this is a bit complicated: for i386 and x86-64 we really need to
extend return values ourself, as the common code now does. For arm64
this at least preserves old behaviour. For riscv64 we don't have to
extend ourself but can expect things to be extended up to int (this
matters for var-args tests, when the sign-extension to int64 needs to
happen explicitely). As the extensions are useless, don't do them.
And for arm32 we actually can't express GCC behaviour: the callee side
expects the return value to be correctly extended to int32, but
remembers the original type. In case the ultimate target type for the
call result is only int, no further extension is done. But in case
the target type is e.g. int64 an extension happens, but not from int32
but from the original type. We don't know the ultimate target type,
so we have to choose a type to put into vtop:
* original type (plus VT_MUSTCAST) - this looses when the ultimate
target is int (GCC: no cast, TCC: a cast)
* int (without MUSTCAST) - this looses when the ultimate target is
int64 (GCC: cast from original type, TCC: cast from int)
This difference can only be seen with undefined sources, like the
testcases, so it doesn't seem worthwhile to try an make it work, just
disable the test on arm and choose the second variant as that generates
less code.
This allows adding files or libraries from
#pragma comment(option, ...)
Also, {f}/file.c will be expanded with the directory of
the current source, that is the file that has the #pragma
Put total_lines etc. into TCCState. Also, initialize
the predefined compiler types for the preprocessor too.
tccpe.c: fix BaseOfCode if .init section present (with tcc -b)
protect some more accesses to global data with the semaphore.
(And for the testcase: don't just write into global data, use local
copies; it's not important for speed here).
- revert Makefiles to state before last bcheck additions
Instead, just load bcheck.o explicitly if that is
what is wanted.
- move tcc_add_bcheck() to the <target>-link.c files and
remove revently added arguments. This function is to
support tccelf.c with linking, not for tccgen.c to
support compilation.
- remove -ba option: It said:
"-ba Enable better address checking with bounds checker"
Okay, if it is better then to have it is not an option.
- remove va_copy. It is C99 and we try to stay C89 in tinycc
when possible. For example, MS compilers do not have va_copy.
- win64: revert any 'fixes' to alloca
It was correct as it was before, except for bound_checking
where it was not implemented. This should now work too.
- remove parasitic filename:linenum features
Such feature is already present with rt_printline in
tccrun.c. If it doesn't work it can be fixed.
- revert changes to gen_bounded_ptr_add()
gen_bounded_ptr_add() was working as it should before
(mostly). For the sake of simplicity I switched it to
CDECL. Anyway, FASTCALL means SLOWCALL with tinycc.
In exchange you get one addition which is required for
bounds_cnecking function arguments. The important thing
is to check them *BEFORE* they are loaded into registers.
New function gbound_args() does that.
In any case, code instrumentation with the bounds-check
functions as such now seems to work flawlessly again,
which means when they are inserted as NOPs, any code that
tcc can compile, seems to behave just the same as without
them.
What these functions then do when fully enabled, is a
differnt story. I did not touch this.
The following functions are now also bounds checked:
memcmp, strncpy, strcmp, strncmp, strcat, strchr, strdup.
Add statistics code for bounds checking functions.
The statistics can be printed by settings environment variable
"TCC_BOUNDS_PRINT_STATISTIC".
Enabled more tests in test/Makefile.
The bounds checking code has now enabled gen_bounded_ptr_add tests.
This makes the code slower but finds more errors.
I had to correct some things in tcc to make it work.
- Fixed off by one in lib/bcheck.c
- Corrected tccelf.c sym_versions.
- Disabled USE_TAL when using bounds checking.
- Fixed cstr_printf va_start.
- Fixed tests/tests2/46_grep.c off by one error.
- Updated gen_bounded_ptr_add in x86_64-gen.c
- Fixed x86_64-link.c pointer diff.
For gen_vla_alloc now always use alloca call when bounds checking.
Added line/filename in %rax before bound calls to find location of error.
This allows creation of TCCStates and operation with API
calls independently from each other, even from threads.
Frontend (option parsing/libtcc.c) and backend (linker/tccelf.c)
now depend only on the TCCState (s1) argument.
Compilation per se (tccpp.c, tccgen.c) is still using
globals for convenience. There is only one entry point
to this section which is tcc_compile() which is protected
by a semaphore.
