
{
|
|
int foo1() { return i; } // error
|
|
int foo2() { return this->i; } // OK
|
|
int foo3() { return B::i; } // OK
|
|
int foo4() { return A::i; } // OK
|
|
|
|
using A::j;
|
|
int foo5() { return j; } // OK
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
In addition to the problems listed above, the manual contains a section on
|
|
[39]Common Misunderstandings with GNU C++.
|
|
|
|
References
|
|
|
|
1. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html
|
|
2. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#report
|
|
3. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#need
|
|
4. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#dontwant
|
|
5. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#where
|
|
6. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#detailed
|
|
7. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#gnat
|
|
8. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#pch
|
|
9. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#known
|
|
10. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#cxx
|
|
11. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#missing
|
|
12. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#fixed34
|
|
13. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#fortran
|
|
14. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#nonbugs
|
|
15. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#nonbugs_general
|
|
16. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#nonbugs_c
|
|
17. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#nonbugs_cxx
|
|
18. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#upgrading
|
|
19. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#known
|
|
20. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/
|
|
21. mailto:gcc-bugs@gcc.gnu.org
|
|
22. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#gnat
|
|
23. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#pch
|
|
24. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#detailed
|
|
25. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#where
|
|
26. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#detailed
|
|
27. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#detailed
|
|
28. http://gcc.gnu.org/bugs.html#new34
|
|
29. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-3.4.6/g77/Trouble.html
|
|
30. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR323
|
|
31. http://www.validlab.com/goldberg/paper.ps
|
|
32. http://gcc.gnu.org/PR11751
|
|
33. http://mail-index.NetBSD.org/tech-kern/2003/08/11/0001.html
|
|
34. http://www.gnu.org/software/libc/
|
|
35. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Compatibility.html
|
|
36. http://www.ncits.org/cplusplus.htm
|
|
37. http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/cwg_defects.html
|
|
38. http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/lwg-defects.html
|
|
39. http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/C_002b_002b-Misunderstandings.html
|