There are some hacks involved to avoid too many changes,
as well as some changes in order to avoid too many hacks ;)
The test libtcc_test_mt.c shows the feature. Except this
new file the patch adds 87 lines overall.
This fixes the issue
int main() { extern char *x; }
void main1() { extern char *x; }
t2.c:5: error: incompatible types for redefinition of 'x'
(reported by Giovanni Mascellani 2019/07/16)
this is enough to let me link a tcctest.c compiled by GCC
using some current debian sid riscv64 system. It needs
linking against libgcc.a for various floating point TFmode
routines. The result runs.
the uninitialized cumofs was leading to random sizes for
the memset when initializing local structures, potentially
leading to segfaults from it. Only a problem with GNU
designated initializers, which we didn't test very well.
See testcase.
- libtcc.c/tccpp.c: fix -U option for multiple input files
- libtcc: remove decl of tcc_add_crt() for PE
- tcc.h: define __i386__ and __x86_64__ for msvc
- tcc.h: undef __attribute__ for __TINYC__ on gnu/linux platforms
- tccelf.c: disable prepare_dynamic_rel unless x86/x64
- tccpe.c: construct rather than predefine PE section flags
- tccpp.c: (alt.) fix access of dead stack variable after error/longjmp
- x86_64-gen.c: fix func_alloca chain for nocode_wanted
- tccpp.c/tccgen.c: improve file:line info for inline functions
- winapi/winnt.h: correct position for DECLSPEC_ALIGN attribute
- win32/lib/crt: simplify top exception handler (needed for signal)
- arm64-gen.c: remove dprintf left from VT_CMP commit
- tccgen.c: limit binary scan with gcase to > 8 (= smaller code)
- tccgen.c: call save_regs(4) in gen_opl for cmp-ops (see test in tcctest.c)
A more automatic approach to code suppression (aka. nocode_wanted)
The simple rules are:
- Clear 'nocode_wanted' at (im/explicit) label IF it was used
- Set 'nocode_wanted' after unconditional jumps
Also in order to test this then I did add the "function might
return no value" warning, and then to make that work again I
did add the __attribute__((noreturn)).
Also moved the look ahead label check into the type parser
to gain a little speed.
Example:
int a = 1;
void f(void)
{
int a = 2;
{
extern int a; // = 1 !!
....
To get this (more) correctly there is a new function to copy
syms between local to global stacks.
Also, this patch changes the meaning of VT_EXTERN back
to the simpler and IMO more useful notion of
DECLARED but not (yet) DEFINED.
and that for both variables and functions. That is, VT_EXTERN
in tcc doesn't have to do with the keyword 'extern' necessarily.
Also this patch does allow
int x[];
as alias for
extern int x[];
(as do gcc and msvc)
... which IMO are:
1) files don't need a _test suffix because all files in
the directory are tests ;)
2) we test the BEHAVIOR of the program, rather than its
binary bit contents.
Ok, but nobody said a test can't use two files ;)
(where the 104+_ construct is meant to prevent the file
from being picked up by the makefile as a test on its own).
Previously test 104 used a combination of *nix tools and system() calls
to emulate a `sh` script, which required split code paths for windows
due to different shell and different absolute path representation.
Also, it used a hardcoded tcc binary path, didn't set locale for sort.
Now the tools are used from a `sh` script which the program generates
and invokes, tmp files are at CWD and no conversion is required, tcc
path is taken from Makefile (exported), and `sort` uses LC_ALL=C.
there's no need for two new flags in type.t . We just can't use
VT_EXTERN as marker if functions are defined or not (like we can
for objects), and then can simply implement the rules of C99/C11
by not overwriting VT_STATIC/VT_EXTERN at all but rather only
look at them. A function already on the inline list can be
forced by removing the VT_INLINE flag, and then linkage
follows from some combination of VT_STATIC, VT_EXTERN and VT_INLINE.
- add tests for standard conformant inline functions
- implement it
The old tinycc failed to provide a conforming implementation
of non-static inlines. It would expose external symbols where it
shouldn't and hide them where it should expose them.
This commit provides a hopefully comprehensive test suite
for how things should be done. The .expect file can be obtained
by compiling the example c file (embedded in the test)
with a conforming compiler such as gcc, clang or icc and then
printing the exported symbols (e.g., with nm+awk+sort).
(The implementation currently reserves two new VT_ flags.
If anyone can provide an implementation without reserving
two extra flags, please replace mine.)